Italian town battles over ‘fighting’ saint

by Nicole Martinelli

A debate over war and religion in an Italian town has lead to the creation of a ‘pacifist’ statue of St. Michael, the archangel credited with defeating the devil.

City council members in Monza, 12 miles north of Milan, voted last year to spend 150,000 euro ($183,000 USD) for a new statue of St. Michael, or Michele as he is called in Italian, to grace the town’s main square.
The largely left-leaning council was, however, uncomfortable building a tribute to a fighting saint when Italian public opinion has been largely against the war in Iraq. And so St. Michael was commissioned without his usual attribute, a prominent sword.

The archangel found in Christian, Jewish and Muslim traditions is sometimes referred to as a “warrior-prince” for his role at the helm of celestial armies against wicked forces. Depicting saints with attributes is a common practice that dates back to when art was the only means of relating episodes of the bible to a largely illiterate community.

His ‘disarmament’ has led to wide protest, including one by Massimiliano Romeo, of the Lega Nord party, who rushed into city hall brandishing a plastic toy “Zorro” sword. Political opponents aren’t the only ones to take issue with the new statue; religious groups have taken the protest to the web arguing that the unarmed statue strips the saint of his significance.

The new, peaceful St. Michael was unveiled to the 700 Micheles and Michelas of Monza, namesakes of the saint, and the parachutists St. Michael also protects on Sept. 29. Petitioners, wearing t-shirts asking for the resignation of the mayor, were also out in force gathering signatures to add a sword and ‘correct’ the 3.8 meter-high(12 feet) bronze statue.

One local religious figure, says the debate over the sword, though far from over, misses the target. Monsignor Enrico Rossi reminds both sides that it is high time to brush up on iconography, pointing out that sculptor Benedetto Pietrogrande took his inspiration from an historic local fresco where the saint is empty-handed.?1999-2004 zoomata.com
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Italy says grape harvest: no grazie

The grape harvest in Italy this year, said to be a small but good vintage, may wilt on the vine because no one wants to do the work.

Sicilian mayor Calogero Trupiano predicts empty vineyards because of a labor shortage — a serious threaten to the Italian wine industry, accountable for more than 20 percent of worldwide wine production.

Granted, grape harvesting is no picnic. Workers rise at dawn to avoid the worst of the late-summer heat and spend a long day bending over vines with pruning shears and hauling heavy, grape-laden baskets for processing.

“I did it once, thinking it was an easy way to pick up extra money,” Marco Paoletti told zoomata. “Never again. It was grueling work. There were ten-hour days with only a break for bread and cheese, you need serious stamina.”

In recent years, fewer Italians have been willing or interested in the job and the immigrant labor force has stepped in where locals bowed out: no more, says the mayor. Trupiano fears the grapes may turn sour on the vine because despite quotas that help bring in foreign workers for field work, not even they are willing to spend 45 days in the fields to earn total wages of around 2,000EUR.

Italians are drinking less wine than ever — about half as much as they did in the 1950s — raising concern that a symbol of the country may go by the wayside. In an effort to raise an interest in dying traditions, last year a town near Naples held three days of back-to-basics lessons on the fall harvest, including a grape-stomping workshop for kids.?1999-2004 zoomata.com
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Related resources:
Ready to give grape picking a try? Get hooked up with the Italian branch of Worldwide Opportunities on Organic Farms (WOOF)….
www.wwoof.it

David Thorpe (Scalea, Calabria)

First Person: real life in Italy

Each month we introduce you to someone who has made the dream of picking up and moving to the Bel Paese a reality.
In their own words they share the good parts, the bad parts and the just plain absurd moments of day-to-day life in Italy.

ID Card: David Thorpe. I am English and work as a telecoms engineer in
Nottingham. At the moment I live in Nottingham, UK. However for one week in four I live in Scalea, Calabria. I am also the webmaster of www.scalea.info, a site in English aimed at helping people visit or move here. I live with my fiancee Melanie. I am 24 and she is 23. You can contact me at info@scalea.info

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B-movies get revenge at Venice Film Festival

by Nicole Martinelli
updated Sept. 1 @ 16:07

Director Quentin Tarantino says he owes a lot to Italian filmmakers, but he’s not talking about art-house greats Federico Fellini or Luchino Visconti.
He’ll pay respect to some unlikely cinema heroes at the Venice Film Festival with a retrospective called ‘Kings of the Bs,’ featuring over 20 films largely unknown to the public, Italian or otherwise.

