1994 february 94 - Backhill online
Transcription
1994 february 94 - Backhill online
:If;~LLA COMUNITA'lTALlANA . wi!/iil' ,~ S A L A B A N C .1 •• '/ Alia VillaCarlotta si mangia, si beve e si balla, in una sala prit,'ata capace di ospitare 150 persone. A voi la scelta dell'occasione dafesteggiare!! Contattare Sig S. Roberts 071 637.9.941 39 Charlotte Street London WlP lHA 2 February 94 I :t;;~FJLA Sommario Servizi Speciali Si vota il 27 marzo Canaletto San Vincenzo Pallottl Avviso Another Victim Veritatis Splendor Eros Ramazzotti COMUNlTA' ITAlJANA • Contents Febbraio - February p. 5 p. 8 p. 14 p. 15 p.26 p.29 p.33 Regular Features Due Parole The Hill La Successione Cronaca della Comun"ita' p. 4 p. 10 p. 15 p. 16 Associazione Trinacria Anno della Famiglia Bazaar Amici di Verdi Chorus ConsoreIle del Sacro Cuore Dall'Italia In Cammino con Carmelo Pausa Poetica For a Rainy Day p.21 p.22 p.28 p.32 Entertainment7 Leisure & Sport Sportlight Italsport Anglo Italian Football League Tempo Libero Mamma's Ricetta p. 36 p. 37 p. 38 p. 41 p.42 Notices - A vvisi Chiesa di San Pietro Calendario Noticeboard To advertise in Backhill write to: Anna Advertising Department Backhill Magazine 4 Back Hill London EC1 R 5EN 0718371966 p.23 p.43 p.44 Printed by Sterling Printing Co. Lld. Febbraio 94 A detail from The Riva degli Schiavoni by the Venetian master Canaletto - see p. 8 © 1994 BACKHILL, 136 Clerkenwell Road, London EC1 78 Bounds Green Road. London N.ll 2EU 3 :iJ;~RLLA COMUNITA'ITALlANA Due Parole Padre Roberto Russo Cari Amici, eterni. La parola non e" proprio esalla, ma il significato e' quello: siamo Mamma mia come passa iI tempo! eterni. Passeremo per la porta della Si puo' dire che ancora non abbiamo morte ed entreremo nella vita eterna. messo a posto iI Prcscpio e gia': Veramente questo e' proprio diffieile cominciamo a parlare della per me capirlo. Lo credo nella prcghiQuaresima. Ci pens.1te che mercoledi': em con cui chiedo a Dio la fede, 16 febbraio e" iI giorno delle Ceneri: pero' e' proprio un mistero questo comineia la quaresima. Mamma, mia nostro tempo. Non moriremo piu"" vivremo per sempre. come passa iI tempo!! Certo iI tempo e" proprio un mistero, un, mistero di fede se vogliamo, perche" tullo quello che succede e' un dono di Dio per la nostra vita e perche' niente di quello che succede ci puo' separare dall'amorc di Cristo; anzi ei unisce all'amorc di Cristo. E tullO questo avviene per noi nel nostro tempo della vita. Guardate, e' proprio bello pensarCi. Pcnsnre a quando siamo cnlrnli nel mondo con la gioia della f.1miglia, la gioia di Dio~ cd c" comincialo· iI nostro tempo: iI do no di Dio. Anche Gesu', e' entrato nel mondo in un certo tempo della storia del mondo, e cosP e' cominciata la sua vita. Anchc per lui sono pass.1ti gli anni, e' pass.1to iI tempo. 'Haf.1110 la volonta' di Dio, e': morto sulla Croce ed e' risorto. Cosi' iI tempo e' divelllato La Quaresima ci chiama un po' a pens.1re a questa nostra vita che non finira' piu'. Che faremo? Saremo profondamcnte uniti all'amore di Dio e nell'amore fra di noi: la ricchezza del nostro cuore e della nostra anima etcrno: pcrche': Gcsu' e" Clcrno. Vera... s.,'ua' tuUa la nostra vita con Dio. mente e' sempre stato etcrno perche' e'Dio. Possiamo pregare, pregare tanto per sentire questa vita di Dio in noi. E' comineiata con iI ballesimo e poi con ~n Ma ora tO~1 a noi divcnlarc Jllempo passa 101 Ways to Pray Lord, it is about prayer. Well, it is just I don'. know how to....well, you know, pray. What is it, Lord? How do you start? What do you pray about? Who do you pray to? God? Jesus? Father? Mother? Lord? Dad? It's not c.1SY, you know. There's never been any r<:<11 guide to follow... 101 ' Ways to Pray!!" Not a bad idc.1 r<:<1l1y is it? It's all very well this Christian stuff, but how do you go about it? C1n't you give us even a tiny hint? You S.1Y we should listen. How do we do that when our minds are so full up we just forget to pray? Never mind listen! How do we know if you've heard- us? How do we know if we've been answered? Do you understand, Lord? 4 la prima comunione e poi con la cresima; e iI tempo passa. C'e' iI matrimonio, ci sono figli e nipoti e ci sono anche sofferenze, prove, erisi, gioie e speranze. Ma tullO nel momento favorcvole per noi, nel momento in cui Dio ei ha voluto con Lui in questo ,mondo. La Quarcsima ci aiuta a pensare a questo. Dio ei ha voluto ~n Lui in questo momento della storia del mondo. Quello che noi facciamo e' gradito a Dio perche' noi vogliamo bene a Dio. Pensiamoci nella Quarcsirna. Raecomandiamoci k1nto alia Madonna che ci aiuti a volere bene a Gesu', come -Gesu' ha voluto bene a noi, e' con orgoglio che ognuno di noi deve dire: "sono stato scelto da Dio". Siamo stati scelti da Dio: coraggiol C1mminiamo in questa nostra vita. PaSs.1 iI tempo. Passiamo iI nostro tempo uniti al Signore Dio. 11 tempo che pasS.1 e' un dono di Dio presente. 11 tempo che paSs.1 sono le vie del Signore, quelle vie in cui noi cam- miniamo con tanla spcranza, con 130la fede, con tanta umilta': perehe' I'amorc di Dio ci ha creato e I'amore di Dio ci ricevera' nel suo Regno. Quindi andiamo avanti, facciamo iI bene. _Dio ci ha voluto insieme in qucsto tempo. Aiutiamoci' in questo tempo della nostra vita. It isn't just me is it? I often wonder if I'm the only Christian doing everything the wrong wayll But is there a wrong way, Lord? Is there any way? Bcar with me, Lord. It's tough but plc.1se keep helping me. Even though I find it all so hard I know I'd be lost without you. You know what I rc.111y mc.1n, even if my prayers don't say it. You know what I need, not what I think I need. Help me to trust your -decision, Lord, even though it might hurt. Pick me up when I f.11l down. Hc.11 my broken fhith when I begin to doubt. Tc.1eh me to pray, Lord. Please!! (Extraclftom "Can we 'd/k. Lord?·· Copyright Kcvin }.(cyhcw: licence no. 29$031) :#~UA COMUNlTA' ITAlJANA Si ,vota il 27 marzo 11 Presidente della Repubblie.1, Ose.1r Luigi Scalf.1ro, ha finallllente annunciato la data delle elezioni poIitiche: il 27 Illarzo (ed anche il 28 Illarzo per rispettare i rituali della pasqua ebraica che cade proprio it giomo 27). Che queste elezioni avvengono in un Illolllento Illolto signifie.1tivo della storia italiana del dopoguerra e' QV-, vio; che le elezioni porteranno' la nazione a call1biamenti fondalllentali nel carattere del paese e' Illeno scon-, Into: sono gli attegialllenti e le abiludini della gente che devono cambiare. Ciononostanle si spera almcno di essere sulla stnlda giusta. Una buona parte dei candidati alle prossillle elezioni proviene dell'altuale partitocrazia: allri no. Da una parte vediamo il Partilo Democratico della Sinistra (gli excomunisti che sono meno comunisti di una voila) beneficiario '-' come del resto anche la Lega - della delusione della gente nei confrollli di mi corpo politico italiano, guidato da anni prin-, cipalmente dalla DC e dai socialisti e colpito dal cancro degli scandali" corruzione e tangenti. C'e' da ricordarsi infalti che it PDS ha avuto un notevole successo alle clezioni amministralive tenutesi verso la fine del 1993. Dall'altra parte vediamo alcuni elementi (Illeno "macchiali 0 piu' pulili) della (ex) Democrazia Cris-, tiana che si presentano nella nuova veste di "Partilo Popolare Ilaliano" il qualc sembra avere ancora un'ampio sostegno nel Illeridione. elettorale (da interamente proporzionale a principalmcnte maggiorilario pur conservando il 25% dei seggi con il sistema proporzionale). Egli ha fondato il movimento "Patto per (,Ilalia'" che cerea di mettere in eampo una larga alleanza liberaIdemocratiea a sostegno della sua eandidatura a Prcsidente del Consiglio. A lale scopo sta provando ad awicinarc Martinazzoli del Partito Popolare Ilaliano e Bossi della Lega. Ci sono all'intemo del PPI alcuni che sono a favore; altri, per esempio Rosy Bindi e Sergio Mattarella, che sono contrari. L'intenzione e' quella di realizzare una mini-cooperazione di partili che condividono idee si mili, richiamandosi a quella che ha portato talllo suceesso al PDS nelle ultime elezioni amministrative. La Lega di Umberto Bossi sembra diventare sem-' pre piu' forte. Ma nonostante le lamcntele delle gente nei confronti di un govemo "Iaggiu"': aRoma, lravolto di seandali, di corruzione, di tangenti - una siluazione questa dovuta, dicono, ai politici e alia criminalita' del meridione - c'e' da chicdersi se la gran parte del popolo dell'llalia settentrionale quando si lrovera' alle ume, voterebbe infillli per un panito scismalico, opportuno e Senl.1 un programma Scnltando ancora nel panorama concreto c serio polilico italiano possialllo trovare Mario Segni, figlio di uno degli ex-presidenti della Repubblie.1, grande promotore dei rcferendnm che hanno. portalo ai call1biamenti del sistema Ricordiamoci delle ultime clezioni brilanniche: secondo molta gente, il govemo conservatore era colpevole della grave situazione economiea in cui il paese si lrovava, impotente dinanzi all'aumenlo notevole e con- tinuo della criminalita' e aveva sman.. tellalO essenziali strutture e servizi pubblici. Pcro', quando il popolo si e' trovato COSlrctto a decidersi sui serio. ha elelto di nuovo un governo conservatorc che gll parcva essere delle due alternative il meno peggio. ChisS<1' quanti ilaliani si troveranno in una situazione simile? Volare per un'Ualia unila - anche se con il Umberlo Bassi Febbraio 94 F. Spirito meridione - 0 per un'llalia spaccala a mela'? Forse meno seriamente, menzioniamo anche "Forza llalia". In questo contesto non e' 10 slogan dei tifosi azzurri ma il movimento creato da, Oscar LUIgI Scalfaro Folo: Mancuso Silvio Berlusconi che comprcnde, tra gli allri, personaggi (naturalmente) del mondo del e.1lcio e della TV. Inoltre c'e' la Rete di Leoluea Orlando il quale e' convinlo di poter conquistare almeno i due terzi dei seggi in Sicilia e rappresenta quindi un possibilie a1lealo per un a1lro partito (il PDS?), Se aggiungiamo Rifondazione Comunisla che sembra anch'essa aver falto qualche passo in avanti, i socialisti (che hanno fatto grandi passi indietro) e il Movimenlo Sociale llaliano troviamo quindi un bel miscuglio di colori, la possibilita' di grande confusione all'ilaliana il 27 marzo e alia fine nessun partito 0 ragruppa· mento con deputati sufficienti a formarc un governo senl.1 dover riccorerc all'ennesima coalizione di inleressi, compromessi e 10ltizzazione. Speriamo che all'inizio di aprile non dovrcnuno dire: "Plus .,a change, plus c'est la meme chose", 5 -b~ ~ . RIVISI'A DELLA COMUNITA'ITALIANA It ITALIAN RESTAURANT 150 Southampton Row London WC1 'll" 071-8374584/5837 { Open J 1.30am until llpm. WE WELCOME WEDDINGS, BANQUETS AND PARTIES IN OUR COMPLETELY REFURBISHED DOWNSTAIRS RESTAURANT .~~ . .. ~~ ~<,..) HI........ .,...~"'2~- S T U D 1.0 PAR I S PIIOTOGRAPIIY & VIDEO A Personal and Friendly Service for your Wedding Day. Prints in Colour, Black and While and Black and Wltile Hand Painted and Toned. A Good Selection of Hand-Made Italian Leatlter Albums. A Two Camera. Video Service also available. Book botl. Photograpl.y and Video to receive a Free 20" x 16" Canvas Photograph of your choice. For an Appointm[!tltto View our Work ring Arturo on 081 851 8975 or 081 852 7.'362 with no obligation. . OTIIERPIIOTOGRAPH1CSERVlCES Commercial. P.R.