The Asian Age

King in court: Italy ‘ tries’ king over racism

- Kavita Nagpal Fanny Carrier

■ The play depicts Kashmiri pandit families located in a place called Nandigram. The households manage their daily expenses by doing various odd jobs. The protagonis­ts of the play, Prithvi and Didda, have five daughters. Prithvi works for Nanbhai for a living along with selling sheep and livestock. Prithvi is wellrespec­ted figure in the whole village.

Eighty years after Mussolini began p e r s e c u t i n g Jews, Italy is putting the dead king who backed his racial laws on trial. The setting may be a theatre, but the prosecutor, witnesses and three judges meeting in Rome are real, their scrutiny of the controvers­ial monarch part of events organised to mark Holocaust Remembranc­e Day. The Trial comes a few weeks after the remains of Victor Emmanuel III were discreetly returned to Italy.

The king, who ruled from 1900 to 1946, fled in disgrace and died in exile in Egypt in 1948.

Three high- ranking judges sit at a table under the motto hanging in courts across Italy: “The law is equal for all”.

T h e c h a r g e ? B e t r ay i n g the spirit of the monarchy’s statute, which tasks it with guaranteei­ng all its subjects are equal.

Witnesses describe the horror of laws the fascist regime introduced from 1938 to ban Jews from public life.

At the time, there were 46,000 living in Italy. Thousands of pupils and hundreds of t e a c h e r s were kicked out of schools, 400 civil servants and 24 generals were fired.

The noose tightened further until deportatio­ns began under German occupation in 1943, resulting in the slaughter of some 8,000 Italian Jews.

One woman reads out a letter from her grandfathe­r describing not only the humiliatio­n he suffered, but also the kindness of those in the monasterie­s that hid him and his relatives.

Experts go through the list of renowned academics in exile, including three future Nobel Prize for medicine winners.

By signing the racial laws, Victor Emmanuel III made an “immoral, illegal and anti- historical use” of his powers, says Rome military prosecutor Marco De Paolis. The king “failed in his duty of opposition. He could have set an example, shaken awake the Italian people’s conscience,” he says. But the defence witnesses describe a Benito Mussolini at his peak after 16 years in power — not a man easily challenged.

“Il Duce” had in fact just dismissed the royal as head of the armed forces and was waiting for a pretext to get rid of the short man Italians called their “little king”.

“I was faced with an unfair and terrible choice,” says Umberto Ambrosoli, playing the king, as he describes his anguish over whether to sign the racial laws or not.

I made the choice that seemed the least bad for the country,” he says, despite admitting his “disgust” at his own decision to allow the persecutio­n of Jews, a community faithful to the monarchy.

“Mussolini had all the power and with the annexation of Austria, the Germans were at Bre n n e r ” , on the border, he says, arguing that by staying on the dictator’s side he staved off I t a l y ’ s descent into civil war.

“In condemning the king, we risk forge t t i n g Mussolini’s responsibi­lity,” is his final plea.

The court retires to deliberate. The verdict is in — but the judges rule that although the king did violate the spirit of the statute, that same document describes the “sacred and inviolable” character of the royal, who cannot be judged.

The trial is declared invalid, but it matters little. Victor Emmanuel was already judged and found wanting by his subjects on June 2, 1946, when Italians voted in a referendum to get rid of the monarchy and become a republic.

The “little king” had abdicated a month earlier in the hope that handing the reins to his fresh- faced son Umberto II would be enough to save the regal house — but in vain. Both were sent packing. The setting may be a theatre, but the prosecutor, witnesses and three judges meeting in Rome are real, their scrutiny of the controvers­ial monarch part of events organised to mark Holocaust Remembranc­e Day. comes a few weeks after the remains of Victor Emmanuel III were discreetly returned to Italy.

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