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The complex and often contradictory story of what happened to the Jewish population in Italy during World War II is little known to the American public. Elizabeth Bettina’s "It happened in Italy, Untold Stories of How People of Italy Defied the Horrors of the Holocaust" belongs to the category of non academic attempts . Unfortunately it falls short on most accounts
ShareAs the generation of Holocaust survivors and first hand witnesses is dying off, the public hunger for information tends to welcome all efforts to reconstruct facts, whether by historians, personal narratives, even attempts by non professionals. The complex and often contradictory story of what happened to the Jewish population in Italy during World War II is little known to the American public. Important scholarly publications don't reach the general public with regularity. Elizabeth Bettina’s It happened in Italy, Untold Stories of How People of Italy Defied the Horrors of the Holocaust belongs to the category of non academic attempts . Unfortunately it falls short on most accounts.
Ms. Bettina is an Italian American Catholic who works in marketing. Her family came originally from the town of Campagna, (Salerno) in Southern Italy. The author spent her vacations there visiting her extended family. For years no one ever spoke to her about what had happened in the town during World War II, nor about the presence of a Jewish detention camp. One day she accidentally stumbled upon a photograph from Campagna in the 1940's. It pictured a group of locals posing in front of the Church of San Bartolomeo, including a policeman, the Bishop and a rabbi. This picture triggered Bettina’s investigations, carried out with the help of Professor Vincent Marmorale Vice President of of the Holocaust Memorial Committee of Long Beach NY. Meetings with former internees from Campagna followed, and so began the journey which provides the narrative of her book. As she learned more about the detention camps in Campagna and Ferramonti and met survivors who had fled to the United States after the war, the author felt compelled to tell their stories. The book is a history of her induction into the history of the Holocaust. She befriended a few of them and arranged for some to return to Italy for a visit. Bettina proceeds in her investigation with the dogged determination of an oral historian, the resourcefulness of Indiana Jones and the enthusiasm of a neophyte. As word spread about her research into the heart -warming story of Southern Italians saving Jewish refugees, she was granted access to the highest echelons of the Vatican. This progression led to personal visits with Cardinal Kasper, Cardinal Ruini and culminated with a group audience, with Pope Benedict VXI. The surprising silence over how these survivors were persuaded to go back to Italy is saddled with another more disquieting silence: how and why these survivors ended up being granted such an audience. Not once does the author wonder why her story, particularly the role of the Bishop of Campagna, was so readily embraced by the Vatican.
Bettina’s reliance on Jewish survivors to support her tendentious argument appears to be an unwitting part of a larger orchestrated effort to pave the way toward the controversial canonization of Pope Pius XII. Not surprisingly the book is printed by Thomas Nelson, a publisher of Christian books, religious videos and software.
It Happened in Italy, weaves a few threads of anecdotal micro histories about the survival of foreign Jews, mostly in two Italian detention camps: Campagna (Salerno) and Ferramonti di Tarsia (Cosenza) without the context of the larger narrative of Jewish persecution in Italy.
On June 18th, during a presentation of the book at the Italian Consulate in in New York, Ms. Bettina and Mr. Marmorale, referring to the Holocaust, reported “You all heard about the horrors, we are telling you the good part of the story, the one that contains hope and light at the end of the tunnel”. If the truth of what happened in Italy, in all it’s ambiguous complexity, is to emerge, it is time to move beyond the “good stories” as opposed to the “horrifying ones” and understand that they are inseparable. Taken out of context, even true stories of Italian compassion become merely simplifications, an assortment of "feel good" tales.
Bettina fails to inform us about what was happening at the time to the large majority of Jews in Italy and seems completely unaware of the fact that after September 1943 the situation in Northern and Central Italy occupied by German forces, was radically different from the South, already liberated by the Allies. Though internees in the camps she describes might have enjoyed compassionate treatment, their survival was mostly a consequence of their geographical location. The Jews who were interned in camps in the Center and North, were also initially treated with some dignity, yet later the Fascist authorities did nothing to prevent their deportation to Auschwitz.
With respect to the roughly 8000 Jews deported from Italy to Nazi concentration camps, the subtitle “How the People of Italy Defied the Horrors of the Holocaust” is both thoroughly inaccurate and morally offensive. Bulgarians protected and saved their Jews by not allowing any to be deported. Italians simply did not.
