Racism, war, atrocity, and its aftermath in Italy, 1938-2010

in Academic Service - Archive by on September 26th, 2010

Event Date: Sunday 26 September 2010
Imperial War Museum, London

Racism, war, atrocity, and its aftermath in Italy, 1938-2010

2010 is the 70th anniversary of Italy’s entry into the Second World War, a decision that set off a chain of events that culminated in two years of devastating warfare and a cruel occupation. German occupation led to the deportation of 7,800 Jews and fostered the conditions for civil war to develop in the north of the country. Partisan warfare and German defensive operations led to repeated atrocities against civilians. The full story of the mass killing of Italian civilians and the persecution of the Jews, which began in 1938, has only come to light in the last fifteen years due to the opening of once closed archives and a shift in the political spectrum that led to renewed interest in Fascist and German crimes. This conference will showcase the new research by Italian scholars working in the field and facilitate discussion with UK-based researchers.

Programme

Welcome – David Cesarani .

Fascism, racism and the Jews in Italy

Chair: MacGregor Knox (London School of Economics)

Carlotta Ferrara degli Uberti (University of Pisa)
The Jews of Italy from emancipation to Fascism (AUDIO HERE)

Salvatore Garau (Royal Holloway, University of London)
Fascism, anti-semitism and the Italian Jews (AUDIO HERE)

questions .

—————————————————

Alessandro Visani (Rome University)
The racial laws 1938: reception and implementation (AUDIO HERE)

Ilaria Pavan (Scuola Normale, Pisa)
Social-economic impact of the fascist racial laws,1938-1945 (AUDIO HERE)

questions .

—————————————————

War, atrocity and its aftermath

Chair: David Cesarani (Royal Holloway, University of London)

Paolo Pezzino (University of Pisa)
Warfare and massacre, 1943-45 (AUDIO HERE)

Michele Battini (University of Pisa)
German war crimes and allied justice  (AUDIO HERE)

questions .

————————————————–

Guri Schwarz (University of Pisa)
Italian Jews and memory of the genocide (AUDIO HERE)

John Foot (University College London)
Italians and the divided memory of the war (AUDIO HERE)

questions .

 

The conference is organised by the Holocaust Research Centre, Royal Holloway University of London, in cooperation with the Imperial War Museum.
It has been made possible thanks to the generous support of the British Academy.

No Comments

Ilaria Pavan – Social-economic impact of the fascist racial laws,1938-1945

in Academic Service - Archive by on September 26th, 2010

Event Date: Sunday 26 September 2010
Imperial War Museum, London

Racism, war, atrocity, and its aftermath in Italy, 1938-2010

—————————————————————

Ilaria Pavan (Scuola Normale, Pisa)
Social-economic impact of the fascist racial laws,1938-1945

The economic aspects of the Fascist anti–Jewish campaign have been largely underrated and neglected, when not denied, for many years.
In the late forties a veil was quickly drawn over the manifold legislative and administrative measures undertaken by Mussolini’s government against Jewish properties throughout seven years, their concrete enforcement and their consequences on Jews, both Italian and foreigner.
This peculiar chapter of the anti–Jewish persecution has been interpreted within the general framework with which the whole Fascist anti–Semitic persecution was read for decades by the Italian and international historiography: a mere bowing to the Nazi will, exclusively motivated by reasons of foreign policy. The anti–Semitic legislation issued by the Fascism was considered without a real ideological and political background and, accordingly — it was said — scarcely and blandly applied by the fascist apparatus, especially in its economic aspects. Moreover, a classic anti-Jewish stereotype has further influenced this erroneous reading: Mussolini’s government was aware of the (alleged) economic dominance and supremacy of the Jewish community; hence, fearing of damaging the whole national economy he did not act with rigor and severity against Jewish properties.
Only recently, triggered by the survey led by the “Italian Government Commission for reconstruction of the events characterizing the acquisition of Jewish assets by public and private bodies”, which was operative between 1999 and 2000, new studies have clearly demonstrated the fallacy and lack of foundation of these well–rooted interpretations.
Starting from the analysis of the economic situation of the Italian Jewry on the eve of the racial campaign, my talk will illustrate the detailed and pervading economic persecution, its key features, its heavy consequences on Jews’ everyday life, as well as the autonomy of the Fascist government and bureaucracy in the conceiving and implementation of the Jewish spoliation, even during the period of the Nazi occupation of the Italian territory.

———————————————————————-

PLAY

 

download

———————————————————————-

accompanying images:



No Comments