fbpx
Wikipedia

Bernardo Mattarella

Bernardo Mattarella (15 September 1905 – 1 March 1971) was an Italian politician for the Christian Democrat party (Democrazia Cristiana, DC). He was a cabinet minister of Italy several times, becoming one of the most important politicians of his generation.

Bernardo Mattarella
Minister of Agriculture and Forests
In office
21 June 1963 – 4 December 1963
Prime MinisterGiovanni Leone
Preceded byMariano Rumor
Succeeded byMario Ferrari Aggradi
Minister of Posts and Telecommunications
In office
19 May 1957 – 1 July 1958
Prime MinisterAdone Zoli
Preceded byGiovanni Braschi
Succeeded byAlberto Simonini
Minister of Foreign Trade
In office
4 December 1963 – 23 February 1966
Prime MinisterAldo Moro
Preceded byGiuseppe Trabucchi
Succeeded byGiusto Tolloy
In office
6 July 1955 – 19 May 1957
Prime MinisterAntonio Segni
Preceded byMario Martinelli
Succeeded byGuido Carli
Minister of Transports
In office
18 August 1953 – 6 July 1955
Prime MinisterGiuseppe Pella
Amintore Fanfani
Mario Scelba
Preceded byGiuseppe Togni
Succeeded byArmando Angelini
Minister of Merchant Navy
In office
16 July 1953 – 18 August 1953
Prime MinisterAlcide De Gasperi
Preceded byPietro Campilli
Succeeded byCostantino Bresciani Turroni
Personal details
Born(1905-09-15)15 September 1905
Castellammare del Golfo, Sicily, Kingdom of Italy
Died1 March 1971(1971-03-01) (aged 65)
Rome, Lazio, Italian Republic
Political partyChristian Democracy
ChildrenPiersanti
Sergio
Residence(s)Palermo, Sicily
Alma materUniversity of Palermo

Bernardo Mattarella was the father of Piersanti and Sergio Mattarella, who both became politicians as well; Sergio is the President of the Italian Republic since 3 February 2015 and Piersanti was President of the Regional Government of Sicily, before being assassinated in 1980 by Cosa Nostra.

Early life and political career

Bernardo Mattarella was born in Castellammare del Golfo, in the province of Trapani in western Sicily as the eldest of seven children in a family of humble origins. His father was a sailor.[1] In 1924, he became the secretary of the Italian People's Party (Partito Popolare Italiano), the predecessor of the Christian Democrat party (DC), in Castellammare.[2]

An anti-fascist, he graduated in law in Palermo, where he lived until the Allied invasion of Sicily. He moved to Rome, where he took part in the founding of the DC in May 1943 with Alcide De Gasperi.[2] After the invasion of Sicily by allied forces in July 1943, he moved back to Palermo where he became one of the co-founders of the DC on the island and was nominated in the municipal council of Palermo by the Allied Military Government of Occupied Territories (AMGOT).[2]

Positions in the Italian Government

He held the position of Deputy Minister for Public Education in the governments led by Ivanoe Bonomi (1944–1945). In June 1946 he was elected to the Italian Constituent Assembly and in 1948 to the new Republican Parliament. He would be re-elected in 1953, 1958, 1963 and 1968.[2]

In 1953, after having been Minister of the Merchant Navy under De Gasperi's short-lived government, he became Minister of Transportation, a position he maintained until 1955. Later he was Minister of Foreign Trade and Minister of Post and Communications. A favourable evaluation of his work as the Minister of Foreign Trade and of Post and Communications is expressed in Guido Carli's memories.[3] In 1962 he was again Minister of Transportation and, in the following year, of Agriculture and Forests. In 1963–66 he was again Minister of Foreign Trades.[2]

Attitude towards Sicilian Separatism

Bernardo Mattarella was the main opponent of the Sicilian separatism, which had some influence in the years following the end of World War II. He expressed his concern in an article published in 1944 attacking the leader of the separatists, Andrea Finocchiaro Aprile: "This man speaks of democracy, but he has the grave fault of having gathered and tried to strengthen the most dangerous and oppressing organization which, for long years, has afflicted our land."[4]

Accusations of links with the Mafia

Mattarella has been accused several times of having links with the Mafia. These accusations were always rejected in court. The alleged links between Mattarella and the Mafia are described in several reports and books. According to a report of the section of the Communist Party of Trapani, which was reproduced in the final report of the Antimafia Commission in 1976, Mattarella had an excellent relationship with the Mafia boss of Alcamo, Vincenzo Rimi.[5][6] The Communist minority of the Parliamentary Antimafia Commission described Mattarella as the man "who had striven to absorb Mafia forces into the Christian Democrats so as to use them as an instrument of power."[7]

 
Bernardo Mattarella and his son Sergio, the future president of Italy, in 1963.

