BY STEPHEN BENNETTS
FLORENCE — “Non ho mai visto Firenze cosi bella. Che bello vederla
cosi piena di gente; di solito ci sono solo le bancarelle d'oro e le cartoline.
E che palle!” (“I've never seen Florence looking so beautiful. How wonderful
to see it so full of people; usually it's all gold shops and postcards.
How boring!”) — Lead singer of the Tuscan-Zapatista rock band Chipil de
Tamales.
Despite the climate of fear and hysteria whipped up by the Italian press
in the weeks preceding the European Social Forum (ESF), held in Florence
from November 6-10, the whole event went off without incident. It culminated
in a triumphant and completely peaceful anti-war march on November 9, the
largest ever held in the city, with a crowd estimated at 1 million people
from all over Europe taking part.
Arriving in Florence the day before the ESF, I found many of the shops
closed for the next few days. Important works of art, such as Michelangelo's
“David” were protected with heavy-duty padding.
The mayor of Florence and the president of the region of Tuscany put
their reputations on the line by offering Florence as the location for
the ESF, while the right-wing government of Silvio Berlusconi government
has done everything possible to get the meeting cancelled. The minister
for culture even proposes a law banning big political rallies from le
citta d'arte (art cities), a move which might eliminate major political
protests from cities like Naples, Florence, Rome, Venice and Verona.
Identity
Leading conservative Florentines, such as the filmmaker Franco Zeffirelli
and journalist Oriana Fallaci, seem to have viewed the ESF as the equivalent
to arrival of the Huns. In a notorious letter published on the front page
of the Milanese paper
Corriere della Sera the day before the ESF,
Fallaci called upon Florentines to express their disgust at the “desecration”
of their city by pulling down their shutters in protest.
However, as the leader of the anarchist Disobbedienti group Luca
Casarini pointed out, the only attack on Florentine heritage ever carried
out was the 1994 bombing of the Uffizi Galleries by the Sicilian Mafia,
the same organisation that helped the Berlusconi government to win all
60 parliamentary seats in Sicily in the last national election.
What was up for grabs was the definition of Florence's identity. Zeffirelli
and others present an exclusively aristocratic vision of Florence as a
city for well-heeled reactionary aesthetes, as presented more or less in
his recent film Tea with Mussolini.
However, the vision of Florence and Tuscany which prevailed during the
ESF was of a region of strong democratic and progressive social traditions
which, apart from being the birthplace of the Renaissance, was also a cradle
of the Italian resistance to fascism and the first place in Europe to abolish
the death penalty; a city of culture, art and innovation which is capable
of entering into a powerful symbolic dialogue with the rest of the world.
The ESF also provided an opportunity for some Florentines to denounce
the city's untrammelled commercialism and materialism; they feel Florence
has sold its soul to the tourist dollar over the last 20 years. “We are
Florentines, not shopkeepers”, one banner announced proudly during the
march.
Compared to the disastrous behaviour of Italian police at Genoa during
the protests against the G8 Summit in June last year, the Florentine police
on November 9 gave a superb lesson to the rest of Italy on the role of
police in a democratic society.
Although 6500 police were mobilised throughout the city, they remained
almost invisible throughout the march. The police chief refused to deploy
helicopters until late in the afternoon, and then only as a way of estimating
the number of marchers.
The marchers did everything possible to keep the rally peaceful. The
General Confederation of Italian Trade Unions (CGIL) dispatched a 2000-strong
force of dockworkers as a servizio di ordine for the procession.
One dodgey-looking group of masked figures was quickly ejected from the
march by three 60-year-old women who pulled off their masks and shouted:
“Either take off your masks or get out of here!”
Panorama
The march was due to set off at 3pm, but it had got underway four hours
earlier. By 3pm, the rear of the march is still stationery at the starting
point. We were at the mid-point, exhausted and freezing, with the “Tarantellablock”,
a group of Calabrian friends and Roman hangers-on from the Calabrian Folk
Music Association. Stopping for a break at one point, we convinced Francesco
to pull out his organetto (squeezebox) and play a Calabrian tarantella
tune.