• Sodal 6 February 94 I Febbraio 94 7 :tJ;~FLLA COMUNITA'ITALIANA The Grand Canal Canaletto was born in Venice, in the parish of S.Lio, in 1697; his house, which is quite near the Rialto Bridge, can still be seen. His father was Bernardo C1nal, a scene painter, and the son was baptized Giovanni Antonio Canal. Later on, he sometimes signed himself Canale or' da Ca'nal but from an early age he was c.111ed Cml3letto, 'the little C1nal', no doubt to distinguish him from his father. Nothing is known about his youth until, about 1719, both father and son went to Rome to work in the theatre. He returned to Venice, perhaps with his father, in 1721 or 1722. Canaletto's first known commission came from Owen McSwiney, ,and involved playing a small part in a highly imaginative project. There were to be twenty-four allegoric.11 paintings commemorating celebrated figures. in recent English history and Canaletto was to collaborate with Piazzetta and Cimaroli in one of them and with Pittoni and Cimaroli in miother. This, then, is all the evidence by which we may jlidge the kind of work on which C1naletto was employed until his first view paintingis recorded . It was not to be long, however,. before a definite style for Canalel!o's c.1rlY painting could be identified. By applying these somewhat tenuous clues to paintings whose authorship is uncertain, modern scholarship has been able to attribute to Canaletto a group of imaginary landscapes, or cupricei, with varying degrecs of conviction. In the c.1se of the Capriccio with Classical Ruins the attribution carries the weight of an inscription, 10 ANTONIO CANAL. 1723. There urc in fact some two dozen puintings in ull, of which it may be 5.1id that, although no single one c.1n bc attributed with certainty to Cmmletto. C1nuletto's c.1rly work had certain characteristics. They were large, painted in warm colours on u reddish· brown ground, often with exaggerated perspective and spectacular cloud effects to emphasise the theatrical nature of the scenes. In these qualities, us also in the freedom of the bmsh strokes, they contrast strikingly with the smull" bright,. topographiC:11 pictures in cool colours, precisely painted" which wc associate with Cunulel!o's luter work, of which so many moreexumples exist. Yet there is much 10 be found'in common among pi~tures of both peri. ods. Above all, Cunaletto was through· out his car~r preoccupied with the filII of sunlight on Ihe varying textures of 8 buiiding materials,. By 1730, Canaletto had formed an association with Joseph Smith:an English man of business who was resident in Venice. Smith was both a dealer and a collector. He dealt in almost any kind of C9mmodity which promised to show .hint a legitimate. profit, including, for the ten years 1730 to 1740, Canaletto's paintings. From-about 1726 until C"· nalel!o's dC<1th in .1768, he also collected all the paintings, drawings and etchings by C1nalel!0 which he was e; the r ..~!"J.II:I:'~ unable to sell or w h i c h. he loved too much to sell. To· wa rds the end of his I i f e Smith sold the greater Giovanni Canal part of his vast collection to King George Ill. Smith's first commission· to Canaletto was for a set of six paintings of the Piazzctta and the area close by. They were very large, c; ,133 x 170 cm. They show Venice as those who lived in the cily knew it, with all its shabbiness and untidiness and often with cloudy skies, ralher Ihan the e1C<1n, sunny Venice the tourists would want 10 remember. Smith had a great persistence. For ten years it would seem that no Englishman who visited Venice and could alford a Canalel!o left without onc, or at any rate without commissioning one or more to be sent home after him. The Duke of Bedford bought no fewer than twenty-two, showing almost every aspect of Venice.Another Englishman, possibly the Duke of Buckingham bought hvcnly-oue views, half of the Graud Canal and the remainder of c.1mpi. and churches. Known as the 'Hurvey' group, these were dispersed in the 1950s but u number of them remain together in a private collection in Milan. It was customary for Canaletto's festival scenes to be painted on a larger sc:lIe than his other pictures, occasionally on a very large sc.11.e, such as the pair now in the' Aldo Crespi collection which arc more than 2.5' metres wide. Like the ceremonies themselves, the festival paintings were essentially de· j.G. Links signed for the visitor rather than the .resident of Venice and in his recording of them the artist seems more concerned with marshalling a complex series of groups and' incidents into a coherent whole than with probing and exposing the intimate detail of Venetian life, as in his more personal views. In spite of the large scale on which Canaletto's .paintings were produced, and the fact that in many cases only slightly varying versions of the same subject appear, tlleir qualily should not be underrated. They show the tourist's Venice just as he wished to. remember it,. "drenched in sunshine but with a luminosily. that follows rain, the light and shade. manipulated with immense skill to produce a balanced and harmonious design and, above all, a handling of the fabric of buildings· that could 'stem only from acute observation and alfection. It may be 5.1fely assumed that between 1730 and 1740 the larger part of Canaletto's work passed through the hands of Joseph Smith. Curiously enough, though, it seems to have been his finest work which eluded Smith. The collection of the Earls of Carlisle, for example, included a number of Venetian vicws of a qualily well below Smith'sstandard. Apart from The Bacino, Canaletto's two grC<1t masterpieces of the 'Smith' period, 1730-40, arc The Stonemason's Yard and The Doge visiting San Rocco. Both arc in the National Gallery, London, ·togcther with the Grand Canal: with S. Simone Piccolo, a haunting evoc.1tion of a part of Venice which has long lost its bC<1uty. The Stonemason's Yard is unique for Canaletto in its mobility of conception, presenting in the 5.1me picture the best of his early, rhapsodic Slyle and his mature sense of realism. The S.Rocco painting breathes life into a rypic.11 Venetian ceremony in a way Gentile Bcllini would indced have envied. A turning point in Canaletto's career c.1me in the c.1rly 1740s when the War of the Austrian Succession reduced drastically the flow of visitors to Venice, and consequently the demand for his pictures. Smith remained a faithful patron but virtually his only onc. Every device was tried to stimulate the demand or to divert the artist's talents into new channels. Five paintings of Roman subjects c.1n be identified with certainty as of 1742 since C1naletto now, almost for the first time, began signing and dating his work. There followed in 1743-4 a February 94 I ::tJ;~FLLA CO~fUNlTA' ITALIANA , grouP. of four paintings of the Piazza, being appointed British Consul in Ven- he was no longer able to find an outlet the Plazzetla a'.'d the Molo, his only ice, wrote to MeSwiney, who had been for everything the artist cOuld produce. known Vemce vIews of the period. back in London for some ten years, Canaletto was therefore reduced to The unusually \vide angle of vision asking him to introduce Canaletto per- drawing capricci for engravers to reof these Venice views, and of drmvings sonally to the Duke of Richmond. It produce and to painting small pictures o.f the period, has prompted the sugges- was therefore with good prospects that for the few tounsts who were still able tIOn that they were executed with the the artist set off for England, where he to visit Venice. But the imagination aid of the cmnera obscura, an instru- was already so well known. which had for so long enabled him to !IIent likc.the ca'!1era whic.h superseded Canaletto at first received a warm sum up the pictorial qualities of any .t, but whIch projected its unage on to a reception in London and found a new subject was now deserting him. He was sheet of ground glass instC<1d of sensi- patron in Sir Hugh Smithson; who was far from idle, but he seldom composed tized film. The association of Canalet- later to become Duke of Northumber- an original picture. Nevertheless, every to's name with thec.1mera obscura is land. The artist's e.1rliest interest was noiv and then there were flashes of the by no means confined to these particu- naturally drawn to the Thames and to old originalitY,of.mind and the acutelar views and it follows the remark of Westminster Bridge which had hardly ness of observation. A. M. Zanetti who, in 1771, wrote that· been completed when he arrived. In 1763 Canaletto was elected a "By his example Canal taught the cor~ Canaletto never produced anything member of the new Academy: He had rect way of using the c.1mera obscura." finer than the superb pictures during not been one of the original thirty-six The subject is one which can never be the nine or ten years he was to spend in members at its founding in 1756. Cerresolved \vith certainty but there is no England, allhough the mannerism tainly the most celebrated Venetian rC<1S0n to believe that optical aids which had already marked his later artist alive at the time, he was nevertheplayed any signific.1nt part in C.1nalet- work in Venice was not sadly apparent. less a view painter and as such scarcely to's art.· C.1naletto did not paint what Many of his figures had become little worthy ofthe status of an Academician. appC<1rs in a camera lens: he painted more than mechanical strokes of the For hIS reception piece, which he dewhat.is ey~ reported to his supremely brush and too often the architecture layed presenting for t,vo years, he crC<1t.ve bram. was conveyed by the hard lines' of a naturally presented not one of the From the beginning of his c.1rcer the ruler rather than the loving response of views that had made him famous, but pep I~ad played a large part in Canalet- the hand to its many subtleties. an architectural capricco such as halfa to s hfe as well as the brush. He used it After his initial success the demand dozen other painters would have been for sket~h~s wh,ieh ~vere later built up for his work began to fall off and after capable of producing. Two years later, mto pallltmgs m IllS studio and for four ye.1rs in England Canaletto de- on 19 April 1768, he died, and today finished drawirigs which we~e almost cided to return to Venice. Then within this capriccio is the only painting by all t~en by Smith and kept in his less than a'year he was back in London, Canaletto on public exhibition in the collectIOn. In these C<1rly 1740s, when it resorting for the second. time to an city whose beauty and fame he had scem~ to !ta~e been hard to find buyers advertisement inviting prospective cli-' done so much to spread abroad. for Ius pamtlllgs, Canaletto turned with ents to visit his studio. The following There are many unanswered quesapparent plc.1sure to drawing scenes on year he received a commission for six tions. We know little or nothing about lhe C<1st of Venice, at that time separate paintings of various subjects. Soon Canaletto as a man. He never married .slands. He then made a visit to the after these were finished it must have and no letter of his survives. On the l1!ainland. and in this he was accompa- become apparent to Canaletto that Eng- other hand, we know a great deal more med by IllS nephew Bellotto, now in his land had little more to offer him and by about mid-Gcorgian London and eightearly twenties. 