To understand how Jews were saved by internment in Campagna one must bear in mind at a minimum a few facts and chronology, all omitted in the book. By the fall of 1936 Mussolini had adopted state anti-semitism. In March 1937 il Duce denounced Zionism as an instrument of British domination and Fascist Italy “brandished the sword of Islam”. Throughout 1937-38 the national press carried out an inflammatory anti Jewish campaign culminating with the “manifesto della Razza” and the proclamation of racial laws. Paradoxically, despite its anti-semitic legislation, Italy allowed in Jewish refugees from other countries until 1939. However from the autum of 1938 the Fascists had reversed their policy and ordered the expulsion of all foreign Jews. When Italy declared war, in June 1940, most foreign Jews were already interned. Italian soldiers found themselves occupying territories with significant Jewish populations. Despite a twenty month Nazi occupation “only” about 18% of the Jews (Italian and foreign) present in Italy were deported. Occasionally Jews were hidden and helped by locals. It is in this very small category that the book on review attempts to find its locus.
While discussing events which occurred to foreign Jews who had found refuge in Italy, Bettina completely ignores the fate of Italian Jews and makes no reference to the thousands of Italians who freely denounced their fellow citizens of a different religion. Beginning with the racial laws of 1938 Italian Jews were heavily discriminated against, denied basic civil rights, expelled from schools, government and industry. All of which eased the way for later arrests often carried out by Italian fascists and deportation by the Germans. The Italian military did not surrender Jews to the Nazis in Croatia, Slovenia, Dalmatia, Greece and later in Russia. The grateful testimonies of the Jews under Italian rule gradually started the myth of Italiani brava gente. Yet this alleged national trait of benevolence was not applied uniformly or consistently. The treatment of Italian Jews within Italy is but one example; the conquered people of Abyssinia, Libya and Albania can attest to a different story tainted by gratuitous brutality.
From 1938 till 1945 Italian Jewish resistance groups mobilized to help Jews arriving from abroad. The most effective was Delasem (Delegazione di Assistenza agli Emigranti Ebrei), which worked closely with the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee. Delasem (never mentioned by Bettina), provided legal assistance, false documents, food and shelter to thousands of European Jewish refugees who had managed to reach Italian territory.
The book's two geographical focal points are the city of Fiume, located on the Adriatic Coast in the North East, and the town of Campagna, 852 miles away, in the South. Fiume (today the Croatian city Rejeka) had been annexed by Italy in 1924 and became a major point of entry for foreign Jews. Campagna, on the other hand, was a rural center,at the periphery of political and military activities.
Bettina’s story concentrates on the relationship and respective roles of two main characters perceived as rescuers of Jewish lives: Giovanni Palatucci, a high police official (Questore) of Fiume and his uncle Giuseppe Maria Palatucci, the Bishop of Campagna.
Yet she provides insufficient background about these two complex characters, both crucial to her narrative and to revisionist accounts of the role of the Church during the Holocaust.
It is deeply disturbing that after arranging for return trips to Campagna for a few survivors, Bettina zealously insists on parading them to high Church officials.
The author misguidedly equates the establishment of detention camps in Southern Italy with the creation of safe havens for the Jews. More specifically the narrative implies that the Campagna internment camp was set up by Bishop Palatucci in order to provide shelter for the Jews sent by his nephew. In reality Campagna, like all the other 39 internment camps, had been set up by the Italian Ministry of Interior, and though some of its internees had been sent from Fiume, this accounted only for a small percentage of its population.
The Italian researcher Marco Coslovich, author of Giovanni Palatucci. Una giusta memoria, Mephite, 2008 clarifies: “In 1940 Palatucci was only commisario di pubblica sicurezza” - a police official in Fiume - “and certainly was not in charge of deciding which Jewish refugees were sent to Campagna or any other camp. He became Questore, only in the fall of 1943, by which time it was no longer the possible to travel between Allied and German occupied areas such as Campagna and Fiume.”
Bettina’s description of Giovanni Palatucci is at best sketchy. The wealth of published material on the Questore, honored by the Yad Vashem Holocaust Memorial in 1990 as one of the Righteous Among the Nations goes unmentioned.
Bettina never discloses that Bishop Palatucci’s initial interest in the refugees in the improvised camp of Campagna had probably more to do with ministering to the sizable number of Jews who had converted to Catholicism in a desperate attempt to save themselves. Similarly, in 1941, Father Callisto Lopinot, a Capuchin friar, was sent by the Vatican to Ferramonti to tend to the spiritual needs of 85 - among the 1440 interned Jews - who had converted to Catholicism. For Marco Coslovich” it is ludicrous to imply that Bishop Palatucci had a role in conceiving the Internment camp in Campagna. On the contrary there is a letter dated April in 1942 to his superiors in Rome in which the Bishop specifically requests the closing of the camp. His tone is totally at odds with his alleged benevolence toward the Jews ”
According to the respected scholar Susan Zuccotti: “The Palatucci story has been a subject of enormous confusion, in part because of the scarcity and unreliability of the sources. Further confusion stems from Three Popes and the Jews ,1967 by Pinchas Lapide. The author, an Israeli diplomat, completely garbled the Palatucci story while providing incomplete and deceptive accounts of Pius XII’s alleged actions in favor of the Jews. While any historian can pick out mistakes on every page of Lapide’s work, everyone gave credence to the book based on
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| Cover. "It Happened in Italy: Untold Stories of How the People of Italy Defied the Horrors of the Holocaust" by Elizabeth Bettina |
Strange admiration with
Strange admiration with nazism? "The old good days " in schools and the media? Wow, Adai Goldberg, I can almost feel the bite of your absurd comment. After only a couple of years in Italy, your knowledge of the language must be very, very bad. Really, you don't know what you are talking about.
