Italy’s prison offers a sweet way to cut crime
PADUA: White-coated bakers are chopping nuts, dipping pastry into liquid chocolate and hanging freshly baked panettone Christmas cake upside down to preserve its domed shape.
But when one of the allmale team steps outside to smoke, he is in a barred enclosure attached to Padua prison.
Sweet smells have wafted through this building since 2005, when the local Giotto cooperative opened the ‘Pasticceria Giotto’, which they say is Italy’s only bakery inside a jail.
The cooperative says the re-offending rate among prisoners who work on their projects in Padua drops to 1-2% from a national average they put at over 70%.
The prisoners, serving sentences for crimes including murder, are keen to extol the psychological benefits.
“This work makes a person feel they have value, you get satisfaction from it. You develop creativity,” said Davor, 49. “When you come in here you don’t feel like you’re in prison.”
Of the roughly 800 detainees in Padua’s Due Palazzi prison, 150 are paid to work on such projects, which also include a call centre and workshops making suitcases and bicycles.
The bakery’s signature delicacy is panettone, baked to a traditional recipe that takes 72 hours to make from a precise mixture of flour, butter, eggs and sugar that is enshrined in Italian law.
Shut off from the world, the prisoners are better able to concentrate on learning, said Elio, 62, as he pitched 2-kg slabs of butter into a mixing machine.