Society / Remembrance Day 2010 in New York
Society / Remembrance Day 2010 in New York

January 27, 2010. Natalia Indrimi, Director of the Primo Levi Center in New York, introduces us the two topics on which Remembrance Day will focus this year: the Jewish Community of Rome and Civilian Internment in Fascist Italy
The Giornata della Memoria was established by the Italian Parliament on July 11 2000. Since that moment, every year all the Italian institutions located in New York collaborate to organize a full calendar of events to commemorate this historic milestone. The main one will take place on January 27 (9 am - 4 pm) outside of the Consulate General of Italy (690 Park Avenue, NYC), and will consist in the reading of all the names of the Jewish victims of Fascism. It is the only outdoors initiative organized in the city for the occasion.
i-Italy interviewed Natalia Indrimi, Director of the Primo Levi Center in New York, who introduced us to the main characteristics of Remembrance Day 2010, and explained the meaning of this commemoration after more than 60 years from the fall of Fascist dictatorship in Italy
Once again all the Italian institutions have collaborated to organize a full calendar of events to commemorate Remembrance Day. What are this year's topics?
This year we will discuss two topics: the history of the Jewish community of Rome and civilian internment in Fascist Italy.
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| Jewish Kids in the Concentration Camp of Arbe, Dalmatia |
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| The Former Concentration Camp of Visco, Italy |
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| Natalia Indrimi |
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| The Ghetto of Rome |
January 27, 9:00 am - 4:00 pm
READING OF THE NAMES
Consulate General of Italy
Park Avenue at 68th Street
Reading of the names of the Jews deported from Italy and the Italian territories
RSVP: memoria@primolevicenter.org
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January 27-February 15
ART & MEMORY: INSTALLATION BY JACK SAL
Italian Cultural Institute
686 Park Avenue, NYC
De/Portees
A multi screen installation by Jack Sal
in memory of the Italian Deportees.
January 27, 6:00 pm
READING TESTIMONIES
Center for Jewish History
15 West 16th Street, NYC
Reading from "Il Libro della Shoah Italiana"
Edited by Marcello Pezzetti
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January 31, 1:30 film; 3:30 discussion
MUSSOLINI'S CAMPS: THE INTERNMENT OF JEWISH CIVILIANS IN FASCIST ITALY
Museum of Jewish Heritage
36 Battery Place, NYC.
Film Screening: The Jews of Fossoli
Directed by Ruggero Gabbai (Italy, 2006, 50 minutes, Italian w/English sbt.)
Alessandro Cassin (journalist) in conversation with Carlo Spartaco Capogreco (historian, author of The Duce's Camps), Doris Schechter, hidden as a child with her family in Italy.
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February 1, 6:00 pm
FORCED CONVERSIONS IN PAPAL ROME
NYU Casa Italiana Zerilli Marimò
24 West 12th Street, NYC
Film screening: Confortorio
Directed by Paolo Benvenuti, (Italy, 1992, 90 min. Italian w/English subtitles).
Based on a true story, Confortorio narrates the vicissitudes of two young Roman Jews who are imprisoned under the accusation of theft during the pontificate of Clement XII, in 1736. The night before their execution, the fathers of the Confraternita of San Giovanni Decollato try to force them to embrace Christianity.
February 2, 6:30 pm
OCTOBER 16th, 1943: THE DEPORTATION OF THE JEWS OF ROME
JCC Manhattan
334 Amsterdam Avenue, NYC
Film Screening: "Una Storia Romana"
This is the most recent document and probably one of the last testimonies of the round up of the Ghetto of Rome. Journalist and writer Pupa Garribba interviews Enrica Sermoneta, who, as a young girl, fortuitously escaped deportation amidst generosity and betrayal. Told in a direct and unconventional style, filtered through the lens of 67 years of debate on the "black Saturday," the story raises old dilemmas and new questions on those days and ours. A post-screening discussion with Pupa Garribba will follow.
An Interview with Enrica Sermoneta
Directed by Pupa Garribba
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February 2, 6:30 pm
OCTOBER 16th, 1943: THE DEPORTATION OF THE JEWS OF ROME
Museum of Jewish Heritage
36 Battery Place, NYC
Film Screening: The Gold of Rome
By Carlo Lizzani (1961, 110 min, Italian w/English sbt)
The Gold of Rome is the first filmic representation of the story of the German blackmail and eventual deportation of the Jews of Rome. Lizzani's rendition of situations and characters and his depiction of rituals and places illuminates the life and spirit of Roman Jewry, setting this semi-fictionalize document apart from other Holocaust films. With a a touch of sentimentality and a genuine understanding of the nuances of the story, The Gold of Rome delves into the dilemmas, conflicts, and cultural assumptions that lead the Jews of Rome to fall in what turned out to be a fatal trap.
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February 16, 5:00 pm
THE GHETTO OF ROME
Italian Academy at Columbia University
1161 Amsterdam Avenue, NYC
Lecture: The Ghetto of Rome
Kenneth Stow (University of Haifa)
Jews have been residents of Rome since before the days of Julius Caesar, but the 16th century brought great challenges to their identity and survival in the form of Ghettoization. Created to expedite conversion and cultural dissolution, the Ghetto had an opposite effect. The Jews of Rome developed a microculture that ensured continuity and distinctiveness. The ability to settle disputes relating to marriage, divorce, inheritance, and other internal matters gave Jews the perception of themselves as actors of their own affairs and developed a unique cultural identity that permeates the community to these days.
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February 18, 6:00 pm
THEATER PERFORMANCE | SALONICCO '43
Directed by Ferdinando Ceriani.
Script by Ferdinando Ceriani, Gian Paolo Cavarai, Antonia Ferrari
With: Massimo Wertmuller, Evelina Meghnagi,
Carla Ferraro, Domenico Ascione, Arnaldo Vacca
i-ITALY
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