It's a puzzlement!
How can you so cavalierly brush aside the testimonials of survivors, anecdotal testimonies though they be, but supported by the weight of numbers? Eighty percent of the Jewish population of Italy survived. That's a fact. Why denigrate that history? What purpose does it serve? Why are you choosing to disregard the difference between the people and the government? Didn't Stille's portrayals in "Benevolence And Betrayal", succeed in explaining to you the complexity of the socio-political environment? Have you read Arieti's "The Parnas"? And what do you make of Segre's "Memoirs Of A Fortunate Jew"? Will you belittle those accounts too? Do you think it's worthwhile to document the stories of the survivors, or do you think they're irrelevant? What valuable information will you offer to the upcoming documentary?
Brava Gente article
Wow, I can almost feel the bite of your commentary. Yet, I agree with your opinion of it being inaccurate and somewhat offensive presentation of Italian Benevolence towards the Jews during that time period. I have been a resident of Livorno for the past couple of years and eerily, there is a strange admiration and preoccupation with Nazism. I have heard from many who believe that Italia was nothing more than unwilling participants. That said, it would seem as if the general behavior would be to treat that particular time period with contempt. Yet, in schools, and the media, one gets the impression as if it were, "the good old days." Great commentary!
Southern Italians Often Defied the Church and Government
As Barzini described Southern Italian sensibility, it was often in defiance of The Church, The Pope, and the government, and not prone to rally around ANY flag. I think the story is complex, and though I agree that The Church is culpable and was corrupt in compliance with the Nazi elements that set up and ran the camps in Italy, that does not diminish the efforts of the people who who defied oppressors and did what they could to save Jews. I agree with the commentator above who said:
"Eighty percent of the Jewish population of Italy survived. That's a fact. Why denigrate that history? What purpose does it serve? Why are you choosing to disregard the difference between the people and the government? [And, I would add The Church?] Didn't Stille's portrayals in "Benevolence And Betrayal", succeed in explaining to you the complexity of the socio-political environment? Have you read Arieti's "The Parnas"? And what do you make of Segre's "Memoirs Of A Fortunate Jew"? Will you belittle those accounts too? Do you think it's worthwhile to document the stories of the survivors, or do you think they're irrelevant?"
It was a complex situation, but there is no doubt in any true historians mind that a majority of Italians loathed Mussolini's sell out to the Nazi powers, and that many were in the camps as AWOL soldiers who defied the Nazi military, and that many helped survivors, especially in the Mezzogiorno where defiance of the Pope's Kingdom was always rampant because of the corruption of The Church and its oppressive ways toward Southern Italians throughout history.
I come from a line of Southern Italian Humanists who defied The Church and named their sons after Galileo, The Father of Science, who was persecuted by the backward Church, for telling the truth of scientific phenomenon. The Church's corruption is rampant throughout history and stinks to high heaven to this day. It cannot be denied, and it continued in the period of the reign of German Nazism. There is an old saying, "Christianity is one thing, Christiandom-dumb-dumb another!" It applies to this story. The people and some individual priests or a bishop here or there, was one thing, The Church at large, another.
The Church is certainly culpable in collaborating with the Nazi powers and bowing to them, and Canonization of Popes is nonsense, in any case. BUT, the Italian people, particularly of the Mezzogiorno were another. It's truly a complex story, but let's not malign the efforts of la gente! And let me add that my mother was a Polish-Jewish War Orphan and my father a Puglese, Greek Albanian Italian. Perhaps, I was one of the first women with an Italian name to be widely published in the mainstream of American literature, because I was NOT raised Catholic, thank heaven!--but taught to be in awe of truth, science, and respect for humanity against all dogma, and not be a follower. Do we need to be reminded of the Inquisition? We can proudly salute those who defied the Nazi powers in Italy and The Church and Pope, to save Jews, regardless of their numbers. That 8O % of Italian Jews survived Hitler and Mussolini is proof enough that many Italians defied the Nazi government and The corrupt Church! Viva la gente, especially those who resist corruption and know what compassion is!