He was accused of having approached Calogero Vizzini, supposedly the most influential Mafia boss at the time to abandon the Sicilian separatists and join the Christian Democrats. The accusation was made by the Italian communists on the basis of an article that Mattarella published on the national Christian democrat newspaper, Il Popolo, on 24 September 1944. This article does not contain any invitation neither to Vizzini nor to the Mafia to join the Christian Democrats. On the contrary, the article accused two families of the town of Villalba (Vizzini and Cipolla) of being responsible of the violence in that town. The article was addressed to those who had voted for the separatists, which were invited to change their vote.[8]

In a letter to Luigi Sturzo, written shortly after the election of the Constituent Assembly of Italy in 1946, Mattarella wrote about the electoral and political influence of the Mafia: "The electoral fight has been hard and tiring, but it has granted us the result of the full failure of the Mafia: it has been defeated by the state ballot, which has freed electors from old style pressures, which have been now and then renewed."[9] According to a report of the Carabinieri on the electoral campaign of 1946 in Salemi, Mattarella gathered with known mafiosi, among them Ignazio Salvo, one of the Salvo cousins who became intermediates between the Mafia and the DC.[10][11][12]

Mattarella supported Vito Ciancimino – the first Italian politician to be found guilty of Mafia membership. Ciancimino became a protégé of Mattarella, who supported his political and financial career. In 1950 Ciancimino obtained concessions for all railway transport inside Palermo. The three other firms that had made a bid were put out of the game, because Ciancimino's bid was accompanied by a letter of Mattarella, who was then Minister of Transports.[13][14][15]

Portella della Ginestra massacre

He was accused of being one of the men behind the Portella della Ginestra massacre, when 11 persons were killed and 33 wounded during May Day celebrations in Sicily on 1 May 1947. The bloodbath was perpetrated by the bandit Salvatore Giuliano who was possibly backed by the Mafia. In the Portella della Ginestra massacre trial in 1950–51 in Viterbo, Giuliano's right-hand man Gaspare Pisciotta said: "Those who have made promises to us are called Bernardo Mattarella, Prince Alliata, the monarchist MP Marchesano and also Signor Scelba, Minister for Home Affairs ... it was Marchesano, Prince Alliata and Bernardo Mattarella who ordered the massacre of Portella di Ginestra. Before the massacre they met Giuliano..." Mattarella, Alliata and Marchesano were declared innocent by the Court of Appeal of Palermo, at a trial which dealt with their alleged role in the event.[16]

The Court of Viterbo decided that Pisciotta had made false accusations. In his final statement the public prosecutor affirmed that Pisciotta was unreliable and that his accusations against Scelba and Mattarella were untrustworthy.[17][18] During the trial, Giuliano's mother and some members of the gang said that Pisciotta's statements were part of a plot designed to put the investigations on the wrong track.[19] This was confirmed before the Parliamentary Antimafia Commission by two more members of the gang, who had joined Pisciotta in this plot.[20] "It was simply an infamous act that even the toughness of the political game cannot justify," Mattarella later said about the accusation.[21]

According to some sources, he had opposed the constitution of the Parliamentary Antimafia Commission in 1958.[22] Others maintain that he had been the only Sicilian minister in the Government of the time who was favourable to its constitution. In an interview in the newspaper Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno, he put forward several proposals that influenced the constitution of the Commission in 1963.[23]

Accusations by Danilo Dolci

 
Bernardo Mattarella in 1964.

The Antimafia activist Danilo Dolci also accused Mattarella of collusion with the Mafia. Dolci had been gathering evidence on the links between the Mafia and politicians for the Antimafia Commission, which was established in 1963. At a press conference in September 1965, he presented dozen of testimonies of people who had supposedly seen Mattarella meeting with leading mafiosi.[24][25] Mattarella sued Dolci for libel. Mattarella's lawsuit for libel allowed Dolci "ampia facoltà di prova", meaning that the defendant would have been declared innocent if he had been able to show that he had offended the plaintiff on the basis of true evidence. In the ensuing two-year trial, dozens of witnesses were heard and many documents were considered. Dolci made an application for an amnesty, but was sentenced to two years imprisonment for libel. He never served the verdict, because of a general pardon.