The 61st edition of the world’s oldest film festival will showcase Fernando Di Leo, prolific writer/director/actor of films like “Death Commando” and “Murder Inferno.” Di Leo, who died in late 2003 without so much as an obit in the national papers, is one of “Kill Bill” director’s favorites. Other featured directors including Mario Bava, Umberto Lenzi, Sergio Sollima and Sergio Martino are more fortunate: they’ll be glorified as special guests during the festival.

B-movies all’italiana are decidedly back in fashion. Designer Miuccia Prada, whose ultra-hip Prada Foundation is a partner in the Tarantino effort, will fund a four-year continuation of the series called “The Secret History of Italian Film.”

Lesser lights of Italian cinema have long been a national guilty pleasure. The so-called erotic Italian comedies of the 1970s, for example, were rediscovered recently by mass audiences when Walter Veltroni, former Culture Minister, professed his admiration for Edwige Fenech, first lady of the genre. (Trailer for her cult favorite “Ubalda, All Naked and Warm”)
The return of the B-movie hasn’t always been without controversy. A series of “Nazi-porn” flicks from the 1970s
released as a supplement to cult-movie magazine Nocturno sparked debate on whether certain chapters of Italian filmmaking weren’t better forgotten.
Otherwise, this blast from the past has been unstoppable. DVDs have given these forgotten flicks a new lease on life, especially outside Italy.

“The DVD has really created a new market for what was previously considered just junk,” journalist and pop-culture observer Aldo Dalla Vecchia told zoomata.”Film buffs abroad were a lot more interested in them than the Italians were up until now.”

That may change if Tarantino’s B-revival is a success.?1999-2004 zoomata.com
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Related resources:
Dedicated to the best of the worst in Italian movies…
www.italiatrash.it
www.freeuniverse.it/cinema_trash.htm

Italy by Numbers: Summer Food Festivals

zoomata staff
2 million Italians participate in August food festivals
43% take place in southern Italy
18% take place in central Italy
29% dedicated to seasonal produce
Summer in Italy means “sagre” or fairs in celebration of local specialties — that’s just a one-letter difference between “sacred,” in Italian to give you an idea of how seriously food is taken here. And, while the food is taken seriously, the fests are casual, picnic-like affairs with communal tables and a band for dancing.
Many center around seasonal produce: the Eggplant Fair (Corigliano – Caserta province) or the Blueberry and Raspberry Fair (Trasaghis – Udine province – month of Aug.)
Though festivals centering around fish or cheese are half as common as those dedicated to meat, the mad-cow scare has shifted interest and crowds to meat-less fare.
Time-honored traditions involving meat (like the donkey stew fair in Calliano -Aosta province – August 25) probably won’t boast a huge turnout but if you can stomach the dish it may be a good way to feel like a local for a day.
To stick with pasta, try the Pappardelle Fair in Montespertoli (province of Florence Aug. 24 – Sept. 3).
Best way to find a food fete in Italy? Keep an eye out for the posters announcing “sagra” when on the road and a short deviation may make for a memorable meal. ?1999-2004 zoomata.com
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Related resources:
http://www.whatsonwhen.com
Searchable database for events in Italy, including food fairs…

Italians protest ‘beastly’ traditions after Palio race death

by Nicole Martinelli
posted Aug 17 @8:33 a.m.

A horse died after breaking its neck and getting trampled by four horses in Siena’s famous Palio race, reopening debate about Italy’s celebrations involving animals. The bareback race in Tuscany, dating back nearly 350 years, is arguably the best-known tradition centering around animals it is by no means the only one celebrated each year by Italians.

The Palio draws crowds of between 30,000 and 40,000 every year — but it also inevitably draws blood, opponents say. Animal rights’ groups estimate 50 horses have died over the last 20 years. In last year’s race two horses died.
The palio incident is the latest clash between Italian traditions and modern sensibilities. Towns throughout the Bel Paese use animals for an estimated 1,000 traditional rites yearly — including donkeys, oxen, turkeys, doves, snakes, pigs, geese, cows, frogs — and animal rights’ groups are trying to put a stop to it.