1755 or 1756 he had finally returned to eenth-eentUlY Venice than we should The tour on the mainland, lip the the city of his birth where he remained ever have known if he had not made Brenta canal and to Padua, resulted in a until his death. these the subjects of his art. number of drawings, all of which went Joseph Smith remained a friend and to Smith, but hardly any paintings. It took a few drawings and paintings but was from the same tour that many of his etchings J~,"'c.C'".';: ..."~..... y-~~'".....- ...~~:~""_"''''''''''''''.....--",..--, sprang and, allhough ~f there were only thirty ex-' amplcs, and they were his first experiments in the art, they show Cmmletto as one of the most skilful and imaginative exponents the medium has ever inspired. It can only have been because of the continued absence of support that Canalello decided, in 1746, to 1C<1Ve Venice and to try his fortune in the country to which so much of his work had alrC<1dy cone. The loyal Smith, who had recently achieved his ambition of Piazza San Marco: looking east Febbralo 94 9 -b~, ~ RIVISI'A DELLA COMUNITA'ITALIANA The 'Hill January 1994. I find it hard to believe that a year has gone by; I wrote my introductory article for 'The Hill' page, back in November' 1992. I must say that I've enjoyed researching the history of '11 Quartiere' and interviewing the people who remember the times when the historic triangle was alive with Italian Immigrants and their offspring. Today Bruno and I went down to Mount Pleasant to have a look at what, if anything, remains of the little row of houses and shops that ',adjoined The Apple Tree public house on the corner of Warner Street and Mount 1'1c.1S<1nt. Therc were Italian immigrants housed here and in another row of houses and shops across the road, leading up to what is now part of Mount Plc.1S<1nt Sorting Area and Post Office Building. What we found was, The Apple Tree and Nos. 47-57 still well preserved, a little way along past what is now a relatively small block' of new flats. L3ystall Court and a small cul-de-S<1c called Pooles Buildings. All that is left ofa small block of buildings which in days gone had been the home of many transient Italian families. All that was left of the houses on the other side of the road was a part of a railing that had obviously been the 'frontage of one of the houses. Maria Di LuCCl\, who spent her early years in Pooles Buildings until 1931, when they moved inlo the'rooms above Comitti's workshops (No 53), sent me this extremely old etching of Comiiti's premises. We are not sure if the etching is in fact so ancient that it is a true picture of the way the building looked at the time it was drmvn, or if the artist left out the upper floors of 49 to display further the signs depicted on the walls and roofs. For generations of Italians the rooms above the Comitti workshops were home. You had to be recommen'ded to the landlord by a relative or friend to get rooms here. The Comitti's were lair'to their tenants and certain standards had to be met, in order to stay in what must have been a step up from the overcrowding that exis£ed in many of the houses in the hc.1rt of '11 Quartiere'. I managed to find out a little of the history of the Comitti's from Maria and one of the descendents, at present car- 10 Olive Besagni rying on the business which is, now in a glass blower who progressed to baSouthgate. rometers at a time when the Industrial Onerato Comitti the founder of the Revolution was taking place and habusiness arrived in England in or rometers had become a popular feature around 1845. It is believed that he came in the homes of the English middle from Como in Northern Italy. The e1asses. It must have been a case of Comitti name has been associated with being in the right place at the right barometers for many generations. The time. The family still have examples of company, which is still trading today, is barometers with the Comitti name on ,more associated with clocks, but in the them dating as far back as 1825 -1830. Onerato had a son Luigi and a old days, as you can sce by the etching, • it was barometers that were the main daughter Bianca. Luigi joined his facore of the " , business. There is in existence a catalogne dated 1910 which offered over 75 different clock designs, more than 100 different barometers, barographs, thermographs and a vast range of thermometers. Onerato was originally Right - etching of the Comitti Building. Below '- the "modern" ver.. sion as it ap-' peared in 1947. February 94 :1J;~EU.A I Can you name the gang? There is deffinilely a Molinari, Grandi and Roberto. Is the boy far right Italo Servini? there in'the business and it was Luigi who fonned the company of '0 Comitti and Son Limited' in the ye.1r 1898. Bianca married George Barker an Englishman who worked for the company. On the death of Luigi, the Barker family carried on the business. One of their sons Ronald James Barker married Beryl RaymOlid; they had 7 children William, Clare, Susan, Thomas, Simon, Jonathan and Angela. The four boys and their descendants arc still running the successful business today. I don't know if the Comitti's owned any of the adjoining properties. I have managcd to trace, with the help of Maria and others, some information about some of our families who lived on this Iiltle patch. Apart from the Molinaris, who moved into No 49 in the year 1904 and one or two others I haven't been able to establish the exact dates when the families actually lived in this are.1. . No. 47: Santina & Giovanni Bcrtani (1920's) Childrcn: Maria, Gina, Pepe" Silvio and Linda. Luigi & Kathleen Morra (1920's) No 49:Jenni & Amadeo Mclordini Sons .. Eddi and Olli (emigrated to Australia) Gina & Pcter Gasparelli Marinctta & Tadeo Molinari (1904) Children: Tony, Annie, Dmnaso & Luisa. Elisn & Giachino Menozzi (1930's) Febbraio 94 COMUNlTA'ITAUANA Sons Rcnato (Ronnie) Giuseppe (pippie) Vittorio (Victor) At one period Ida Finella had a small cafe on the ground floor,. but she never actually lived there. No 53:Famiglia Di Lucca Children: Maria, Mario and Primo (accordionist) Lena & John Grandi Children:Charlie, Mary, Frankie, Ricki, Carlo, R.1phael Frances & Lorenzo Capoeci Famiglia Stone (English) Pasquale & Co. Piano and pianoia makers. They also hired out barrel organs. The local children used to wait upon a group of "transvestites" who came regularly to hire one of the organs. The children were faseinated by the arrival of this group, who would enter the premises' as men, and appear later dressed as women. No doubt our little Paes,1ni dished out a comment or two as this rare phenomenam trundled their organ off inlo the streets. No 55:Rnchel & Giovanni Pisani Children: Frank (rich), hairdresser, violinist. Johnny (Cartoonist for the DailySkelch).Carmela, whose son Mario Fabrizi was a well known comedian seen regularly in films and on the television in "The Benny Hill Show" and the "The Army Game" a popular series in the early 1960's. No 57:Giovanna & Peter Servini (Wine Importers) Children: Lena, Marco, Adele (Delina), Giovanni (Johnnie), Marco, Pierina, Giuseppe (Pip) and Domenko. Maria & Domenico Servini Children: halo, Marinetta and Giovanna ' Pooles Buildings: Adelina & Jack Azzali Children: Giuseppe (Joo) Giovanni (Johnny Cowboy) Francesco (Frank), Yvonne, Maria. Famiglia Sidoli Sons: Luigino (Gino), Gio· vanni (Johnny, Cisco Kid) Famiglia Assarati (1930's) The only family who had a ear and a garagel Famiglia Piemonte The row of houses and shops opposite Comittis No 8: Maria & Peter Zanelli (1930's) , Children: Ettore (Eeci) Rene & Bruna. No 18:Mary & Giovanni Rabaiotti Children: Alberto (Belt, Rabbits), G10ria No 16:Daisy and Giovanni Miglio Children: Peter, Gino, Tina, Ecci, Bruna, Elena. ' ' The little· shoe menders, Monas, whose story I related in an earlier issue, was also situated along this row. The Apple Tree public house was already well established in 1904, the landlord's name was Dove. The children in the early years remember that it was the place to find Papa', because it was here that the Italian men went to relax in their leisure hours. Apparently, Mrs Dove was always kind to the children and would regularly give them sweets. (Children, p:irtieularly in those days, do not forget givers of sweets). I will be telling you more about the residents of No 49, Famiglia Menozzi in next month's BACKHILL. Goodbye for now ... Olive. - -~ '--_~ _-'t.~ ---~ ~ -:~~~--i Childhood in Mount Pleas· ant. Cloe4wise from front: Bruno Manolini (visiting from Italy), Marinel/a Gi·. aeon nee Servini~ Bruna Ter.. roni nee Zanelli, Luisa Malinar!, El/ore (Eeky) Zanelli. 11 :J!;~LLA COMUNITA'ITALlANA • ( • KEYS CUT WHILE-U-WAIT • • LOCKS SUPPLIED & FITTED • • DIGITAL DOOR LOCKS • • INTERCOM SYSTEMS SUPPLIED & FITTED • • SECURITY GRILLS SUPPLIED & FITTED • SERVICE. • FAST & 'EFFICIENT . . - ~. . . .' :;.... 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Leaflets and Brochures BENITO AND LUCIANO WE CAN GIVE DRIVING TUITION IN ITALIAN PASS YOUR TEST WITH US Sterling Printing Company Umited Continuous Stationery Febbraio94 78 Bounds Green Rd. London Nil 2EU 081-888 9153 DAY: TELEPHONE EVENINGS: 0836319744 0850238275 071 6301227 071 7311075 13 -v~ ~ VincenzoPallotti L'apostolato di san Vincenzo Pallotti . RIVlSl'A DELLA COMUNlTA' ITAUANA. Francesco Amoroso SAC con i· quali svolgeva un capillare apostolato, tra i ragazzi dellc scuolc dci Castclli Romani, diffondcndo carPresupposto di unvero cd cffic.1.cc toni edificanti, introducendo preghapostolato e' la volonla' di vivcre e icrc, distruggendo libri e immagini profcssarsi strumcnto di Dio distinta- scandalosc. Prcsc la direzionc di mente. La forza evoc.1.1iva e aggre- Adunanze e Congregazioni giovanili, gante dell'atiivila' apostolic.1. sta esat- pcr .educarnc piu' profondamentc i tamentc nella evidenza di qucsta stm- soci. mentalita' e nella sua distinzione. Appena sacerdotc' si allco" a san Cioc', quanto piu' uno e' capace di Gasparc .dcl Bufalo pcr propagare il esscre segno· visibilc della slla· ap- eulto dcl preziosissimo Sanguc, ma partcncnza a Gesu' Cristo, lanto piu' piu" ancora' per t"1fC insicmc CO~l lui cfficacc sara'· la sua evangclizzazionc gucrra al malcdcllo pcccato. e diventcra' polo di allrazionc pcr Nel 1832 ebbe dallaMadonna iI nuoyi evangclizzatori. done privilegiato di essere ammcsso Era questo iI mcssaggio del prec- allo Spolmlizio Spiritualc con lei, la edente artieolo Sll san Vincenzo Palloiti, il qllale si feee integralmentc strumcnto di Dio neL SilO csscrc e nd suo opcrare, e racchillse iI SilO programma di vita in questc parole: '.'Sia distrulla llllla la mia vita e la vila di Gesu~ Crista sia tuua la vita mia''., oPPllre in qucste altre: '·'11 nulla e il pe!Mlt~ ,c' t~t!.a la mia vita. if nulla c iI peccato e' tuna la mia richczza., mu pcr la Miscricordia infinita di Dio. la vila di GCSII' Cristo. ,!,io Signore, e' tuUa la mia vita". TendcrC siucer:ul,ente, in/hili, a