When the Court refused to allow new evidence from witnesses, Dolci and Alasia decided that the trial was a travesty. They announced that under these circumstances they would no longer attempt to defend themselves. The remainder of the trial, therefore, took place with Dolci and Alasia absent from the courtroom. Dolci responded by broadcasting his opinions over a private radio station, which was promptly closed.[24][26] On 21 June 1967, the Court of Rome, sentenced that Mattarella offered reliable evidence of his opposition to the Mafia in the entire course of his political career. The statements collected by the defendants – Dolci and his assistant Alasia – were considered nothing more than "deplorable gossip, malicious rumour or even simple lies." The Court was of the opinion that Mattarella "never had relations with the Mafia environment."[27][28]

Mattarella won the trial but lost a cabinet post in the new government of Aldo Moro. According to the journalist and politician Luigi Barzini, who had been a member of the Antimafia Commission, few of Dolci's charges against Mattarella, most of which were undoubtedly true but not all as decisive as he thought, could be proved in a court of law, as Sicilian witnesses rarely repeat in public what they might have said secretly to a trusted friend.[29]

Other accusations

US gangster Joe Bonanno claimed that Mattarella was among the welcoming party that met him when he landed at Fiumicino airport in Rome in October 1957 for a vacation. Both had grown up in Castellammare del Golfo.[30][31][32] However, the claim seems to be fictional: it describes Bonanno's trip to Italy in September 1957, in the company of F. Pope, the editor of the newspaper "Il progresso italo americano". As reported by the same newspaper they arrived in Rome on 13 September of that year.[33] According to Pope and Italian newspapers, Mattarella was not in Rome that day. As Minister of the Post, was in another remote Italian town to inaugurate a public work.[34][35]

In 1996, 25 years after Mattarella died, Francesco Di Carlo, a Mafia pentito, said he had been a "man of honour" – a member of Cosa Nostra.[36] His son Sergio Mattarella dismissed such accusations as ridiculous.[37] According to another pentito, Francesco Marino Mannoia, Mattarella was close with the Mafia boss Francesco Paolo Bontade, but Mannoia said he did not know if Mattarella actually had been a member of the Mafia.[38]

Death and legacy

Mattarella died in Rome in 1971. Journalist Gaia Servadio described him as an elegant gentleman with an elaborate and fluent discourse that disclosed his legal training. He was recognized as an able minister, in particular at the post of Foreign Trade, which he held twice.[21]

His son Piersanti Mattarella was killed by Mafia in 1980. His assassination was probably spurred by his strong commitment against the relationships of numerous Sicilian politicians (mostly members of DC itself) with the Mafia. He was "committed to introducing a new transparency in the functioning of his party and in the Sicilian public life".[39] However, the Mafia felt betrayed by the Mattarellas who used to be responsive to Mafia interests.[12] According to Leoluca Orlando – former mayor of Palermo for the DC and Antimafia activist, who had been a legal adviser to Piersanti Mattarella – the rumours about his father and his party's experiences with the Mafia were probably responsible for Piersanti's aspiration to clean the Christian Democrat party of any such connections.[7]

His other son Sergio Mattarella was elected by parliament to be the 12th President of the Italian Republic in January 2015, being the first Sicilian to have held the post.[40]