We are soon joined by a young man with a tamburello (tambourine) and
we started dancing. I noticed four Yugoslavian Rom (gypsy) women hovering
in the distance and motioned them into the circle. They took turns dancing
with me and others, laughing.
An ESF delegate with a heavy Liverpool accent expressed his disappointment
that “as usual” the “Marxist-Leninists” seemed to have taken control of
everything; he insisted it was the anarchists who had started the “no global
movement”. He seemed to have completely lost the plot, because the forum
and rally presented a truly amazing panorama of alternative social, political,
cultural and economic activity in Europe in which no one group imposed
its position.
Everyone is here from the most dogmatic Marxist-Leninists to organic
farmers, Buddhists, Catholic peace activists from Pax Christi, Italian
ferals who live in tepees outside Florence, Kurdish, Basque and Sardinian
separatists, ecologists and “fair trade” activists selling Caffe Rebelde
Zapatista to support the Mexican indigenous movement in Chiapas and
Sicilian Anti-Mafia activists from the group 'Libera', who are selling
pasta and olive oil produced on land confiscated from convicted Mafia bosses.
There were literally hundreds of seminars, workshops and conferences
held in the three days leading up to the march. The movement is “transversal”
and even managed to attract students from the conservative Catholic University
of Tor Vergata in Rome. On the train to Florence, which was packed with
young “no global” activists, I fell into conversation with a young nun
on her way to Padova and a young activist from L'Aquila in Abbruzzo. It
became a dialogue between the disparate groups in Italy and Europe who
are united in opposition to the current drive towards war and a globalisation
that only benefits the rich.
How ironic that the UN Security Council should have given US President
George Bush the green light for war in Iraq the day before the march in
Florence. A New York woman, whose son died in the World Trade Centre towers
and who has since set up a US anti-war group, was at the ESF. She got a
lot of publicity, as did students participating in the forum from the American
University in Florence.
There was an incredible variety of music during the march and rally,
with many groups bringing their own huge sound systems mounted on the backs
of trucks. Favourite tunes are “Bella Ciao”, the anthem of the Italian
Partisans, the lovely song of the Chilean Communist Party and various renditions
of “Pizzica”, the Salentine tarantella.
Ferment
Many Florentines managed to overcome the fear and hysteria generated by
the likes of Zeffirelli, Fallaci and the Berlusconi-owned mass media. An
elderly man waved a black umbrella with the words
“Grazie Ragazzi”
(“Thanks guys!”) as we passed. I spotted another old man proudly sporting
his ancient Partisan beret. Elderly women in the poorer part of town waved
ecstatically to the crowd from their balconies, while in one of the more
well-heeled parts of town, a 12-year-old girl had hung a peace banner from
the railings of her family's expensive townhouse.
The director of the Uffizi Gallery offered free entrance to all ESF
delegates, the ultimate rejoinder to those who had prophesied that Florence
would be reduced to smoking ruins. In a scene which seemed almost Biblical,
an elderly woman was lying on a stretcher at one corner of the march route.
She had insisted on being brought there all the way from her home in Friuli.
The mayor of Florence and the charismatic CGIL leader Sergio Cofferati
stopped to greet her as they passed.
Cofferati was welcomed everywhere with enthusiasm. For many, he represents
the only figure capable of leading the counterattack against Berlusconi.
The ESF was further evidence of the huge process of political, cultural
and social ferment that is taking place in Italy at the moment. It is a
far cry from the stagnation of the late 1980s, when I lived in Rome for
two years. Italy today is being culturally rejuvenated by many factors,
not the least of which is a greater openness towards the outside world,
certainly one of the positive elements of globalisation.
Another important factor is the rising tide of disgust at the excesses
of the Berlusconi government, which has galvanised a powerful mass opposition
movement which is rapidly becoming more authoritative than the ineffective
and discredited parliamentary opposition.
[Stephen Bennetts is researching the revival of popular traditions in
the south of Italy. He is a former editor of the Indigenous Law Bulletin
and Indigenous Law Reporter and has also worked as an anthropologist
for the Central Land Council and other Aboriginal organisations in Central
Australia. He will be in Italy until June next year. For the unabridged
version of this article, contact Stephen at <bennetts@clio.it>.]
From Green Left Weekly, November 27, 2002.
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