farsi puro strumcnlo di Dio c lrasformarsi in Gcsu' Cristo, e' iI reqnis;lo essenziale pcr divenire davvcro Apostolo dcll'Elcrno Padre, poichc', se non e' questa I'ispirazione dclla propria vita e la guida dclle propric azioni. incvilabilmcnte, I'allivita' si mutera' in apostolato dcl proprio .io, anchc sc e' fhlla sollo la copcratura dcl nomc di Dio. Cosa chc avvicnc scnza 1l1alizia, s'intcnde, copcrtura del nome di Dio. Cosa chc avVicnc scnza Madre di Dio; e grazic a qucsto malizia, s'intende, mu avvicnc. per Spos.1.lizio Ici, la Picna di Grazic, gli I'irrucnza dcll'io ·psicologico chI? d11' portava in dotc tullO qucllo che avcva. origine a tulle Ic nostre azioni c, se gli portava iI Figlio, pcrehc' cgli 10 non c'e' un'altra for/':I prcvalcnlc, Ic riconosccssc come SlIO, c, poichc" cUa dirigc a suo proprio vantaggio. . cra SPOS:I dcllo Spiriio, s'impcgnava San Vincenzo, gia' ncl 1815. trc far si ehc cgli fossc luno trasformalo anni prima che divcnisse saccrdole, ncllo Spirilo Santo. appllnto' iI progcllo di f.1.re un'associL'affcno immcdiato dcllo SpoS:ll. azionc di saccrdoti santi, pcr potcr izio fu la composizionc di un lriplice ricmpire di santi Ic casc dci .sccolari. Mcsc di Maggio, uno pcr i Rcligiosi" Era gia' chiaro pcr lui chc la s:mtita' un altro pcr i Fcdcli Laid, e iI tcrzo non puo' esscre promossa chc da pcr i Sacerdoti. Chi li Icggc capisce un'altra, piu' grandc. &,ntita". E com- cite il Santo avcva in mcntc una incio" a .raccoglicrc intorno a se" un crociata, o·.iiissfonc gcncmle, di s.1.nlipugno di sacerdoti SOllo iI tilolo fic;lzionc per tulta la ChicS:l. Tulti signific.1.tivo di Icga Antidcmoniac;l. Sami,' prcsto Snnli, grandi SmitH 14 Qucsto e' il pinno di Di.o, del quale si fcce portabandiera san Vincenzo Pallotti. La santita' dci Fedeli non dev'cssere minore di quella dei Religiosi e dci Sacerdoti, pcrche' anche pcr essi il modello e' Gesu' Cristo e anche· cssi, sc avrilllno fame e sete di s.1.ntita',nc Saranno Saziati. Fondo' poi, nel 1835, l'Unione 0 Societa' dell'Apostolato Caltolico, alln qualc invilo' tUlti: Saecrdoti Sccolari, Religi(lsi, Suore e Laici, pcrche~ con tUlli mczzi n loro disposizione: ministero eeclcsiaslico, prcghiera, s.1.crificio e bcni materiali, contribuisscro a ravvivarc la Fede e la C1.rita' e a diffondcrc il Regno di Dio in tulto iI mondo. Ma chc cosa era I'apostolato per san VincenzoZ Ecco la sua dcfinizionc. L'apostolato e'· la continuazionc dclla stcssa opcra che Gesu' Cristo vcnnc a traltare sulla tcrra, cioc' la Redcnzionc. Cioe': I'Apostolato e' la'Redcnzione di Gcsu' Cristo. Non si tratta, 'allorn" di far discorsi 0 azioni; ma di rcdimere Ic animc, santificarle.· Dice anchc. Gcsu' Cristo vcnne aportarc il fuoco sulla 'terra C VIlolc che qucsto fuoco venga acceso; qucsto cs.1.11a~ mCllte c'· 10 scopo della Socicta', diffondcrc il fuoco di Gcsu' Cristo. Mi spicgo mcglio. Gcsu' Cristo pcr insegnarci i pregare, composc il Padre, Noslro. Ma, pcr prcgare, non basla rccilarc le parole del Padre Nostro. Non sono le parolc che fanno la prcghicra; la preghicrl! la fa I'aspirazionc intima dcll'animn. Cosi' I'aposiolato lion lo,fa un'azionc Iiturgic.1., nc' una formula di preghicra missionaria nc~ un'ofTcrt3 ,di danaro, ma la sele dcl Rcgno di Dio. La vita di Gcsu' Cristo fu apostolato, pcrchc' fu tUlta una obbedicrizi al Padrc, pcrchc' il suo cibo l:ra la \folonta' dcl Padre. 11 modo dcll'apostolato pallotliano c' anchc molto significativo, Egli volcva fare tanlo pcr la gloria di Dio, ma scnza che nessuIlo·' se ·-accorgcssc. Solo, solo, solo pcr la gloria di Dio e pcr la s.1.lvczz.1. dclle animc. Anzi, pcr evitare che in una sua azione si nascondcssc qualeosa di lcrrcno, egli chicdcva che Ic suc ne <;:,onfinua a pagina 38 Febroaiy94 :iJ;~1LA COMlJNlTA'ITALlANA La Successione \ Vorrei iniziare questo nuovo anno 1994 (ehe auguro pieno di ogni felicita' a tUlli i lellori) con qualcosa di' nuovo rispello all'argomento delle pensioni che sono usuale trallare. Voriei parlarvi brevemente della Suecessione. Ora, voi' s.1pete che Io non sono un notaio, peicui le informazioni che sto per dare sono, per necessita" di natura generale e quindi consiglio coloro che si trovano in questa situazione di contattare chi' del caso per avere maggiori dellagli che si applic.1no al SIlO caso. Cosa succede se una persona muore senza aver fallo testamento e lascia un palrimonio? In questo caso. it ,patrimonio'va diviso tra i' familiari supcrstiti in basc alia legge che prevede delle priorita'. Innanzi tUllo, se gli eredi sono ;1 coniuge cd i figli, un terzo dei beni va al coniugc (marilo 0 moglie) cd i duc tcrzi ai figli leggillimi, naturali 0 adottivi. In prescnza di un solo ,figlio il patrimonio va diviso a mela' con it coniuge che ha anche it dirillo del- Avviso· La boccialura parlamentarc del disegno di Lcggc costituzionale di modifica degli articoli 48, 56 c 57 della costiluzione ha provocato, come e' noto, amarezza c· delusione nclle collcllivita' italiane all'estero. L'alluazione dcll'cscrcizio ali'cstcro del dirillo.di volo c', infalli, una aspirazione delle comunita' .italiane vecchia di molti decenni c" dalc Ic premcsse e Ic posizioni concretc assunte dai vari partiti polilici, cra Icgillimo allendcrsi che la scconda Icllura parlamentarc avrcbbe confcrmato I'csito della prima, Purtroppo, cosi' non e' stalo cd i motivi dcl cmnbiamento di rOlla di alcuni schieramcnti politici - chc pur scmbrano contrastare le Icgillimc aspCllative dcgli italian; all'estcro " non sono di agevole comprcnsione ed interprelazione pcr la comunita' ilaliana residcnte nella circoscrizione consolare di Londra. ' Oa parte del Governo - che si e' ballulo per I'approvazione del discgno Febbr~lo 94 Pietro Molle I'uso deU'abitazione familiare. Se non ci sono figli, i due terzi vanno al coniuge mentre I'altro terzo va diviso Ira i fratelli cd ascendenti. Se manca iI coniuge 0 i parenti fino 111 selto grado, I'eredita' passa allo Stato. Quanto si paga? L'imposta della SIIcccssione si calcola in base aI va!ore del patrimonio:. al di sotto di un valore di 250 milioni )'imposta di successione non si paga eccetto iI 2% suI solo'valore degli immobili. Oltre i 250 milioni di valore del patrimonio si applicano delle imposte it percenluali:'3% da 250 a 350 milioni; 7% da 351 a 560 milioni; iO% da 50],a 800 milioni,'ecc. Dal'I994 ·entrano in vigore nuove regole per la liquidazione deU'imposta di successione. In precedenza, la procedura per la SIIccessione era la seguente: I'ercde 0 gli eredi dovevano presentare aU'Ufficio del Registro la dichiarazione di successione entro sei mesi dal deceso di:colui, cha lascia I'eredita'. L'Ufficio di Registo caloolava I'importo da pagare e notificava il contribuente. L'imposta doveva es- sere pagata entro 90 giorni. A partire da\ 1.1.1994 it tennine della presentazione della dichiarazione di successione e' sempre ill sei mesi, ma se l'Ufficio del Registro non risponde, Spelta a1.contibuente ill farsi i conti per' C?nto proprio c pagare entro i 90 giorni. Ora I'operazione del calcolo delI'imposta non e.' facile cd i tecnici del Ministero delle. Finanze stanno meltendo a punto un apposilo modulo che e' fonnalo da ben 16 pagine, faccndo concorrenza aI" famigerato Modulo 740. Cosi' dopo esserci "illvertiti" con I'ISI, I'ICI cd iI 740, iI Ministero ci sta prcparando un altro rebus. II guaio e' che in questo caso si rischia di raggiungere I'imverrosimile perche' una persona che ha appema perso un familiare non puo' avere la tranquillita' d'animo per compilare questo ulteriore modnlo che gia' si preannuncia difficile. E come al SOlilO, le complicazioni saranno ancora maggiori per gli ita!iani che muoiono 0 che vIvono aU'estero. Console Generale Luca Brofferio di Legge • si desiderano, pertanto, sottolineare i seguenti aspetti. Nnmerose prese di posizione a diversi Iivelli, compresa quella autorevolissima del 'Capo delle Stato, hanno portato in primo piano nella politica nazionale la presenza degli ilaliani aU'estero, iI loro lavoro, i loro rapporti con la madre patria cd iI loro contributo aU'economia nazionale. Cosi', nonostante i' numerosi e gravI problemi attuali della politica intema italiaila, la tematica degli italiani all'estero e' assunta per la prima volta da mollissimi anni al massimo Iivello di risonanza nazionale. Cio' e' dimostralo anche dal fatto che negli ultimi giomi gli schieramenti polilici si sono espressi in favore deU'adozione di provvcdimenti legislativi che consentano I'esercizio del diritto di voto attivo dcgli italiani all'estero gia' in oecasione delle prossime consultazioni politiche, abbandonando nccessariamente per iI momento il progetto delle circosclrizioni estere che richicde una modifica coslituzionale. Pertanlo, iI govemo desidera rassi· curare le comunila' all'estero che non vi e' alcuna diminuzione del SIlO interesse verso le loro problematiche. La madre pa/rla delude I suol figli? 15 -b~ ~" RIVIS'lW DEILA: COMUNITA' ITALIANA Cronaca attivita' deJJa~c6munita' ( Le Consorelle.del Sacro Cuore Il party natalizio delle Consorelle del Sacro Cuore ci ha' portato tanto 'buon umore. Anehe i, momenti. della 'festa fanno parte della vita di Dio. Vi ricordate che 'Gesu' alle nozze di Cana' ha cambiato I'acqua in vino? ' 'Meno male~dle Gesti' ilonha fatto questo,miracolo alle Consorelle,: altriiiienti shibriacilVario iutti!" 'tombola,' abbiarno mimgiato Abbiamo ,giocato bene, abbiamo:parlato' e abbiamo ,cant:IlO tanto,bene con iI nostro Marcello VolaTite' alia fisarmonica; . a Foto: P. Russo Amici di Verdi Chorus l '-------------,..,...----' ( As with.anyone who attended ,the Amici di Verdi Chonts' perfoTtnance'of 1 Lombardi della Prima Crociata, I could not wait for their next offering. This was lield on 'Wednesday 8th December at St. ,Peter:s Italian Churchjust opposite Hattclll' Garden. The'inauspicious,entrance to the Church belies the grandeur of its interior. . As wc would expect from' the Amici Chonts it was ail all Verdi programme: from Verdi's first opera, Oberto, through to the Requiem" with a br,ief biography before each section read by Richard Hazel. Nl?t \vishing to start of the \viong note 1 must, .however, , say that 1 did, not f<;el the Chonts was particularly comfortable \vith'the first piece '''Di vermiglia, amabilluce" from,Oberto,and the "Va Pensiero" from Nabuceo which followed.. It did not see'll to have the passi(lIl'the pfece demands; Words like "0 mia patria si bella e perduta" were (no pun intended) lost. Bul then Came 1 Lombardi. Four wonderful pieces, all,b~1utifully handled from Ole '''Salve Maria" with Kntia Nikolic (soprano); ",Gent5.1Iem", "0 Signore del tetto natio" and the "Te lodiamo"" with all four soloists it reached a climax. Tntly wonderful stum This was followed by three pieces from Macbeth: "Patria OpreS5.1'" of 1847, and 18.65,(1 enjoyed both, very much) and ",' Ah, la paterna mano". This was sung by the tenor Julian Gavin with whom, I must adinit, 1 was not so impressed. He has a good voice :but I felt he ,lacked the delicate touch and a more velvety voice: aOer ali, il is Verdi and with Verdi nothing should be forced. Next cmne the impressive "11 Santo nome di Diol' from Forl.a del Destino wilh soprano, bass (Jonathim Barry), and the Men's chonts. I was ' particularly impressed \vith Mr Barry. The'Requiem dominated the lasl seetion of the programme and \vas a tTC<1t ilidecd. With "Confutatis maledietus", "Dies lrae"" "Lacrymosa", "Agnus Dei'" and "Lux aeterna". Although 1 felt this section might have needed a little !uore rehe.1r~11 from the Chonts it was, ' nevertheless, wonderful with' all the soloists -at their PhOlos:StudioMedici best. The mezzo-sopmno of Margarel Maguire niost & Stephel' Gill especially cm,ght the ear. The audience rightly showed lheir appreciation and much deserved it was too. We were treated to an encore a'nd the audience was invited to join lhe choir in a further rendition of Va Pensiero: Va Pensiero, the unofficial anthem of all emigrants but most especially the'Italians. Va Pensiero~ sung in,the magnificent setting of the ,Ilalian Church, the first· Church buill for, Italians oUlside Ilaly. Therefore, as one e.1n imagine, it was a Va ,Pensiero full of passion, energy aild "cuore". Praise from those with who attended' lhe concert, and praise indeed to the director of lhe Choir, !'