See also

References

  1. ^ Bolignani, Bernardo Mattarella: biografia politica di un cattolico siciliano, p. 11
  2. ^ a b c d e (in Italian) Bernardo Mattarella 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine, portale "Alcide De Gasperi nella storia d'Europa" (Accessed 8 June 2011)
  3. ^ Carli, G. (1996) Cinquant'anni di vita italiana, Laterza, pp. 119 and 147
  4. ^ Popolo e Libertà, 3 June 1944
  5. ^ (in Italian) Relazione conclusiva, Commissione parlamentare d’inchiesta sul fenomeno della mafia in Sicilia, Rome 1976, p. 813-815
  6. ^ Casarrubea, "'Fra' diavolo' e il governo nero", p. 84
  7. ^ a b Orlando, Fighting the Mafia and Renewing Sicilian Culture, p. 47
  8. ^ See e.g. the article of Li Causi, leader of the Sicilian communists, in their newspaper La voce comunista, on 21 July 1946
  9. ^ Letter of 29 June 1946. See De Marco, Sturzo e la Sicilia nel secondo dopoguerra (1943–1959), S.E.I., Torino 1996, 47
  10. ^ Hess, Mafia & mafiosi, p. 159
  11. ^ (in Italian) Deaglio, Il raccolto rosso, 1982–2010, p. 137
  12. ^ a b Dickie, pp. 423–24
  13. ^ (in Italian) Relazione conclusiva, Commissione parlamentare d’inchiesta sul fenomeno della mafia in Sicilia, Rome 1976, p. 223-224
  14. ^ Servadio, pp. 207–8
  15. ^ Chubb, Judith (1982) Patronage, power, and poverty in southern Italy, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-23637-1, p. 145
  16. ^ Servadio, pp. 128–9, which is actually inaccurate on this point, as Mattarella was never put under investigation nor under trial for the Portella della ginestra bloodbath. In the trial, the accused persons were Alliata, Marchesano and Cusumano, who had been accused by Giuseppe Montalbano, a communist member of Parliament (Audition of on. Giuseppe Montalbano before the Parliamentary Commission of Enquiry on Mafia in Sicily – Report on the relation between Mafia and banditry, approved on 10 February 1972, document XXIII n. 2-sexies).
  17. ^ (in Italian) Tito Parlatore, L'eccidio di Portella della ginestra, requisitoria pronunziata al processo celebrato a Viterbo dinanzi alla Corte d'Assise, Roma: Senza editore, 1954, pp. 178–195 and 318–331
  18. ^ (in Italian) Strage di Portella. Appello 1956. Parte seconda, Blog di Giuseppe Casarrubea, 6 August 2008
  19. ^ Sheet 491 of the minutes of the hearing of 24 July 1951, when Maria Lombardo (Giuliano’s mother) said that Mr. Crisafulli (Pisciotta's attorney) had asked her to be part of the plot.
  20. ^ Proceedings of the Parliamentary Commission for the enquiry of the phenomenon of Mafia: Camera dei Deputati – Commissione parlamentare di inchiesta sul fenomeno della mafia in Sicilia – Report on the relation between Mafia and banditry, approved on 10 February 1972 (document XXIII n. 2-sexies), p. 569 (audition of Frank Mannino, inmate, member of the Giuliano gang) and p. 639 (audition of Antonino Terranova, inmate, member of the Giuliano gang).
  21. ^ a b Servadio, p. 159
  22. ^ Servadio, p. 197
  23. ^ See the proceedings of the colloquium Cattolici, Chiesa e mafia, University of Messina, 27–29 November 2003
  24. ^ a b Bess, Michael (1993), Realism, utopia, and the mushroom cloud: four activist intellectuals and their strategies for peace, 1945–1989, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0-226-04421-1, pp. 194–97
  25. ^ (in Italian) Danilo Dolci e la dimensione utopica 12 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, di Livio Ghersi (accessed 2 March 2011)
  26. ^ (in Italian) Ragone, Le parole di Danilo Dolci 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine, pp. 220–22
  27. ^ Decision of the Tribunal of Roma, 21 June 1967, published in "Il Foro italiano" 1968, 342 ff., confirmed by both the Court of Appeals of Rome (7 July 1972) and the Court of Cassation, VI chamber (26 June 1973).
  28. ^ (in Italian) Trent'anni dall'omicidio di Piersanti Mattarella: L'"uomo nuovo" della Democrazia cristiana, asud'europa, 25 January 2010
  29. ^ Sicilians and Others; reply by Luigi Barzini, The New York Review of Books, 4 December 1969
  30. ^ A Man of Honour (1983), written with Sergio Lalli, New York: Simon & Schuster
  31. ^ (in Italian) E' morto Joe Bonanno fondò Cosa nostra in Usa, La Repubblica, 13 May 2002
  32. ^ Dickie, p. 290 of the first edition. However, the author has recognized that these facts are not true and has removed any reference to them in the second and in the third edition of the book.
  33. ^ Il Progresso Italo americano, 17 September 1957
  34. ^ Giornale di Sicilia, cronichles of Trapani, 14 September 1957
  35. ^ See also: Sergio Mattarella's letters to the editor in Interventi e repliche, Corriere della Sera, 14 May 2002, and Le lettere, La Repubblica, 11 October 2002
  36. ^ (in Italian) 'Vi dico i nomi dei padri della mafia', La Repubblica, 11 October 1996
  37. ^ (in Italian) Un giudice dietro l'omicidio Mattarella, La Repubblica, 12 October 1996; Giornale di Sicilia, 13 October 1996
  38. ^ (in Italian) 'Venne dai boss ho visto e giuro', La Repubblica, 15 April 1993
  39. ^ Dickie, third ed., 2009, p. 448
  40. ^ Walker, Keith (31 January 2015). "73-year-old Sicilian Sergio Mattarella is Italy's new president". Euronews. Reuters. Retrieved 5 February 2015.

Further reading

  • (in Italian) Bolignani, Giovanni (2001). Bernardo Mattarella: biografia politica di un cattolico siciliano, Rubbettino Editore, ISBN 88-498-0214-5
  • (in Italian) Caruso, Alfio (2000). Da cosa nasce cosa. Storia della mafia del 1943 a oggi, Milan: Longanesi ISBN 88-304-1620-7
  • (in Italian) Casarrubea, Giuseppe (1998). "Fra' diavolo" e il governo nero: "doppio Stato" e stragi nella Sicilia del dopoguerra, Milan: Franco Angeli, ISBN 88-464-0820-9
  • (in Italian) Deaglio, Enrico (2010). Il raccolto rosso, 1982–2010: cronaca di una guerra di mafia e delle sue tristissime conseguenze, Milan: Il Saggiatore, ISBN 978-88-428-1620-1
  • Dickie, John (2004). Cosa Nostra. A history of the Sicilian Mafia. London: Coronet. ISBN 0-340-82435-2.
  • Hess, Henner (1998). Mafia & Mafiosi: Origin, Power, and Myth, London: Hurst & Co Publishers, ISBN 1-85065-500-6
  • Orlando, Leoluca (2003). Fighting the Mafia and Renewing Sicilian Culture, New York: Encounter Books, ISBN 1-893554-81-3
  • (in Italian) Ragone, Michele (2011). , Foggia: Edizioni del Rosone, ISBN 978-88-97220-19-0
  • Servadio, Gaia (1976). Mafioso. A history of the Mafia from its origins to the present day. London: Secker & Warburg. ISBN 0-436-44700-2.

