A mission "fuori porta" (out of town) for the General Consulate of New York. May 1 was an intense and important day for the Italian community outside Manhattan. Consul General Francesco M. Talò and his delegation visited Hartford, Connecticut.
According to the latest census, Connecticut is the state with the highest number of people of Italian origin.
The Consul General was first received at the Hartford Capitol by Connecticut Governor Dannel P. Malloy. The two exchanged opinions on the strengthening of relations between Italy and Connecticut.
During the meetings of the day, the theme most discussed was the promotion of the Italian language, especially by making use of the AP exams and their promotion. All the speakers agreed that this topic is of interest for all the younger generations.
From left to right Consul General Francesco Maria Talò and Governor of Connecticut Dannel P. Malloy
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A moment of the visit
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During the day, the Consul General also met with representatives of the various Italian-American associations in Connecticut. Another topic was the 150
th anniversary of the Italian Unification.
During the meeting, functionaries of the Consulate General collected digital finger prints, mandatory for the new biometric passports, in order to help those Italians who live far from Manhattan.
The mission was part of the “Consulate outside the walls” project, and was the second after the Rochester outing in October, attempts to bring the consular services closer to those residents far from New York.
During the year the Consulate General intends to do this in other distant areas and will announce the dates ahead of time on their website. Before returning to New York, the Consul General, aided by Deputy Consul Lucia Pasqualini, stopped briefly at
Yale University to meet the Italian scholars and students. It was an important opportunity to examine the prospectives towards a strengthening of the relationship between our ever-growing presence in one of the most prestigious universities of the world and the Italian system in New York.
It's ironic that with
It's ironic that with Connecticut's "Italian-American" population being largely of Sicilian and Neapolitan-Southern Italian origin, the Consulate would entertain strengthening relations with institutions such as Yale University that perpetuate the age-old stereotype - that history and culture is absent south of Rome or off the mainland - not out malevolence but out of ignorance and possibly arrogance. Nonetheless, I applaud the efforts of the Consulate in reaching out to these oft forgotten communities.