{ina Walker. Praise 10 Ihe piano aecompianment of Dennis Knight and Denise Pallon. Praise to the four. soloists. But most ,of' all praise to the Amici di Verdi Chonts. I look forward 10 the next. Peter Bertoncini 16 February 94 -b~ -P ( i Anno d,ellaFamiglia . RlVISl'A DELLA COMIJNITA'ITAlJANA ) Scriviamo qualchc pensicro per due awenimenti della Chiesa di San Pietro e del Club che riguardano i nostri giovani. * Abbiamo avuto il party nal.~lizio dei bambini e delle bambine che si preparano alia Prima Comunio~e. Vi e: stata prima una bella eelebrazione religiosa nelle sale parrocchiali della Chies.~, queste sale erano tuUe decorate e piene di luee. Abbiamo cantata e poi abbiamo mangiato e bevuto quello che le famiglie hanno portato. * Una settimana dopo nella sala rossa del Social Club, anche qucsta preparata tanto bene, vi e' stato il party natalizio dei nostri giovani che si preparano per le OG!. Anche questo e' stato simpaticissimo e allegro. * E adesso qualche considerazione. Tanti di questi nostri giovani fanno parte di tante altivita': cantano in Chiesa, oppure leggono in Chiesa. oppure sono Chierichetti. Ci sono tante buone persone che pensano a loro: i catechisti, gli allenatori, i comitati del Club e delle Associazioni,noi Preti; insomma tante persone. Ma qnello che e' tanto bello agli ocehi di Dio e agli ocehi di tutti, sono le Famiglie. Le famiglie che li seguono: nel Catechismo e negli allenamenti. Si vede quanto a/fetto c'e' nelle famiglie. Quando non possono venire le mamme,vengollo i papa'. Quando non puo' venir nessuno, vcngono i nonni. Ed e' bello vedere tuui questi bambini, moUosponlanei e naturali, moUojnteressati a tutto, moHo hiipegnati. Li vediamo sercni. ma non dimentichiamoci mai che hanno anehe loro i loro problemi e le loro sofferenze. Non dimentichiamo speciahnente in queslo anno che e' stato dichiarato dalla Cliiesa e dalle Nazioni come I'Anno dell:i-Fainiglia. Organizzercmo anche tante cose, ma intanlo mandiam'o avanti quello che c'e': catechismo, Prima Comunione, Cresima, Bauesimo, l'OGl Cc doe' i giochi dei nostri giovani). 11 nostro Dio e' un Dio che clllra in tUlta la nostra vil.~ c ,non solo in Chicsa e quindi offriamo a Dio tuua la nostra vita, quella della Chiesa con la nostra Famiglia e quella fuori della Chiesa con la nostra Famiglia. Ma ricordiamoci. non ci SO-110 due vile, re ne e' una soJa, la nostra, quella di ogni giorno, quella che fa la volonta' di Dio selnpre e in ogni posto. Care Famiglie, coraggiol! Padre Russo e' a vostra disposizione. Sopra: La reSla nala/izla del candlal/ Prima Comunione Sollo: Gruppo OGI -Foto: P. Russo Sinislra: 1/ coro del glovanl Foto:.BettyDriver Febbraio94 17 -b~ .-P .. RIVJSrA DELLA COMUNITA'ITAUANA Cronaca ( continua da pagina 17 Bazaar a CasaS, Vincenzo ) Dobbiamo ringraziare tulti coloro che Il3nno partecipalo al nostro Bazaar. Le care Signore che da anni 10 preparano. con tanlo atrello; ogni anno diventano sempre piu'· giovani, piu' brave, piu' allegre. Si vede proprio ch~ chi vive la vila di Dio non invecchia .mai. Poi dobbiamo ringraziare lulli voi che sicte venuii a comprare: e'· un periodo in cui ci sono Baz.1ar in IUltc le parti. di Londra. La vostra partceipazione e' sempre lanto generosa e Ci aiuta a realizz.1re tante cose. Tanti cari riligraziinncnti anche al nostro Club che "113 preparato le starize per i1 Bazaar; e' vera .che i1 Club appariicne alia Chicsa, ma i rapporti alfclluosi tra i1 Club e Chiesa. appartengono solo alle relazioni sincere e amiehevoli fra la Chiesa. e i1 Club. P. Russo la .,---J] "ll..---:",...A_S_S_O_C""",...T_·r_i_n_a_c..,.r_ia_" Eceo i1 nuovo eomitato dell'Associazione che si e reccntemente rridunato a Londra (' - - - 18 Sale della Chiesa ) ---J Nelle nostre Sale Sociali dclla Chiesa di San Piclro si sono svolti dei momenti·sereni. Abbiamo fcstcggiato i1 complc.1nno· di Fabio (centro sinistra) nclla Comunita' neo-eatceumenale. Dopo la eelchrazionc cu·caristic.~ ci siamo riuniti per continuarc a vivcre momenli di fralcrnita' anehe intorno al mangiare e al bere. Fnbio, tanti 3uguri. In un'altra occ.1sione la nostra sala e' slala· addobbata e prcparata molto bene da lante brave e care pcrsone: cosi' anche abbiamo preparato i1 mflngiare e i soO-drinks: non abbiamo fotografato Ic pcrsone: sono dci nostri c.1ri amici che ancora dcvono lrovine il giuslO cammino dclla vila e che Iloi prcti, insicmc con voi. 'ccr~hiamo di aiutarc. February 94 TAR-OX TAR-OX Performance Braking Products A range of brake discs and brake pads to improve braking efficiency of vehicles for. road and track. The brake discs are manufactured from special cast iron and have up to 40 grooves : per surface to increase stopping power. The brake pads can be supplied (n different compounds to suit the driver's requirements. ,. 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Come' and see Enzo and Gillian at THE INN AT HIGH POST - a modern hotel/leisure complex near historic Salisbury. There is lots to see and do without any pressure, and. the beautiful indoor swimming pool, jacuzzi, sauna sunbed and gym will ~elp you relax completely. Opposite there is lovely eighteen hole golf course. All rooms are en::su~tewith every facilitY including SkY teievision~ The food is excellent, arid' he!id chef Antonio l\iarin will be delighted to cook his favourite specialities for you. Nowhere will you find a warmer welcome wi.th a distinct Ital.ian bias. THE INN is privateJy owned and run .by Enzo and his, family :with all the enthusiasm of truly enjoying what they do - a9,d IJeing proud of it. FANTASTIC WEEKEND BREAK OFFER Starting on Friday evening with di~ner, accommodation and full English breakfast, Saturday dinner, accommodation· and breakfast, and a wonderful carvery speciality :Iunch on Sunday to complete your weekend. £94 per person (sharing a twin or double room) Think about joining us for a party- it must be somebody's birthday soon,. or for that romantic anniversary treat away. PHONE NOW 0722 73592 for th~ brochure and information. THE INN is situated on A345 between Amesbury &'Salisbury. (Out of London westwards on M3 to A303. Turn left:at Amesbury and The Inn is 3 miles on the right. Easy!) The ...... l-t"1'Posl. Nr. S3'$buly, Wlurfltt'J. SP.J 6AT (072 213) 592-.6. Fax: (J722i 73630, VAT No.. .:.$024$3 80 T~ MddleW~d Jlr<lr'~to\,zo&("""",~'Q'03 rf.dto'J$Gf';'''''~~ 20 February 94 _J :if:.~ Dall'ltalia Italy's Christian Democrats (DCs) transformed themselves into the Popular party, in an effort to distance the party from the discredit of years of corrupt rule under successive Christian Democrat governments. The bulk of the party follo\ved Mr Mino Martinazzoli, the outgoing Christian Democrat lC<1der. in forming the new political group. However. a small minority decided against the move and set up on their own calling themselves the Centre Christian Democrats. in a split related more to personalities than to ideology. COMUNITA' ITAlJANA news from Italy yqu may havr~ missed' Luciano Liggio, the jailed former head of Sicily's Corleone Mafia clan, had died in hospital. Sentenced to life imprisonment in 1974 for murdering a Mafia rival, Liggio (below); 68. had been suffering from heart trouble. He was rushed to hospital from his top-secUrity Sardinian prison. In the 1980s, the Corleonesi - headed by Liggio's former~lieutenant,' Salvatore "Toto· Riina - emerged as Sicily's most powerful clan during a bloody Mafia \var.' A new face apPC<1red beside Jesus and the shepherds in taditi,onal Christmas cribs in Naples this YC<1r: Antonio Di Pietro. the crime-smashing judge .who has~become one of Italy's ,most popular heroes thanks to his relentless investigation of political crimes. Angelo Loffredo, a ,Neapolitan crafisman"lms created: two' figurines of the judge. one in hisofljcalb!ack robes and one in civilian clothes. There is l!lso a range of [)i Pietro gadgets for the less devout: His chubby face can be seen beaming on anything from "I love Di Pietro" T-shirtsto carriage clocks. Bored with being told that monks arc square and un(:ool, Fr Modesto. 35. from Genoa has produced an 40-minnte video describing life "inside~'. He said "This video 'will, hopefully. show that ,ve, arc normal men, neither nuts nor nerds." Monkish activities in the 1990s ,include football~matches in the ,afkrnoons between prayer sessions and editing the monastery's ilewspapcr. ' ", '. - Francesca Archibiigi's "11 grande eocomero"'(fhe, Great Punipkin) about a girl's reCovery from supposed epilepsy; is Italy's nominee for a foreign language Oscar. The 33'year-old director is preparing her fourth film, ','Con gli oCehi chiusi" (With Eyes t:::1osed) about a landowner who falls in love with a country girl but cannot tell her. Radio Radicale, the mouthpiece of Italy's Ridic.11 Party, has revC<1led that the" Italian north-south divide remains Italian car giant Fiat is 10 layoff ,as wide as ever. Having decided to up to 10,000 white-collar workers next tran'smit uncensored messages from its YC<1r in an effort to save costs during the listeners 24 .ho.urs a "day. the radio current dis.1strous slump within station was surprised to find that the European car. market. National aulo most vociferous opinions centred on unions in Rome say details of the plan north-south, hatred. "You' pC<1sants will involve placing their members on from the south." deClared' an temporary redundancy fo, up, to seven anonymous 15-YC<1r-old c.111er, "are a months on 80% of basic salaries. The mass of unwashed sons' bitches". unions estimate that between 5,000 and Form the south someone else warned: 8,000 \\1lrkers will be affected at Fiat's "Fascist comrades: the stmggle against Mirafiori and Rivalta plants, while the Milanese and the Jews has around 2,000 will be hit at the finn's officially started." Alfa Romco plant in Arese. of Italy's populist Northern League, which surged to prominence with vociferous condemnation of endemic corruption in the country has become embroiled in scandal following the arrest of a top party official. Alessandro Patelli, the league's national organiser, was arrested on suspicion of corruption and illegal party financing and taken to Milan's San Villore jail. League activists rallied to the defence of 43-year-old Patelli. The group's outspoken leader Uffiberto Bossi insisted Patelli was innocent. "They'Ve got the \Vfong person and the \vrong movement," he said. Patelli was ariested on suspicion of accepting some 200 million lire from the struggling Feiruzzi group as a contribution to campaign costs in the April 1992 general eleCtion. Fitness analyst Michele Frenelli has revealed that~ "people get shorter when they are on holiday". Frenelli says that this is especially true for women, who "lose as much as three quarters of an inch during holidays", due to long trips in cars and skin-tightening caused by sunbathing. AspokesPerson for the British Medical Association described the findings as a Ubit odd.'