bernardo, mattarella, september, 1905, march, 1971, italian, politician, christian, democrat, party, democrazia, cristiana, cabinet, minister, italy, several, times, becoming, most, important, politicians, generation, minister, agriculture, forestsin, office, . Bernardo Mattarella 15 September 1905 1 March 1971 was an Italian politician for the Christian Democrat party Democrazia Cristiana DC He was a cabinet minister of Italy several times becoming one of the most important politicians of his generation Bernardo MattarellaMinister of Agriculture and ForestsIn office 21 June 1963 4 December 1963Prime MinisterGiovanni LeonePreceded byMariano RumorSucceeded byMario Ferrari AggradiMinister of Posts and TelecommunicationsIn office 19 May 1957 1 July 1958Prime MinisterAdone ZoliPreceded byGiovanni BraschiSucceeded byAlberto SimoniniMinister of Foreign TradeIn office 4 December 1963 23 February 1966Prime MinisterAldo MoroPreceded byGiuseppe TrabucchiSucceeded byGiusto TolloyIn office 6 July 1955 19 May 1957Prime MinisterAntonio SegniPreceded byMario MartinelliSucceeded byGuido CarliMinister of TransportsIn office 18 August 1953 6 July 1955Prime MinisterGiuseppe PellaAmintore FanfaniMario ScelbaPreceded byGiuseppe TogniSucceeded byArmando AngeliniMinister of Merchant NavyIn office 16 July 1953 18 August 1953Prime MinisterAlcide De GasperiPreceded byPietro CampilliSucceeded byCostantino Bresciani TurroniPersonal detailsBorn 1905 09 15 15 September 1905Castellammare del Golfo Sicily Kingdom of ItalyDied1 March 1971 1971 03 01 aged 65 Rome Lazio Italian RepublicPolitical partyChristian DemocracyChildrenPiersantiSergioResidence s Palermo SicilyAlma materUniversity of PalermoBernardo Mattarella was the father of Piersanti and Sergio Mattarella who both became politicians as well Sergio is the President of the Italian Republic since 3 February 2015 and Piersanti was President of the Regional Government of Sicily before being assassinated in 1980 by Cosa Nostra Contents 1 Early life and political career 1 1 Positions in the Italian Government 1 2 Attitude towards Sicilian Separatism 2 Accusations of links with the Mafia 2 1 Portella della Ginestra massacre 2 2 Accusations by Danilo Dolci 2 3 Other accusations 3 Death and legacy 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingEarly life and political career EditBernardo Mattarella was born in Castellammare del Golfo in the province of Trapani in western Sicily as the eldest of seven children in a family of humble origins His father was a sailor 1 In 1924 he became the secretary of the Italian People s Party Partito Popolare Italiano the predecessor of the Christian Democrat party DC in Castellammare 2 An anti fascist he graduated in law in Palermo where he lived until the Allied invasion of Sicily He moved to Rome where he took part in the founding of the DC in May 1943 with Alcide De Gasperi 2 After the invasion of Sicily by allied forces in July 1943 he moved back to Palermo where he became one of the co founders of the DC on the island and was nominated in the municipal council of Palermo by the Allied Military Government of Occupied Territories AMGOT 2 Positions in the Italian Government Edit He held the position of Deputy Minister for Public Education in the governments led by Ivanoe Bonomi 1944 1945 In June 1946 he was elected to the Italian Constituent Assembly and in 1948 to the new Republican Parliament He would be re elected in 1953 1958 1963 and 1968 2 In 1953 after having been Minister of the Merchant Navy under De Gasperi s short lived government he became Minister of Transportation a position he maintained until 1955 Later he was Minister of Foreign Trade and Minister of Post and Communications A favourable evaluation of his work as the Minister of Foreign Trade and of Post and Communications is expressed in Guido Carli s memories 3 In 1962 he was again Minister of Transportation and in the following year of Agriculture and Forests In 1963 66 he was again Minister of Foreign Trades 2 Attitude towards Sicilian Separatism Edit Bernardo Mattarella was the main opponent of the Sicilian separatism which had some influence in the years following the end of World War II He expressed his concern in an article published in 1944 attacking the leader of the separatists Andrea Finocchiaro Aprile This man speaks of democracy but he has the grave fault of having gathered and tried to strengthen the most dangerous and oppressing organization which for long years has afflicted our land 4 Accusations of links with the Mafia EditMattarella has been accused several times of having links with the Mafia These accusations were always rejected in court The alleged links between Mattarella and the Mafia are described in several reports and books According to a report of the section of the Communist Party of Trapani which was reproduced in the final report of the Antimafia Commission in 1976 Mattarella had an