National Post (National Edition)
Last woman standing in Italy’s rural exodus
ROME • The population of an Italian mountain village is down to just one elderly woman, highlighting an exodus from rural areas that has resulted in hamlets being abandoned across the country.
Hundreds of villages are empty or on the verge of being forsaken, with some of them being offered for sale to foreign buyers in search of second homes.
Paolina Grassi, 90, is now the sole inhabitant of Casali Socraggio, a collection of slate-roofed houses in a valley on the border with Switzerland. Born in 1926, she has lived all her life in the hamlet and wistfully remembers happier times when the village bustled with life.
“There was a restaurant, a shop, a bakery and an elementary school. In my class there were 36 children. When I was born, three families had 10 kids each,” said Grassi, who is the youngest of five sisters. Her husband passed away more than 20 years ago and her last surviving sister died last year.
She may be the village’s sole resident but she loves the solitude. “The silence is wonderful, especially at night,” she told La Stampa newspaper. “You don’t hear so much as a car. Outside it is completely dark, but up above the sky is scattered with thousands of stars.”
Casali Socraggio is just one of hundreds of villages in Italy where the population has dwindled in the decades since the Second World War. Migration abroad, and internal movement from the poverty-stricken south to the factories of the wealthier north, have left many settlements struggling to survive.
A report last year found that a third of Italy’s villages face depopulation. One inhabitant in seven has left villages in the past 25 years, according to one study. The exodus of young people has meant that the number of inhabitants aged over 65 has risen by 83 per cent.
Nearly 2,500 villages are at risk of turning into ghost communities, according to the report, which was compiled with the help of the National Association of Italian Councils.
Exacerbating the problem is the fact that Italy has one of the lowest birthrates in Europe. A report released this week by the national statistics office showed that Italians had 577,000 babies in 2008 but only 473,000 in 2016.