-' Italian farrrier Luigi DaIone didn't have the heart to discourage his bam tomCat when it developed a crush on a neartiy rabbit. Daloneallowed the two to brCed, and now claims 10 have developed new animal - the "cabbit". "They ean meow, jump long distances and see in the dark" said the Atessa farm~r: Some areas of'Rome may soon be Occ~pied by troops at the request of city authorities. According to Rome's 'police chief. Vincenzo Parisi, an agreement had been reached to send in about 500 soldiers to guardembassies, airports, home of prominent figures and other, places deemed high risk from bomb attacks. Parisi said the troops were needed because police units normally used in- anti-terrorist roles were required for criminal investigations. The idea was inspired by,the use of the armed forces in Sieily to deter Mafia-related violence. , Febbraio 94. 21 I, " J --------------------------:------- RIVJSl'A DEU.A COMUNITA'ITALIANA In Cammino Con Carmelo This month, I would liI<e you to read the article written by Edward Platt and published in the Guardian of Wednesday 27 October 1993 ....I used to think I knew all the Italian heroin addicts in London, but not 'any' more. In the last coupl~ of years, the numbers have become very alarmiIig," says Father Carmelo di Giovanni, the padsh priest' of St Peter's Italian Church, in London. The city, is now home to an estimated 2,000, Italian drug users - the overspill of a drug population that has become "Urlcolltainable" in Italy, according to Gianni Diannin, a drug counscllor who works for the govcrnment-funded Standing COlUerence, on Drug Abuse (Scoda). ' In 1990, the Anglo-Italial} Dmgs and HIV,Network was set up to help and counsel Itali3lis in, London, an alliance co-ordinated by Scoda. As far as Father Carmelo was concerned, it ,Vas overdue. '''For about 15 years, he was the only person helping' Italians willi their problems," says Diannin. It was ,not a' role "that Father Cllrmelo had envi5<1ged for himself when he was seill to London in 1970. He regardcd it as a punishnlent. In Italy he, had been a niilitant communist and a supporter of Ihe armed struggle. "'Even 'as a seminarian. I thought that you would ac;hieve change, through, violen9C,'" he 5<1yS, remembering his yOUlhful excesses \vith a certain meful 5<1iisfhction. 'He took part' in public, deinonstralions, and hunger strik'es; if ile had ended up with a machine-gun in his haild, hc hc would 'have nsed'i1. ' ..., didn't' ,do It,. because God protected mc," he says, silling bcnC<1th a print of the Virgin Mary Ihat hangs on the \vall ·of his office in Clerkenwell. Exaspcratcd by ,his "revolutionary menlalily,'" his 'superiors sent him to London. Here, to his surPrise, he found a different focus for' his intense'longing for justice' when he becmue involved in visiting Italian prisoners in British jails. For' the last, 20 yC<1rs, he has continued to tend to his "parish behind bars". Prison work inlroduced him to the growing population of Italian heroin addicts; it also rc-inlroduced him to terrorisnl. when Mario Fcrrandi. a membcr of the comlllunist organi5<1- tion Primea Linea - The Front Line was arrested in London in 1980, and sent to Brixton prison. Father Carmelo struck up a friendship 'vilh him and when he· was' extradited to prison in Italy, he,began to visit him there. He found t1lal Ferrandi, and his fellow inmates. had little to show for, a decade of politiC<11 violence. "They killed, they planted bombs, but they ~vere left ,vith nothing, except blood on their hands. Wc accepted they were sinners, they were murderers, and from there something really beau. tiful began. I wrote to them over, the YC<1rs, many discovered Ihe Church. It ,vas a lIIiracle;""he 5<1yS; It was also part of a wider process that 5<1W many former terrorists - the pent;'ti -. co-operate with the auihorities. Laws were passed allowing special leniency for repentant terrorists and Father Carmelo took advantage of this ne,v freedom. He 'used to organise meelings in Italy where he would 'put two former terrorists - a" Communist and a Fascisi - on stage together. The audiences, up to a thousand people, did not always apprcciate his efforts. One nOlorious terrorist, Marco Bar- says, 22 one, received snch a hostile reception from the press and Ihe pnblic that Carmelo was forced 10 ICllve him out of future meetings. Bul he was undeterred. "'1 wantcd them 10 sec that these people had changed. Nobody is evil - everyone has, their story and you have to love them as lhey'are, noi judge them," he 5<1YS. In London. he applied the 5<11riC principle to his work with dmg addicts."He is very popnlar, bcc.1nsc his approach is so uilllsnal. !;le· is very up· front, very dirccl" lInd he doesn't try to force a .mOraIiSlie' view of dmg use on pcople," says Di:lnnin. Falher Carmelo puts it differently: "I trust them and they trust me. I never· throw crap in their faces." After more than 20 years in London, he says he feels more English than Italian and, though he secs a beller future for Italy now, he would not live. there any more. "I love the English way of doing things." He ,says: "You are very tolerant you welcome people from other cuItures, from abroad." But English tolerance has its limits; there has been a spate of stories in ,the tabloids recently accusing, Italians, of coming to London to indulge their heroin habits and live on welfare handoQuts. ~everly Poison, of the AngloItalian Network, dismisses this. '''They're not coming here because ,they think they can get benefits. They hC<1r, by word of mouth in Italy, that you C<1n get Confidential advice in '-'London,'" she says.· By common con'sent, the dmg services in London are beller and less "punitive" than' in Italy. Gillnni, a regular visitor to, the HC<1llhy Options Team, a drug agency in the East End where a quarter of the clients are Italian, believes' the appeal of London is· the frcedom it offers. "Everything is more democratic here. If you are using, you can still live your life. You can find a job, ' l!nda place to S(,1Y," he 5<1YS. Father Carmelo concedes ,there may Ilave been occasional abuses of the benefits, system, but rather than berating the Italians as "scroungers", lie, points out thai ,the reports demonstrate the strengths ,of the welfa~e state. He is full of praise f,?r the doctors and nurses who have worked witil Italians affected. by HlV' and Aids. "Quite a lot of them have died, and I have known most of them 'and they have all been trC<1ted with great love \and ~1.rc. n he says. . Yet. he warns that our social security. sYstem may, come under incrC<1sing strain, for it is not just the Italfan drug-using population that has bccn on the incrC<1se. "There are a lot of Portuguese and Spanish already, and sooner or later, there ,viII be other nationalities; Europe is onc country, and borders are coming down. We will have to face the problem of how to help them..... Un'abbraccio a lulll. February 94· ::iJ;ar/f(fff!;au COMUNITA' ITALlANA La Vita dellano'stra Parrocchia Sono nati alia vitadi Dio con iI Santo Battesirno Olivia Hannah MeNulty: James e Antonietla MeNulty Cinzia Luisa Lconard: Graham Lconard e Claudia Pellicci Sofia Orsini: Salvatore Orsini e Giuseppina Gaiteri Francesea Nardone: Remo Nardone e Ivy Tse Stefan Andrca Carlo Papini: Sergio Papini e Marina Theophanous Julia Panasoutis: Georgious Panasoutis e GeraIdina Jannele Sonya Mae Serafill: Jerry SeraIin e Janet UIelt Emanucla Gadaleta: Enrieo GadaIeta e Caterina Licursi Dino Mensano: Antonio Mensano c Antonietla Brancale Fahia Marghcrita Liliana Dcl Ncvo: Flavio Del Ncvo e Agostina Gregori Rosina Ruggcri: Emilio Ruggeri e Anna BarllUto Robcrto Giovanni Battista: Pictro Ballisla e Dcborah Standish Tora ,Dallhnc Wcymari: Christopher.Weyman Donna Smith Johnny Micheal Wcyman: Christopher Weyman c Donna Smith Gabriclla Marcclla Barbarino: Sabatino BaIbarino c Rossana Panice AnnaLiza Nazzaroli: Valter Nazz.1roli e Jacqueline Godfrcy Dari~ z.wagno: Dino z.wagno c Nicola Gualdi. Sofia Bceearclli: John Beecarclli e Carolinc Mornzzi Gianhica GiuscppcLuisi: Vito Luisi c Alfonsina Maffeo Claudio Abagnalc:Erncsto Abagnale e Sabrina Brac3Jiello Chiara' Amy. Maneuso: Salvatore Mancuso e Katharine Bird Louis Stcfano Pierre Tassia: Vinccnzo Tassia c Carolyn Mansard Robcl10 Modcsto Antonio Faratro: Antonio Faratro c Annamaria Perdoni Fr:mecsca Maric Conti: Roberto Conti e Delia Guyver Tonino Petralia: Massimo Petralia e Darshna Parmar e Hanno unito le loro vite davanti a Dio nel Matrirnonio Tracy Sime - VincCilZO Gaiteri ~iposano nella Pace del nostro Signore Emma Festa Joan Fcuillade Domenica Paganuzzi Lina Bcrgonzi Nicholas Van Pcelan Antonio Lonc Giuseppc Militello Aehillc Losi Carlo Grandi Febbrciio 94 23 -b~ ." ~ .RIVISfA DELLA COMUNITA'ITALIANA ~ FORTE HOtlU EXCLUSIVE HOTELS .1- FORTE GRAND ~ Whatever you wish to say; Thank you; Well Done; Good LuckForte Leisure Cheques are the pe.rfectgifi miyone can buy or recezve. 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Pro,Lyl"h u..n.LJ,..OO$ TOT~OPERTY MA:;AGE~IE:-''T CONTAc:T - PHIL GAUDINI ) B&nk & Probate ti Extt'n,iocul 0 For a copy ofour brochW"C Contact Pauick Nataro on Tel' (0$115144&14 F",,: (OSI) 553 9767 Tel: 071-388 9633 Febbraio94 25 - :iJ;~EU.A COMUNITA'ITAUANA Another Victim Fr. Gaetano Fracassi was among the 4,000 Italians domiciled in Britain detained 'and interned follo\ving Italy's entry into World' War H. After a brief. spell' in a Manchester police station, he' was ,'taken to a' camp ,near Edinburgh which, held a thousand of his fello\v countrymen. From there he was transferred to BUry, L:inc3shire, and after a few days along with others he was moved 'to Liverpool and placed on board the SS Arandora Star which" with German and Austrian internees set sail for Canada on I July. Early the follo\ving morning, after being torpedoed in the north Atlantic, the ship sank and Fr. Fracassi was among the 446, Italians who lost their lives. Until 'the summer of 1940 there had been 'liitle remarkable about tlie life and career ;of Gaetano Fracassi. Born, 'in Pescorolo, near Cremona, Italy, in 1876, he determined while young.to be a priest. As a seminarian, at Lucerne, S\vitzerland, he applied 10 join the Salford diocese. Ordained in 185)8 he arrived in this ,conntry not knowing a word . . of English. He commenced studying the language at St. Bede's College, Manchester, while his pastoral du'ties 'concentrated on the Italian colony at Ancoats. Later he served as assistant at. St. B~igid's, Manchester; Failsworth; and Greenacres, Oldham. In 1913 he was a'ppointed rector of St. Joseph's, Stockste.'1ds, Rossendale. This struggling mission, made up of two school-chapels, served a ,videly scattered population.' During Fr. Fracassi's rectorship it was decided to divide the mission, Newchurch being detached to form a separate congregation. Fr. Frac.'1ssi thus played an important role in advancing Catholicism in Rossendale. The years in the valley proved to be the most happy and successful in Fr. Fracassi's priestly career. When he leftRossendale in 1922 civic' leaders joined with the congregation in testifying to his outstanding contribution to religion and the 26 community generally. His incumbency at Stacksteads, editorialises the local paper, had been marked by "steady devotion to duty, praisewortllY fervour and broadmindedncss". Fr. Fraeassi~s 'next post was as' parish priest of St. Alban'sAricoatS, 'Manchester. Apart from his immediate parish duties he was regarded as being, unofficial chaplain to the Italian community in the city and its environs. In 1922 St. Albaii's population was put at 1,800: within a few years this had dwindled to' 600 due largely, to the city's rehousing programme. An even bigger concern Fr. Gaefano Fracassi •...a Christian charily that no national jeeling could 'oblilerate...