excellent relationship with the Mafia boss of Alcamo Vincenzo Rimi 5 6 The Communist minority of the Parliamentary Antimafia Commission described Mattarella as the man who had striven to absorb Mafia forces into the Christian Democrats so as to use them as an instrument of power 7 Bernardo Mattarella and his son Sergio the future president of Italy in 1963 He was accused of having approached Calogero Vizzini supposedly the most influential Mafia boss at the time to abandon the Sicilian separatists and join the Christian Democrats The accusation was made by the Italian communists on the basis of an article that Mattarella published on the national Christian democrat newspaper Il Popolo on 24 September 1944 This article does not contain any invitation neither to Vizzini nor to the Mafia to join the Christian Democrats On the contrary the article accused two families of the town of Villalba Vizzini and Cipolla of being responsible of the violence in that town The article was addressed to those who had voted for the separatists which were invited to change their vote 8 In a letter to Luigi Sturzo written shortly after the election of the Constituent Assembly of Italy in 1946 Mattarella wrote about the electoral and political influence of the Mafia The electoral fight has been hard and tiring but it has granted us the result of the full failure of the Mafia it has been defeated by the state ballot which has freed electors from old style pressures which have been now and then renewed 9 According to a report of the Carabinieri on the electoral campaign of 1946 in Salemi Mattarella gathered with known mafiosi among them Ignazio Salvo one of the Salvo cousins who became intermediates between the Mafia and the DC 10 11 12 Mattarella supported Vito Ciancimino the first Italian politician to be found guilty of Mafia membership Ciancimino became a protege of Mattarella who supported his political and financial career In 1950 Ciancimino obtained concessions for all railway transport inside Palermo The three other firms that had made a bid were put out of the game because Ciancimino s bid was accompanied by a letter of Mattarella who was then Minister of Transports 13 14 15 Portella della Ginestra massacre Edit He was accused of being one of the men behind the Portella della Ginestra massacre when 11 persons were killed and 33 wounded during May Day celebrations in Sicily on 1 May 1947 The bloodbath was perpetrated by the bandit Salvatore Giuliano who was possibly backed by the Mafia In the Portella della Ginestra massacre trial in 1950 51 in Viterbo Giuliano s right hand man Gaspare Pisciotta said Those who have made promises to us are called Bernardo Mattarella Prince Alliata the monarchist MP Marchesano and also Signor Scelba Minister for Home Affairs it was Marchesano Prince Alliata and Bernardo Mattarella who ordered the massacre of Portella di Ginestra Before the massacre they met Giuliano Mattarella Alliata and Marchesano were declared innocent by the Court of Appeal of Palermo at a trial which dealt with their alleged role in the event 16 The Court of Viterbo decided that Pisciotta had made false accusations In his final statement the public prosecutor affirmed that Pisciotta was unreliable and that his accusations against Scelba and Mattarella were untrustworthy 17 18 During the trial Giuliano s mother and some members of the gang said that Pisciotta s statements were part of a plot designed to put the investigations on the wrong track 19 This was confirmed before the Parliamentary Antimafia Commission by two more members of the gang who had joined Pisciotta in this plot 20 It was simply an infamous act that even the toughness of the political game cannot justify Mattarella later said about the accusation 21 According to some sources he had opposed the constitution of the Parliamentary Antimafia Commission in 1958 22 Others maintain that he had been the only Sicilian minister in the Government of the time who was favourable to its constitution In an interview in the newspaper Gazzetta del Mezzogiorno he put forward several proposals that influenced the constitution of the Commission in 1963 23 Accusations by Danilo Dolci Edit Bernardo Mattarella in 1964 The Antimafia activist Danilo Dolci also accused Mattarella of collusion with the Mafia Dolci had been gathering evidence on the links between the Mafia and politicians for the Antimafia Commission which was established in 1963 At a press conference in September 1965 he presented dozen of testimonies of people who had supposedly seen Mattarella meeting with leading mafiosi 24 25 Mattarella sued Dolci for libel Mattarella s lawsuit for libel allowed Dolci ampia facolta di prova meaning that the defendant would have been declared innocent if he had been able to show that he had offended the plaintiff on the basis of true evidence In the ensuing two year trial dozens of witnesses were heard and many documents