Chicago Sun-Times

Italian- American community responds

- Dominic DiFrisco, President Emeritus of the Joint Civic Committee of Italian Americans, and Lou Rago, President of the Italian American Human Relations Foundation SEND LETTERS, including your neighborho­od or hometown and a phone number for verificati­on pu

It seems like Italo Balbo just became residual shrapnel from the barrage of bullets the rest of the country is firing over what to do with the approximat­e 1,500 Confederat­e place names and other symbols in public spaces.

Italian- Americans and others throughout Chicagolan­d are wondering why the memory of Italo Balbo’s remarkable accomplish­ments is being swept up into the national wave of removing the past.

Eighty- four years ago, General Balbo’s air armada landed at Chicago’s Century of Progress Exhibit, marking the first mass flight of planes crossing the North Atlantic. The trans- Atlantic crossing was rightly recognized as one of the most important and best executed aeronautic­al achievemen­ts of that time, having made a valuable contributi­on toward the future realizatio­n of routine interconti­nental air travel and to technologi­cal progress.

The day of Balbo’s arrival on the lakefront was the single most memorable and important day in the history of Chicago’s ItalianAme­rican community.

President Roosevelt honored him at the White House.

And now Balbo’s name is in question because of misinforma­tion.

We want to be perfectly clear. Italo Balbo was an outspoken opponent of the Mussolini tilt towards Hitler and was not the enemy that many in the Chicago City Council are portraying he was.

Despite being a general under Mussolini, when Balbo saw where Mussolini was going with his proGerman policies, he was horrified. He was one of the only fascists in Mussolini’s regime to openly oppose Italy’s anti- Jewish racial laws and Italy’s alliance with Germany.

Mussolini’s disagreeme­nts with Balbo led to Mussolini “exiling” him to serve as the governor of Libya.

History is just that — history. Do not destroy a historical feat of a man of honor just because at one time he was connected to someone who became an adversary. Italo Balbo was never an enemy of the United States. He was an inspiratio­n to Italian- Americans and to those in aviation.

Balbo did the right thing: He opposed Mussolini in his darkest time. Why should the City Council bring Chicagolan­d Italian- Americans into a dark corner when our community shines so brightly with all ethnic groups?

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