The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

- Photos and text from wire services

Gucci donates scrap fabric to migrant dressmakin­g shop

ROME » Nigerian women who were trafficked to Italy to work as prostitute­s have found work in a handbag and dressmakin­g shop that recently received some top-notch raw materials: 4,000 meters (4,374 yards) of leftover fabric from Gucci.

The initiative was announced Wednesday in Rome, complete with a fashion show by the Nigerian dressmaker­s and a group of Italian design students who helped teach them to sketch and sew the designs, which mix Gucci silks, satins and cotton with bright African prints.

Sister Rita Giaretta, who runs a home for rescued migrants in the southern city of Caserta, said the aim of the project was to give the women dignified work so they aren’t reliant on handouts.

“Giving them their dignity means putting them back on their feet and believing in themselves and not seeing themselves only as in a situation of need,” Giaretta said.

The New Hope tailoring cooperativ­e, which has a storefront shop in Caserta, was born in 2004 as a project affiliated with Giaretta’s residence and until now made mostly bags and accessorie­s.

CBS’ Bill Whitaker tells inmate grads to seize their place

OSSINING, N.Y. » CBS News’ Bill Whitaker has spoken at college commenceme­nts before, but never at one where most graduates weren’t free to leave with their families.

Whitaker, who has done several stories on criminal justice in four years at “60 Minutes,” urged 44 men who earned college degrees Wednesday while inmates at New York’s Sing Sing state prison to go “seize your place in the universe” with what they’ve learned.

Sing Sing sits on the banks of the Hudson River 30 miles north of New York City, the prison for which the phrases “up the river” and “The Big House” were coined. For two decades it has offered inmates the chance to earn a degree through Mercy College, and Wednesday’s class was the largest ever.

Whitaker has reported on conditions for the mentally ill in New York’s Rikers Island, about the nation’s busiest death row in Texas, on the different correction­al approaches in the United States and Germany, and a wrongfully convicted man who served 30 years in a Louisiana before he was released with a $20 gift card. He said he relished the chance to speak to the types of people he reported on.

“You were kind of expecting Forest Whitaker, right?” the CBS newsman said in reference to the Oscar-winning actor.

Whitaker, who is black, said the nation’s prison system is “filled with people who look like you and me and your families.” Often, they’re treated unfairly and are at the mercy of politician­s fearful of being seen as soft on crime. Only a handful of Wednesday’s graduates were not black or Hispanic.

That motivated Whitaker to tell the story of Glenn Ford, who died shortly after being released from prison in Louisiana, he said.

Whitaker said he was struck by a German prison official’s statement that if inmates are treated like enemies, they become the enemy. At the prison he visited in Germany, inmates are given keys to their own cells, prompting the head of the Sing Sing college degree program to joke to the warden about trying it there.

 ?? ANTONIO CALANNI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? People walk in front of Gucci shop in MonteNapol­eone street in Milan, Italy.
ANTONIO CALANNI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE People walk in front of Gucci shop in MonteNapol­eone street in Milan, Italy.

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