were considered Dolci made an application for an amnesty but was sentenced to two years imprisonment for libel He never served the verdict because of a general pardon When the Court refused to allow new evidence from witnesses Dolci and Alasia decided that the trial was a travesty They announced that under these circumstances they would no longer attempt to defend themselves The remainder of the trial therefore took place with Dolci and Alasia absent from the courtroom Dolci responded by broadcasting his opinions over a private radio station which was promptly closed 24 26 On 21 June 1967 the Court of Rome sentenced that Mattarella offered reliable evidence of his opposition to the Mafia in the entire course of his political career The statements collected by the defendants Dolci and his assistant Alasia were considered nothing more than deplorable gossip malicious rumour or even simple lies The Court was of the opinion that Mattarella never had relations with the Mafia environment 27 28 Mattarella won the trial but lost a cabinet post in the new government of Aldo Moro According to the journalist and politician Luigi Barzini who had been a member of the Antimafia Commission few of Dolci s charges against Mattarella most of which were undoubtedly true but not all as decisive as he thought could be proved in a court of law as Sicilian witnesses rarely repeat in public what they might have said secretly to a trusted friend 29 Other accusations Edit US gangster Joe Bonanno claimed that Mattarella was among the welcoming party that met him when he landed at Fiumicino airport in Rome in October 1957 for a vacation Both had grown up in Castellammare del Golfo 30 31 32 However the claim seems to be fictional it describes Bonanno s trip to Italy in September 1957 in the company of F Pope the editor of the newspaper Il progresso italo americano As reported by the same newspaper they arrived in Rome on 13 September of that year 33 According to Pope and Italian newspapers Mattarella was not in Rome that day As Minister of the Post was in another remote Italian town to inaugurate a public work 34 35 In 1996 25 years after Mattarella died Francesco Di Carlo a Mafia pentito said he had been a man of honour a member of Cosa Nostra 36 His son Sergio Mattarella dismissed such accusations as ridiculous 37 According to another pentito Francesco Marino Mannoia Mattarella was close with the Mafia boss Francesco Paolo Bontade but Mannoia said he did not know if Mattarella actually had been a member of the Mafia 38 Death and legacy EditMattarella died in Rome in 1971 Journalist Gaia Servadio described him as an elegant gentleman with an elaborate and fluent discourse that disclosed his legal training He was recognized as an able minister in particular at the post of Foreign Trade which he held twice 21 His son Piersanti Mattarella was killed by Mafia in 1980 His assassination was probably spurred by his strong commitment against the relationships of numerous Sicilian politicians mostly members of DC itself with the Mafia He was committed to introducing a new transparency in the functioning of his party and in the Sicilian public life 39 However the Mafia felt betrayed by the Mattarellas who used to be responsive to Mafia interests 12 According to Leoluca Orlando former mayor of Palermo for the DC and Antimafia activist who had been a legal adviser to Piersanti Mattarella the rumours about his father and his party s experiences with the Mafia were probably responsible for Piersanti s aspiration to clean the Christian Democrat party of any such connections 7 His other son Sergio Mattarella was elected by parliament to be the 12th President of the Italian Republic in January 2015 being the first Sicilian to have held the post 40 See also EditPolitical connection of Stefano BontadeReferences Edit Bolignani Bernardo Mattarella biografia politica di un cattolico siciliano p 11 a b c d e in Italian Bernardo Mattarella Archived 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine portale Alcide De Gasperi nella storia d Europa Accessed 8 June 2011 Carli G 1996 Cinquant anni di vita italiana Laterza pp 119 and 147 Popolo e Liberta 3 June 1944 in Italian Relazione conclusiva Commissione parlamentare d inchiesta sul fenomeno della mafia in Sicilia Rome 1976 p 813 815 Casarrubea Fra diavolo e il governo nero p 84 a b Orlando Fighting the Mafia and Renewing Sicilian Culture p 47 See e g the article of Li Causi leader of the Sicilian communists in their newspaper La voce comunista on 21 July 1946 Letter of 29 June 1946 See De Marco Sturzo e la Sicilia nel secondo dopoguerra 1943 1959 S E I Torino 1996 47 Hess Mafia amp mafiosi p 159 in Italian Deaglio Il raccolto rosso 1982 2010 p 137 a b Dickie pp 423 24 in Italian Relazione conclusiva Commissione parlamentare d inchiesta sul fenomeno della mafia in Sicilia Rome 1976 p 223 224 Servadio pp 207 8 Chubb Judith 1982 Patronage power