Florence, for example, has already responded to pressure by replacing live animals in both the Cricket Festival and the Scoppio del Carro, where a dove used to be sent speeding into the cathedral tied to a lit rocket. A similar ritual takes place every year in the Umbrian town of Orvieto, where protests have become an integral part of the Palombella Festival for Pentecost.

“It’s not a celebration any more but a battlefield,” said journalist Daniele Di Loreto. “I have the suspicion that more people show up for the fighting than the Palombella — like car races, it’s much more exciting if there’s an accident.”

The bone of contention: a live dove, symbolizing the holy spirit, is tied to the center of a wheel of fireworks and placed on a steel cable. The short, albeit not very peaceful trip for the dove involves gliding down 300 meters with fireworks exploding all around. End of the line is the sacristy of the 13th-century cathedral — if fallout from the fireworks lights flames on the heads of the Virgin and Apostles it’s a good omen for the coming year. The dove, shaken but usually still alive and unharmed, is then removed from the contraption.

Local bishop Lucio Decio Grandoni, main opponent of the animal rights groups, maintains the dove doesn’t suffer. Following tradition, after the wild ride, the bird is given to a bride and groom to keep — and at least doesn’t risk ending up dinner. As a concession, the dove won’t be tied to the wheel anymore but placed in a glass box. For now, it looks like the Palombella Festival will continue as usual: the local court archived a formal complaint by protesters after last year’s celebrations.

For Italy’s Antivivisection League, these traditions may date back centuries but their treatment of animals has no place in modern society.

“These are sacred-profane rituals, usually in honor of some local saint or Madonna, linked to primitive fears of famine, epidemics,” said Mauro Bottigelli of LAV. “But no holy spirit or expression of sincere devotion gives people the right to crucify a dove in Orvieto or sacrifice an ox in Roccavaldina or slit the throat of goats in San Luca.”

For religious rites, groups advocate substituting the animal with a stand-in papier-m?ch? version. Animal rights groups lobby hard to ban altogether various races and contests involving animals. Given the number of these horse-and-pony shows, it may take some time — protests didn’t stop the recent turkey race in the province of Palermo but the geese contest in Como, part of medieval celebrations featuring jousting contests and boat races, won’t take place this year in September. ?1999-2004 zoomata.com
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David N. Welton (Padua)

First Person: Real Life In Italy

Each month we introduce you to someone who has made the dream of picking up and moving to the Bel Paese a reality. In their own words they share the good parts, the bad parts and the just plain absurd moments of day-to-day life in Italy.

Looking to move to Italy? Try the reader-recommended Survivor Package

ID Card:
David N. Welton, programmer/consultant specializing in Linux, Apache and open source software, have been in Italy on and off since 1995. I’m from the US, 28, and live with my girlfriend, Ilenia.
You can find more about me & my business at http://dedasys.com/ and a collection of anecdotes about life here at http://blog.therealitaly.com/. Continue reading

Technology: Italians keep an eye on the ball

by Nicole Martinelli
posted August 3 @ 16:58

Perhaps the most difficult rule to call correctly in the sports world is soccer’s offside. Leave it to the Italians?who have complained about more than their fair share of dodgy calls?to dive into solving the problem. Experts at Italy’s National Research Council are developing a computer-based system that could change the way the game is judged.

Here’s how it would work: a camera installed on the sideline at midfield would offer a 180-degree view of the field. The camera’s footage would be processed by a computer capable of distinguishing not only each player’s position on the field, but also that of the ball in order to determine if a player is offside. At the moment of infringement, the machine will then wirelessly signal the referee.

Why does a sport require so much brain power?
Follow if you can: the offside rule states that a player for Team A, usually a forward, can’t be closer to the goal than Team B’s last defender when a Team A player touches the ball toward the goal. Judging offside is not an easy matter, even for professionals. Soccer authorities created training videos for referees to help them make more accurate decisions and simplified rules but arguments about offside calls still abound.

