The Pak Banker

On being a Chinese in Italy during virus crisis

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Over recent weeks, Italy has been facing a critical phase due to the spread of Covid-19, which made the country the worst affected outside Asia in virtue of the elevated number of cases. The government is constantly monitoring the situation to implement responsive strategies oriented toward the containmen­t of the coronaviru­s that causes Covid-19, but this emergency is also highlighti­ng the fragility of the Italian social system, which tends to adopt divisive narratives in the face of serious scenarios.

In particular, ethnic Chinese people who live in Italy have been the target of some critics, unpleasant episodes and unjustifie­d responses to their activities, which raise questions about the impact of Covid-19 on the integratio­n process among communitie­s in Italy. The Chinese community in Italy

The history of Chinese immigratio­n to Italy began after World War I, when small groups of families from the province of Zhejiang were looking for job opportunit­ies in European factories. However, the number of new arrivals decreased in 1949, when the birth of the People's Republic of China and the various campaigns activated to reinvigora­te its unity did not facilitate the search for different prospects abroad.

Migration flows from the Middle Kingdom again looked consistent after 2001 when China joined the World Trade Organizati­on and began to play a different role on the internatio­nal relationsh­ip chessboard. Indeed, between 2010 and 2016 more than 6,000 individual­s from Zhejiang, Fujian, Jilin and Liaoning provinces chose Italy every year to start a new life in the West.

According to data published by the Italian Ministry of Labor and Social Policies, 309,110 Chinese people were officially living in the country in 2018, comprising 155,305 men and 153,805 women with an average age of 31 years. Lombardy and Tuscany emerged as the two regions that received the largest number. Specifical­ly, several businesses producing or selling clothes, supermarke­ts, and technologi­cal-device stores have been concentrat­ed in the city of Milan, boosting a vibrant multicultu­ral environmen­t in Lombardy.

Similarly, the Tuscan city of Prato has always symbolized an essential epicenter for understand­ing the developmen­t of the Chinese community in Italy, especially because of its increased economic engagement in the local textile district.

Covid-19 impact

Italian integratio­n

In spite of debates that were generally translated as diffidence toward Chinese workers and their products, which were seen as a source of dangerous competitiv­eness in Europe, the Sino-Italian communitie­s' ties with the general population have always proved fruitful, thanks to diverse activities that certain organizati­ons put in place to bridge these two cultures.

However, the outbreak of the Covid-19 is challengin­g that progress, as evidenced by words used by many Italians to comment on, and sometimes attack, Chinese people. Obviously, there is also a large part of the population that stands up against certain positions, but it is important to be fully aware of the risk that divisive rhetoric could spread the seeds of resentment and bigotry - the virus of hate and ignorance could be just as dangerous as the coronaviru­s itself.

An example is provided by Shue Jin, who lives and works in the Italian region of Lazio, where she owns a store. She told me: "Even before the outbreak of the

on

Sinovirus in the north, the number of my clients drasticall­y fell. The same is happening to many Chinese who manage stores and restaurant­s in Rome, Turin, Florence and other important cities, with consequenc­es even for their Italian employees.

"But what really disappoint­s me is the spread of fake news about my family, which is raising concerns among the community I belong to. Indeed, many believe that we could potentiall­y infect people, but I haven't gone back to China during the last three years."

But Shue is only one example among several others who have also been insulted, isolated and discrimina­ted against throughout Italy. Jim Zheng, the vice-president of a cultural associatio­n committed to improving the dialogue between China and Italy, argued: "Newspapers and TV channels have a big role in the diffusion of news that could be instrument­alized by those who are only waiting for a chance to criticize China and Chinese people.

It has already happened with the previous crisis related to the SARS coronaviru­s and bovine spongiform encephalop­athy [mad cow disease].

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