and poverty in southern Italy Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 23637 1 p 145 Servadio pp 128 9 which is actually inaccurate on this point as Mattarella was never put under investigation nor under trial for the Portella della ginestra bloodbath In the trial the accused persons were Alliata Marchesano and Cusumano who had been accused by Giuseppe Montalbano a communist member of Parliament Audition of on Giuseppe Montalbano before the Parliamentary Commission of Enquiry on Mafia in Sicily Report on the relation between Mafia and banditry approved on 10 February 1972 document XXIII n 2 sexies in Italian Tito Parlatore L eccidio di Portella della ginestra requisitoria pronunziata al processo celebrato a Viterbo dinanzi alla Corte d Assise Roma Senza editore 1954 pp 178 195 and 318 331 in Italian Strage di Portella Appello 1956 Parte seconda Blog di Giuseppe Casarrubea 6 August 2008 Sheet 491 of the minutes of the hearing of 24 July 1951 when Maria Lombardo Giuliano s mother said that Mr Crisafulli Pisciotta s attorney had asked her to be part of the plot Proceedings of the Parliamentary Commission for the enquiry of the phenomenon of Mafia Camera dei Deputati Commissione parlamentare di inchiesta sul fenomeno della mafia in Sicilia Report on the relation between Mafia and banditry approved on 10 February 1972 document XXIII n 2 sexies p 569 audition of Frank Mannino inmate member of the Giuliano gang and p 639 audition of Antonino Terranova inmate member of the Giuliano gang a b Servadio p 159 Servadio p 197 See the proceedings of the colloquium Cattolici Chiesa e mafia University of Messina 27 29 November 2003 a b Bess Michael 1993 Realism utopia and the mushroom cloud four activist intellectuals and their strategies for peace 1945 1989 Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 04421 1 pp 194 97 in Italian Danilo Dolci e la dimensione utopica Archived 12 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine di Livio Ghersi accessed 2 March 2011 in Italian Ragone Le parole di Danilo Dolci Archived 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine pp 220 22 Decision of the Tribunal of Roma 21 June 1967 published in Il Foro italiano 1968 342 ff confirmed by both the Court of Appeals of Rome 7 July 1972 and the Court of Cassation VI chamber 26 June 1973 in Italian Trent anni dall omicidio di Piersanti Mattarella L uomo nuovo della Democrazia cristiana asud europa 25 January 2010 Sicilians and Others reply by Luigi Barzini The New York Review of Books 4 December 1969 A Man of Honour 1983 written with Sergio Lalli New York Simon amp Schuster in Italian E morto Joe Bonanno fondo Cosa nostra in Usa La Repubblica 13 May 2002 Dickie p 290 of the first edition However the author has recognized that these facts are not true and has removed any reference to them in the second and in the third edition of the book Il Progresso Italo americano 17 September 1957 Giornale di Sicilia cronichles of Trapani 14 September 1957 See also Sergio Mattarella s letters to the editor in Interventi e repliche Corriere della Sera 14 May 2002 and Le lettere La Repubblica 11 October 2002 in Italian Vi dico i nomi dei padri della mafia La Repubblica 11 October 1996 in Italian Un giudice dietro l omicidio Mattarella La Repubblica 12 October 1996 Giornale di Sicilia 13 October 1996 in Italian Venne dai boss ho visto e giuro La Repubblica 15 April 1993 Dickie third ed 2009 p 448 Walker Keith 31 January 2015 73 year old Sicilian Sergio Mattarella is Italy s new president Euronews Reuters Retrieved 5 February 2015 Further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bernardo Mattarella in Italian Bolignani Giovanni 2001 Bernardo Mattarella biografia politica di un cattolico siciliano Rubbettino Editore ISBN 88 498 0214 5 in Italian Caruso Alfio 2000 Da cosa nasce cosa Storia della mafia del 1943 a oggi Milan Longanesi ISBN 88 304 1620 7 in Italian Casarrubea Giuseppe 1998 Fra diavolo e il governo nero doppio Stato e stragi nella Sicilia del dopoguerra Milan Franco Angeli ISBN 88 464 0820 9 in Italian Deaglio Enrico 2010 Il raccolto rosso 1982 2010 cronaca di una guerra di mafia e delle sue tristissime conseguenze Milan Il Saggiatore ISBN 978 88 428 1620 1 Dickie John 2004 Cosa Nostra A history of the Sicilian Mafia London Coronet ISBN 0 340 82435 2 Hess Henner 1998 Mafia amp Mafiosi Origin Power and Myth London Hurst amp Co Publishers ISBN 1 85065 500 6 Orlando Leoluca 2003 Fighting the Mafia and Renewing Sicilian Culture New York Encounter Books ISBN 1 893554 81 3 in Italian Ragone Michele 2011 Le parole di Danilo Dolci Foggia Edizioni del Rosone ISBN 978 88 97220 19 0 Servadio Gaia 1976 Mafioso A history of the Mafia from its origins to the present day London Secker amp Warburg ISBN 0 436 44700 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bernardo Mattarella amp oldid 1102527734, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.