“Referees make mistakes about 50% of the time, no matter how good they are. To work, our system would have to vastly improve that,” says researcher Archangelo Distante, 59, himself once an amateur soccer player. “Humans don’t have eyes in the back of their heads, but the computer will have to be capable of judgment, not picking up false offsides and stopping play. It’s a real challenge.”

The system?which the team hopes to complete by next year?would be a blessing to any team that has ever been on the receiving end of a bad call. Still, although domestic leagues around the world may well adopt the technology, not everyone is keen on the idea. Football is a game played by humans that should be judged by humans, says a FIFA spokesperson. Fair enough. The soccer clubs, however, are interested enough in bringing computers to the field to fund the research, Serie-A’s Udinese is behind the latest effort. Other projects, based on more intrusive and expensive wireless technology, have also been presented to the Italian soccer league recently. If this new technology takes off, FIFA’s referees may find themselves facing even more cries of foul than they do now. ?1999-2004 zoomata.com
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Miss Chubby Contest: Outweighing Italy’s Beauty Myth

zoomata staff
posted July 26 @ 14:43

Giovanna Guidoni, who tipped the scales at 416 pounds to win Italy’s national Miss Chubby Contest, confirms that fat is beautiful.

Guidoni, who fuels her passion for food as part owner of a restaurant, says she wouldn’t lose an ounce and hopes to change the stereotype of obese people as social outcasts. “I’m not ashamed to be seen at the beach,” Guidoni says.

The 16th annual edition of Miss Cicciona (Chubby) held in Tuscany had a total of 40 women over 220 pounds competing for the title. Participants engage in a hefty group dinner before weighing in for the contest. (Guidoni on the scales here) Fabio Teseo, 449 pounds, won the title of Mr. Ciccione. His wife Mirella — the two met in a medical clinic for the obese — also competed but did not come home with a sash.

Contest creator Gianfranco Lazzereschi, who formerly worked in the fashion industry, says the biggest obstacle was convincing the public it wasn’t meant to insult the obese. A naturally slim Lazzereschi, in one photo dwarfed by the winners, does seem to be making a fat profit from the publicity, however.

Contestants presented themselves in front of an estimated crowd of 5,000 in clothes of their choice, ranging from elegant evening wear to bathing suits; the talent portion of the evening included singing, dancing and strip tease. This year’s bountiful beauty contest was hosted by Platinette, Italy’s popular and generously upholstered drag queen, recently in the spotlight for a controversial TV show, “Scalpel!” specialized in extreme makeovers via plastic surgery.

Though the contest gains media attention with each passing year, most Italians would rather undergo surgery than be obese – spending some $22 million USD yearly for surgery to shave off extra pounds. At around 15% of men and 21% of women, Italians are half as obese as U.S. counterparts. ?1999-2004 zoomata.com
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Noisy sex? Only in certain hours, Italian court rules

feet

An Italian couple has been ordered to have sex only in the daytime after the man’s wails of ecstasy provoked complaints from neighbors. Retirees next door, who claimed the grunts equaled decibel levels of a jackhammer, will now be able to sleep soundly after a Rome judge imposed a sex ban from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m. on a married couple.

This is the third case of roof-raising sex to hit Italian courts in a year; all three judges have imposed a blackout on sonorous love making at night.

What’s all the ruckus about?

Italy has the fifth-highest population density in Europe and most of those circa 60 million people live in apartment buildings.
Regulations on noise, however, are stuck in a post-war time warp. The fine for too many decibels in an apartment building is 100 lire, about 5 cents in euro (as set out in 1942, during Fascist rule) and unhappy neighbors must go through an already overloaded court system to get justice.
Politicians have proposed bills to update fines and develop mediation centers for out-of-court settlements, but have not reached an agreement.

In the meantime there are 4.7 million pending cases of apartment-building spats, most of them about noise, frequently sex noise — especially during the hot summer months when Italians sleep — or try to — with the windows open.

Identified only as ‘Signora Carmen,’ the woman in the Rome case told Italian media, “This is absurd, you can’t limit passion. I think the neighbors are just jealous. I guess we’ll go back to having sex in the car and hope we don’t get arrested for obscene acts in public.”

Image used with a CC-license, thanks Emily’s mind.