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ITALIAN HISTORY

Foibe massacres: What is Italy commemorating on Saturday?

Italy will on Saturday mark its 20th memorial day for the World War II massacres of thousands of Italians by Yugoslav resistance fighters, a tragedy which members of the current government are accused of misrepresenting.

Foibe massacres: What is Italy commemorating on Saturday?
Members of Italian far-right group Casapound in Milan hold torches during the Day of Remembrance of the martyrs of the Foibe Istriane. (Photo by MARCO BERTORELLO / AFP)

Since 2004, February 10th has been a national day to remember the so-called Foibe killings, when thousands of soldiers and civil servants working in what had been Fascist Italy were executed by Tito’s partisans, their bodies thrown into sinkholes.

But Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s hard-right government has particularly embraced the event, last week announcing a new Rome museum dedicated to the victims.

The day is a chance “to pay homage to the memory of those who died at the hands of the communists”, said Ignazio La Russa, Senate speaker and co-founder
of Meloni’s post-fascist Brothers of Italy party.

Not everyone shares the interpretation of La Russa – notorious for collecting busts of the late Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini – of what was in fact two rounds of killings, followed by the mass flight of Italian speakers from what became Yugoslavia, then Slovenia and Croatia.

The first massacre came in 1943, after Nazi Germany’s ally Italy signed an armistice with the US and Britain.

READ ALSO: Italian film tells uncomfortable story of partisan WWII massacres

Historian Eric Gobetti said it was “a consequence of violence committed by the Italian Fascists against the Yugoslav national minority, Slovenians and Croats, who after the capitulation of Italy, took revenge”.

The reprisals were “not against all Italians but some Italians who represented the Fascist state”, Gobetti, an author of a book on the Foibe, told AFP.

The second massacre in 1945, after the end of the war, was more akin to a “settling of accounts” between the Yugoslav forces who freed the territory and those who fought alongside the Nazis, as was also seen in France, he said.

“The victims were essentially collaborators with the Germans, civilians but above all military,” Gobetti said.

Whereas the prevailing narrative in Italy is that the Italians were wholly innocent victims, Gobetti and other historians emphasise how the Fascist regime abused minorities in the region.

‘Climate of violence’

The experts also contest the numbers of people who died in Foibe, named after the Italian word for sinkholes into which the victims were thrown, sometimes alive.

Gobetti said a “maximum of 5,000” people were killed, while the Federesuli, an Italian association representing the exiles of the time, claims a number between 6,000 and 10,000.

A similar divergence exists in estimates of how many people were displaced after the post-war border changes, when Italy lost territories acquired in World War I.

READ ALSO: Six lesser-known World War II sites to visit in Italy

Palazzo Chigi in Rome is illuminated with the colours of the Italian flag and the words ‘I remember’ on February 10, 2023, to mark the national memorial day for the victims of the Foibe. The date has been given increasing importance under Meloni’s government. (Photo by Andreas SOLARO / AFP)

For historians, around 250,000 people were exiled, whereas for the Federesuli, it was 350,000.

“Some 90 percent of the native Italian community left because of the climate of violence imposed by Tito’s communist regime”, finding themselves living in refugee camps set up by Italy, said Lorenzo Salimbeni, a spokesman for Federesuli.

Fascist nostalgia

“Politicians nostalgic for Fascism have always exploited this story to present themselves as victims of WWII instead of executioners, when in fact
the Italian Fascists contributed to starting the war,” said Gobetti.

This narrative was enshrined in the 2004 law setting up the national memorial day, passed under the government of Silvio Berlusconi, but backed by opposition parties, and taken up by the media.

In this context, “anyone who remembers the actual historic facts is considered to be denying the Foibe” – while in some debates, the massacres are put on the same level as the Holocaust, Gobetti said.

Salimbeni of the exiles’ association welcomed news of the new museum to the Foibe, which he said followed work of previous governments “of left and right”.

But this reinterpretation of history in Italy has sparked outrage among its neighbours.

In 2019, Slovenia accused Rome of “unprecedented historical revisionism” over the massacres.

It was speaking after then-Interior Minister Matteo Salvini, now Meloni’s deputy prime minister, compared the children who died in the Foibe to those who died at Auschwitz.

“Fascism was a fact and its objective was destroying the Slovenian people,” Slovenia’s then-premier Marjan Sarec said.

By AFP’s Gildas Le Roux

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POLITICS

Meloni, Italy opposition head to hold unprecendented debate

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni will spar with main opposition party leader Elly Schlein in an unprecedented debate on May 23 ahead of the European elections.

Meloni, Italy opposition head to hold unprecendented debate

The debate — the first ever in Italy between a sitting prime minister and the head of the opposition — will be hosted on Rai1, the flagship station of the state broadcaster.

Meloni, head of the Brothers of Italy party, has been in power since October 2022 as part of a coalition with other right-wing parties.

Partly in response to losing that year’s election, Schlein was elected to lead the opposition centre-left Democratic Party (PD) in March 2023.

Both of them are at the top of their party’s lists for the June 8-9 European elections.

Neither will take their seats in the European Parliament however with Meloni planning to stay on as prime minister and Schlein preferring to remain a member of the Italian chamber of deputies.

Recent polls put Brothers of Italy at 27 percent in the European vote and the PD at 20 percent.

Apart from both being the first women in their respective positions, the two are polar opposites.

Meloni, 46, is a skilled orator with a modest suburban background. Her party stresses Italy’s Christian roots and has put the fight against immigration on top of its agenda.

Schlein, 39, who is in a couple with another woman, comes from an academic family and also has US and Swiss nationality. She is less comfortable with public speaking than her rival.

Meloni’s party is running on a campaign slogan of “Italy is changing Europe” while Schlein has focused on problems with Italy’s healthcare system.

Negotiations over organising the debate were arduous, both teams said.

Schlein has for months accused the right-wing governing coalition of interfering with coverage at Rai, which she says has become a “government megaphone”.

Italian leaders have long been accused of meddling with Rai, but insiders say intrusions have become more pronounced under Meloni.

Rai journalists have told AFP that investigative reporters have been pushed aside, pro-government commentators promoted, and programmes critical of members of the government cancelled or watered-down.

“I have worked at Rai for 20 years but I have never felt such pressure or seen as much censorship,” Enrica Agostini, a journalist at Rai News, told the Foreign Press Association in Rome.

Some Rai journalists held a 24-hour strike this week, though most programming continued as usual thanks to a union more favourable to the government not joining.

“TeleMeloni is the fruit of imagination of the left”, Brothers of Italy said this week on X.

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