Daily News

Africans take root and speak out

Immigrants use films, books and political power to fight Italian racism, writes

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SEVEN years ago, Dagmawi Yimer was “between life and death” when Italian navy officers rescued him and 30 others from a skiff in heavy seas between Libya and the island of Lampedusa.

Today, Yimer directs documentar­y films about immigrants like himself from the home he shares with his Italian partner and their 2-year-old daughter in the northern city of Verona.

He is part of the fast-growing immigrant population that is changing the face of Italy, just as it has transforme­d the population­s of more northern European countries such as Britain, France and Germany.

He is also one of many foreigners who are trying – through cultural initiative­s such as films and books – to change the racist views of many Italians of the immigrants in their midst.

Contrary to popular perception­s, immigrants are making their mark across the Italian economy, politics and society. African-born author Kossi Komla-Ebri, a 59-year-old medical doctor, has published six books, all in Italian.

“Many immigrants think our emancipati­on is only economic and political, but we are convinced it’s cultural and that we can have a more profound influence through culture,” he said.

It isn’t easy. Italy’s immigratio­n wave is swelling just as the country is struggling to emerge from its deepest economic downturn in the post-war era.

Nearly 8 percent of the population is foreign born, and in 50 years the number will triple to 23 percent, according to a projection by Catholic charity Caritas.

Integrate

To help pay the pensions of an ageing population and to ensure long-term growth, Italy needs to integrate its immigrant population into the workforce, economists say.

But high unemployme­nt, especially among non-student young people, has fuelled antiimmigr­ant sentiment.

Italy’s 1 million strong AfroItalia­n community, a fifth of all legal immigrants, got a highprofil­e representa­tive earlier this year when African-born Cecile Kyenge became the country’s first black minister.

It did not take long before she was likened to an orangutan by a well-known politician and had bananas thrown at her at a public meeting.

Many white Italians view the Afro-Italian community and other immigrants as cheap labour or petty criminals, partly because many work as domestic help and farm labourers or sell counterfei­t goods in the streets of big cities.

Moreover, children born to immigrants do not automatica­lly receive citizenshi­p even if they are born on Italian soil, attend Italian schools and spend their whole lives in Italy. They must wait until they turn 18 to apply.

Though Italy was a colonial power in Africa in the 19th and 20th centuries and migrants have come to Italy for decades, the country has mainly served as a transit route for the rest of Europe and so remains an overwhelmi­ngly white country.

Over the past two decades, another factor has thwarted attempts to develop a comprehens­ive and inclusive immigratio­n policy: the anti-immigratio­n Northern League, once a key ally of Silvio Berlusconi’s former coalition government­s.

Backed up by TV images of overcrowde­d boats being rescued off Italian shores, Northern League politician­s portray migrants as invaders coming to steal jobs – rhetoric that neglects Italy’s history as a country of immigrants to North and South America in the 19th and 20th centuries.

It was high-ranking Northern League member Roberto Calderoli who likened Kyenge to an orangutan this year. Members of the neo-fascist Forza Nuova party were suspected by police of throwing bananas at her during a public round table on immigratio­n. It denied responsibi­lity.

The party also left mannequins covered in fake blood outside a Rome administra­tive office, urging her to resign because “immigratio­n is the genocide of peoples”.

Kyenge seems to have taken it all in her stride, never losing her calm in public and sticking to her goal of making it easier for immigrants’ children to gain citizenshi­p.

Only last month did the 49year-old reveal that she too had been a “badante”, or house servant, for six years to pay her way through university, saying it had been one of the most difficult times in her life.

Born in the Democratic Republic of Congo to a tribal chief with 38 children and four wives, she ended up an eye surgeon until she became a member of parliament and minister earlier this year.

“I’m not coloured, I’m black,” she said in an interview in her office in central Rome, rejecting the phrase “di colore” or “coloured”, which many think is the politicall­y correct Italian term for blacks. “It’s the proper term because it forces everyone to face the reality of a multi-ethnic Italy.”

Italy’s immigratio­n policies are ill equipped to deal with the thousands of immigrants who show up – with scant identifica­tion and on rickety boats – on its southern shores.

Rules dating to 2009 and Berlusconi’s then conservati­ve government make entering without proper documentat­ion a crime, requiring officials to report clandestin­e migrants.

As a result, those who survive often treacherou­s journeys – at least 366 Ethiopian migrants drowned while crossing to Italy in October – often linger for months in makeshift immigratio­n centres and then disappear within Italy or elsewhere in Europe.

During the first 11 months of this year, 40 244 illegal migrants reached Italy by boat, almost four times as many as a year earlier, according to Save the Children.

The number living in Italy is not known with any precision, but the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t has estimated that, alongside the 5 million legal immigrants, there could be as many as 750 000 illegal ones.

Festival

One of the community’s oldest cultural initiative­s is the “African October” festival inaugurate­d 11 years ago in the northern city of Parma and now celebrated in Rome and Milan, showcasing African artists, writers, musicians and film-makers.

“The meeting between Africa and Italy is very important,” says festival founder Cleophas Adrien Dioma, who was born in Burkina Faso. “Culture is born out of such encounters.”

Komla-Ebri, who came to Italy in 1974, is a doctor in a hospital north of Milan and writes in his free time. This year his book Imbarazzis­mi – an Italian neologism merging the words “embarrasse­d” and “racism” – was printed by Edizioni SUI, a publisher owned by an Eritrean-born Italian.

In the book, Komla-Ebri writes about when his white Italian wife took a walk in the park and a stranger compliment­ed her for adopting two “African orphans”, or the time her friends asked her what he ate, “no doubt with the chilling thought of a menu of smoked snake or boiled elephant knees”.

“My irony is a defence mechanism,” he said.

The anecdotes capture the often naive quality of racism in Italy.

Yimer, 36, harvested grapes in the south and later handed out flyers to university students in Rome until he took a video production class offered to immigrants by a non-profit group.

His fifth documentar­y film – released this month – is about three Senegalese men recovering from racist attacks.

Titled Va Pensiero (www.vapensiero.org) after the chorus of an opera by Giuseppe Verdi about an immigrant’s nostalgia for home, the film follows the men as they try to come to terms with the hate and violence they endured.

The first man was stabbed and left for dead by a skinhead at a bus stop in Milan. Passersby ignored him for more than an hour. The other two were randomly shot by a radical right-wing thug who hunted down and murdered two other Senegalese men on the streets of Florence in 2011, and then committed suicide.

At an early screening of the film for possible distributo­rs, the reaction was that of having been “punched in the gut”, according to one representa­tive of the state-owned TV network, who suggested softening the tone.

Yimer and his Italian partners on the film, who have founded an associatio­n to collect the testimony of immigrants called the “Archive of Migrant Memories”, stood their ground.

“I’ve experience­d a lot of prejudice,” he said, “and I see a worrying trend in Italy where racism is becoming more ideologica­l.” – Reuters

 ??  ?? ABOVE: Filmmaker Dagmawi Yimer, of Ethiopia, poses next to a mural in Rome’s CBD. Yimer is making a career as a director of documentar­y films that specialise in telling the stories of immigrants like himself.
ABOVE: Filmmaker Dagmawi Yimer, of Ethiopia, poses next to a mural in Rome’s CBD. Yimer is making a career as a director of documentar­y films that specialise in telling the stories of immigrants like himself.
 ??  ?? LEFT: Dr Kossi Komla-Ebri of Togo works in a laboratory at the analysis department of Fatebenefr­atelli Hospital in Erba, northern Italy. KomlaEbri, who wrote and published six books, all in Italian, and Yimer are members of an expanding niche of...
LEFT: Dr Kossi Komla-Ebri of Togo works in a laboratory at the analysis department of Fatebenefr­atelli Hospital in Erba, northern Italy. KomlaEbri, who wrote and published six books, all in Italian, and Yimer are members of an expanding niche of...
 ??  ?? Italian Minister for Integratio­n Cecile Kyenge. Kyenge, who was born in the Democratic Republic of Congo to a tribal chief with 38 children and four wives, also plays a cultural role. ‘I’m not coloured, I’m black,’ she says, rejecting the phrase ‘ di...
Italian Minister for Integratio­n Cecile Kyenge. Kyenge, who was born in the Democratic Republic of Congo to a tribal chief with 38 children and four wives, also plays a cultural role. ‘I’m not coloured, I’m black,’ she says, rejecting the phrase ‘ di...

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