• was the demand of the loc.'1l education committee entailing alterations to !he school, When the work was finished St. Alban's had a better school with a parish club which could double as a classroom, but the parish was &'1ddled with a debt of £7,000. The twin anxieties of a huge debt and a declining parish no doubt contribiJted to the breakdown in Fr. Fracassi's hc.'1lth, and he was absent from St. Alban's for most of 1933. Fr. Fracassi, it Can be surmised, was aware of Italy's entry into the' war when he retired for the night on 10 June. Early the following day the police called and roused him from his bed, ordering him to aecompany thcm John Dunleavy to the station. After being held with others he was taken 200 miles to :1 tented encampment at Milton Bridge, near Edinburgh, containing Italians drawn from all over Britain. While there he p,encilled a message to Dr. Henry Vincent Marshall, Bishop of Salford, in which he seemed anxious to minimise 'the privations of camp life and requesting permission to offer Mass. Bishop Marshall responded, to this letter, though a second note Was returned to Bishop~s House stating that Fr. Fraeassi had been moved to what the camp authorities termed 'an unknown destination'.' , Evidence that the authorities had given' Iittie ot no forethought to implementing the internment plan is borne out by the fact, that along with many other Fr. Fraeassi was next returned !o England, to Warth Mill at Bury, Laneashire: by strange coincidence a place almost ,halfway between his old parish of Stacksteads and his current· post at AneoatS! A, derelict cotton factory, Warth Mill had been 'brought into service as a trarisit camp from which inmates were assigned to other centres. In'the case of the Italians - unlike the 'Germans and Austrians who had already been classified - a selection proced~e of sorts was hastily devised for the next stage. Some were to be deported to British possessions overseas, the remainder sent to the Isle of Man. The, first party of Italians to leave Warth Mill was sent,to Douglas: the seCond group, which included Fr. Fracassi, was placed on the Arandora St.'1r. ' While he \vas at Bury Fr. Fraeassi may' possibly havc made further contact with his bishop: a local priest, Fr. Joseph Rector, had insisted on being allowed into tlie camp onCe he learned of the large Italian presence. As priests of. the Salford diocese it is probable that he ani! Fr. Fracassi were acquainted: Apother priest, Fr. (now Mgr) Gaetano Rossi of the Glasgow diocese was already at Bury when Fr. Fracassi arrived. He recalls vividly Fr. ! :#~Fll.A Frac."lssi being withdrawn and little inclined to converse in Italian. The experience was obviously telling on his poor physical and mental condition. On the outbreak of war between Italy and Britain, an exchange of embassy staff, businessmen, journalists, and thcir dependcnts was cffectcd. A number of this party ,were siCk and elderly. Dr. Marshall wrotc to Cmdinal Hinsley at Westminstcr suggesting Fr. Frac."lssibe allowcd to join this group, sincc he was 64 and in poor hc.1Ith. 'The Cardinal ,replied nothing could, bc done in this mattcr. On board the' Arandora Star, meanwhile, thc Warth Mill contingcnt werc joined by othcr Italians from different c."lmps and· also by .Gcrman and Austrian internees. Apart frOlil the ship's crew there was a military guard. When the ship sailcd' on thc evening of I July somcthing likc 1,500 mcn wcre aboard: about thrcc timcs the uumber' the owuers c.1rried on pc."lcctimc cmises. Following the torpedoing and, sinking of the ship on ihe following morning hundreds of lives were lost" though the largest number of c."lsualties was from the Italians, some 446 accordiug to one authority, and among these was Fr. Frac."lssi. Fr. Fracassi survived the initial explosion c."lused by the shell" and was helped from his cabin to rcach the deck. Eye witncsses later told of' the utmost confusion, no safcty drill haviug bccn givcn to the intcrnees, while the crew seem to have bcen lax in many aspects. Whai is more, the ship was deficient offifeboats aud rafts, those lauuched were ,soon full. Aloug with some of the othcrs Fr. Frac."lssi apparelllly decided to stay with the ship to, the end. Survivors testified later that Fr. Fnlc."lssi was c1c."lrly visible among the small party surrounding the ship's'captain on the bridge, his arm raised hl benediction as the ship S<"lnk, some thirty minutes after the torpedo had stmck. It .was not until the following year that Bishop Marshall and the congregation at St. Alban's finally Ic."lrned of the death ;of Fr. Fmcassi. The news \V:1S conveyed in the cold Febbril;o 94 COMUNlTA' ITAlJANA language of officialdom: ... .1 regret to have to 'infonnthat Gaetano Fracassi S<1i1ed on the Arandora Star and was not among the survivors following the sinking of the ship by enemy action..." Rumours that Fr. Fracassi, along with other local men, had lost Bishop Marshall Beyond the conventional approach his life had circulated in Manchester in the prcvious July when news of the sinking of the Arandorn Star was made public. Initially" due to mismanagement by the authorities, it was difficult 10 discovcr who had died and who had survived while even now it is not possible to be precise about the actual number or'those who S<1i1ed on the ship. Although a number of rescue craft did reach the scene of the sinking on'2 July;,there were so nmny bodies that orders were givcn 10 abandon them. ' Reports of bodies being washed up on the shores of Ireland and Scotland were frequent during that CeS<1re Camozzi, of summcr. Manchcstcr's Monogram Cafe for inst:lIlce, was discovered on thc coat of Doncgal, and was' subsequcntly ,buried at Carndonagh, a small memorial inscribed "CCS<1re C1mozzi, Arandora Star; 1940", marking thc gravc. The body of Naples·born Enrico Muzio,' the London·bascd tenor, was found on the Hebridean island of Barra and his rcmains were interred in the local Catholic cemetery. No trace of Fr. Fracassi Was ever found. Once confinnation of Fr. Fracassi's death had arrived, Bishop Marshall and many of the diocesan clergy assembled at SI. A1ban's on 20 March 1941 for a Requiem Mass. Panegyries given on sueh occasions usually consist of a resume of the deceased's career," the outstanding spiritual attributes 'of the dead priest are highlighted and he is commended to the prayerS of ,the congregation. Bishop Marshilll went far beyond this conventional approaeh taking the opportunity to censure the authorities for failing to notify, him before taking into custody one of his senior priests, ignoring the age and condition of Fr. Fracassi, and deploring the indignities visited upon the dc3d priest (and by implication, other internees), during captivity where he had displayed such heroism in the discharge of his .priestly duties to numerous fellow victims. While Fr. Fracassi never became a British subject, and belonged' to a nation now at war with us (Bishop Marshall explained) he had never been connected with any organisation working against Britain and had never done anything to the detriment of this country. There was, the Bishop said, "a Christian charity that no national feeling could obliterate. It was that charity that we extended to our Catholic enemy and that charity which we would expect our Catholic enemy to extend to thosc of our sons \vho might fall into their hands". The Bishop suggested that SI. Alban's church should be regarded as the memorial to Fr. Fracassi, a scntiment no doubt welcomed by the clcrgy and congregation at the Requiem. But time has not been kind to St. Alban's; the dispersal of the population during the war and· since meant that the decline continued and in 1968 the chureh was' closed and has since' been demolished. Yet the fate of Fr. Fracassi and all other victims of the Anindora Star are still recalled eaeh year at a memorial Mass held at nearby St. Michael's. 27 :ft:.~EU.A COMUNITA'ITAUANA Pausa Poetica Gizzi e Puglisi Gissara ,A poem submitted by Enzo Gizzi: it is one of his favourites There's A Reason For evcry pain that wc must bear, For evcry burdcn, cvcry care, There is a reason. . For cvcry gricf that bows thc head, For evcry tear-drop that is shed. There is a reason For cvcry hurt, for cvcry plight, For cvcry loncly, pain-rackcdnight, There is a reason. But if we trust God as we should, 'It all will work out for our good: He knows Ihe reason. Poems from Elisabetta Puglisi Gissara Non dobbiamo dimenlicarcl di 'coloro che soJfrono e che non hanno lanlo quanlo abbiamo noil Gesu ~ e' venulo al mondo facendoci iI regalo piu' bello e piu' incommensurabile poiche' ha fallo parlecipe I'umanila i dei suoi senlimenli e del suo amore infinilo. In ogni poverello c 'e' nascoslo iI suo voila che ci chiede amore,' rispondiamo. a queslo richiamo' con lullO iI noslro , cuore, cosr come ha fallo egli con n o i . ' 11 Poverello Un vicolo buio, un raggio di sole penetra, piccolc vccchie casc quasi serrate tra ,di loro in uno scontro grottcsco e in quel vieolo angusto, picno di voci argentinc, di vispi monelli, in un cantuccio racchiuso, ci sei tu poverello. Sei vecchio e tremoJante, hai due occhi d'inlensa tristezza spenti, picno di cterna amarezza, hai iI vcstilo sdrucilo, vccchio, sbiadito, un capello suI capo bianco,sformalo, un lunge bastoncirio a cui sci perennemcntc appoggiato in una continua trepida allesa. Tendi la mano ai passmiti, e' v ecchia anche quclla, 28 stanca; tremoJante, vedo in que\' gcsto iI Signore, povercllo quando ci chiede amore, quando ci chiede calore. E' uno scalpitio di passi, un corrcre di gcntc frcttoJosa che non ha tempo di dare amore, di darc calore, ha troppa frella, capisci per guardarti, per aiularti, per incoraggiarti, non c'c' tcmpopcr I'amore, la vila continua e iI lor lavoro Ii aspetta. Le lenebre si diradano con i raggi di luce che luminosi squarciano iI cielo e /'amore puo' compiere iI miracolo piu' grande: spazzare iI buio della ,noslra a,!ima. quando e' priva di omore. Facciamo sI" che cio' QVV,!nga... Buio E' buia la notte come un cuore senza amon:, c· buia la tua anima incancrenita daJl'odio comc un cavallo ncro imbizzarrilo chc corrc briglia sciOlta. E' buio iI dopo se non si credc aJl'amorc comc gli occhi di un cicco chc non vedc, c' buio dentro I'ariima di un bimbo 'solo, affamato di calorc, comc una grotta profonda c senza finc. E' buio quasi tutto iI mondo, privo di lucc, copcrto dal malc, ammantalo di tencbrc spesse, Sconfi- a nate, c· buio comc un quadro perfctto; ma nero, perchc' sporco, invccchiato dal tcmpo c dalla trascuratezza umana. February 94 ::tJ;~1LA Veritatis Splendor In the last edition I spoke about the introduction of the new encyclical that the Pope has recently written. Our Holy Father announccd that he took six years to finally complete. Also, he wanted to wait for the ,Nelv Catholic Catechism to be issued before he released this new encyclical. Wc kno\v that "Veritatis Splendor'" de.1ls \Vith fundamental questions regarding the Church's moral teaching and its purpose, is to address·.and, clearly set forth '''ccrtain aspects of doctrine which arc of crucial importance in facing what is certainly a genuine crisis". Here, it is ele.ir that Pope John Paul wants to make sure that all the children of Our Holy Mother' the Church adhere to what 's truly based in sound doctrine' in the light of scripture and tradition. Il ,is no accident' that the first chapter oL the encyclical begins with thc incident of the- rich young man who came to .Jesus and said, "Te.1C Iler,what good must I do to' have eternal life?" This man was genuinely interested in the salvation of his own soul. It is a question that e.1eh one of us asks Christ. We know that this world is not the cnd of all things. Wc arc all endowed with ,an eternal soul that cannot be taken away from liS. This soul will" one day, also be responsible before God to answcr for all the good that wc have done and for all of our evil deeds as well. No one 'will be exempt from this judgement. It is Christ who emlle to s,1ve us and, who, evel)"day beckons us to follow His example.' We must" therefore, listen to Him and put into practice all that he has taught us to do. We must turn our he.1rts and minds completely to God. If wc are willing to do this, wc' havc alre.1dy turned our will to God and we will be open to always do His Will. God is the ultimate good, He is the source .of all of our happiness. Indecd, we w,ll always find' our ultimate happiuess in Him. Throughout scripture He has given us the information that we uced. He has given us the Ten Commandments and in the New Testament. He has laId us to, "Love one another as I have lovcd you". He also gave us Ihe Be.1Iitudcs. The Church 1e.1ches us that Ihere is a vel)" close conneclion bctween eternal life and obediencc to God's Commandments. If we live "by the flesh", we will fiud t1mt God's law for us will become a burden. To live according to the world, is to live as though nothing existed aner this life. Il is a vel)" selfish ideology that tells Febbmio 94 ., COMUNITA'ITALIANA us t11at what is here is it and that we have to live life her to the full aecording to wordly standards. I once he.1rd an expression that said, "He. who has the most toys ,when he dies, winsl~' To this I personally respond, "C1n you take ·the!ll' with you?" If this is it, then life 'is nothing more than a hellish existence thafleads one to' nothing more than futility, JesUs also. responded onoo . to this ideology ,by stating, "What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and'to loose his very soul?". This life will pass for' all of us quickly. It is the life to come thatmalters for that one will last for eternity. We all need. God. ,So. we must all take, this to' heart and begin our joumeys ,toward our sanctification: This is not an easy task since'lvc all,tend to do, what is evil. We must ask God to help us since we One ofMan's greal advances? cannot do it alone: It is His grace that will enable' us to become holy. God is ready la give us this grace· and give it to us in abundance - as He loves us very much and wants us to be united to Him in he-wen for all elernity. To help us He has sent the Holy Spirit. It is the Spirit who guides us and makes us able to live this life of grace. One example of this is the gin of celibacy Ihat God, gives to people who are callcd to Iivc in close imitation of Him as Priests and Religious. As I said e.1rlier, we havc all been endowed with a free will. God respects this will that we have and lets us do as.m, want. He has also called us to livc' in unity and communion with one another. Therefore. we must avoid all forms of division and dishar- MicheleScotto SAC many with one another. A very sad example of this is the division we have today belween various Christians..By alloWing this division to continue; we give scandal to the world. Here ends Chapter I of the three chapters of the encyclical. I would like to reflect now upon the divisions that exist so sadly between Christians. We have an obligation to unite, once again into "One Lord, one Faith. and.one Baptism".. St. Paul, in 'his first lelter to the ' Corinthians writes: "All the same; I do appeaito you, brothers, for the sake of our Lord Jesus Christ, to make up the differences between you, and instead. of disagreeing among yourselves; .to be united again in your belief and:practice".· Hnmanity, 'in all· of its' years of existence has not,changed. We have oonainly advanced in all of the seiences; We<have sent men'into,space and yet we cannot bring Peace to the Eanh. We still hear of repressive governments and starvation in other countries. How can we call ourselves "followers of Christ" if we do not stand up and all try to do our part to help one another? If we look a Iiltle closer la home. we sce divisions among our own families. What are we doing to end these divisions? We must ask ourselves "What would Jesus S<1Y and do if he \vcre here right nowT' It is lrue that this world is not perfcet - and il well never be. However, \VC as Christians have a responsibility to give witness in our own personal lives. We must live the Gospel. We must be filled with the love of God. When we are filled with this love, we must givc it to others. If someone asks me for £50 and I only have £20 in my j>ocket, can I give Ihal person £50? The same is true for us as Christians. Therefore, we must pray and live in close union with God: Then God will give us what we need 10 do what we must. We must pray alien. We must also call on the Blessed Virgin Mary to intercede for us. Through her, God grants many very special graces. She is our intercessor and our Mother in Heaven. During this month. I ask all of your to pray the Rosary and include in it Ihe very special intention that "all may be one". Next time, I will deal \vith Chapter 2 of this encyclical. It is my sincere wish that all of you will continue in your walk wilh me Ihrough "Veritatis Splendor". God bless all of you. 29 -~.~ 'i!~ Q9;,. . ~ I ~~J ~.:: ~' .~ It ;~~,~ ::~ • . ~ ~] --T--"":'If -J I ~ to:: ~. ~ ~ ~ i 8 11 ~ Unit 10 & 11, The Deacon Estate 'Cabinet Way (off North Circular Road M06) Chirigford . . . London E4 8QF Tel: 081 523 5858 Fax: 081 5233435 ..<::> ...., :/f:.~LLA COMIJNITA'ITAUANA ITAL WINDOWS &SECURDOOR TOP QUALITYJNSTALLATION OF ALL, RANGES OF WINDOWS IN UPVC AND ALUMINIUM.DOUBLE GLAZING:. PATIO DOORS, WITH SPECIAL SELECTION OF INTERNALANDEXTERNALSECURITI , bOORS IMPORTED FROM ITALY 20 HOUSES INSTAllED IN.ONE ROAD ALONE GOOD BACKUP SERVICE AND MAXIMUM DISCOUNT OFFERED A COMPLETE FREE DOOR WHEN YOl) ORDER WINDOWS WITH US. FINANCE AND CREDIT FACILITIES AVAILABLE CALL NOW FOR A FREE QUOTATION FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL MR. VINCE.NZO TEL: 081-905 0861 OR 081-422 921~ wI'HE BESTJOB AT A VERY GOOD PRICE" BridalwearSpecialists Weddin Da s.· We individually, design and ·handmake Wedding Dresses Bridesmaids Dresses Pages. Dresses Veils etc... Christenings first Communion Amanda Maccini Linda 'Bertola TeI: 0923 835041 Te1:081 940 3807 bomboniere tulle ' eonfetti fiori BOMBONIERE NELLA PIU' BELLA TRADIZIONE ITALIANA Claudia Simioni 77 Pine Walk Calshaltoll Beeches Surrey SM5 411A Tel: 081·6427 172 Febbraio94 31 .. :tJ;~.;;" T .. COMUNITA' ITALIANA For a Rainy Day Richard Si/via least two of the above categories to be 'used in order to provide required funds. This article ,briefly 'outlines the various 'investment Next to purchasing a house,' the vehicles available in each Category in cost of educating ehildren,privalely is order to highlight the options likely to be a family's largest available. finaneial commiiment. If it is iniended that the children are to attend, A: Funding from Income university or other further education, Unless parents can afford, to pay provision should also -be made for the fees directly out of their income, parental contributions to student as and when they fall due, it is maintenance granls to cover living important ,that an investment' plan is costs during term time. actioned as early as possible in order There are a, number of sources of to provide the funds needed at a finance available, to suit varying fulure ,date. This will require personal circumstances, all of \vhich prcmiums to be paid, on a regular ultimately seek to ensure that the basis. (or ulilising anyone combination 01) the following investment vehicles:(AI) QualifYing Life Assurance Policies: enable the proceeds to be received with no personal liability to Income Tax and C.1pit.11 Gains Tax· provided that the premiums are payable for a minimum period of ten 'years. They are, in 'effect, life assurance contracts which incorporate a savings element. (A2) Unit Trust and Investment Trust Regular SaVings Plans: tend to be more flexible than necessary monies become available (AI) above (which need to be on the required dates some time in the invested for 10 years) as they C<1n be fulure to pay the fees. terminated at any time without These sources can be generally penalty. They are also likely to classified as falling into one of the produce results superior to those of a , following three c<1legories:life policy invested in the S<1me unit a) financing from parcnts" existing trust. However, allowance should be income in the form of regular monthly made for Capital Gains Tax which contributions; may arise on S<11e of the units or b) financing from parents' existing investment trust shares where the capital in the form of lump sum gains re.1lised exceed £5,800 during contributions; and the (current) tax ye.1r. c) financing from "other" (A3) A Series of Personal Equity sources, Plans: ,is a very tax efficient method In practice, it will probably be of providing'for school fees as there necessary 'for a combination of at is no tax to pay either on any capital Private and Further EdiJcation 32 tile gains or from dividend income. can be effected by a U.K resident aged 18 or over, who niay invest up to £6.000 in any tax year into a general P.E.P. consisting of direct holdings in various U.K. shares, unit trusts or investment trust. In addition, a further £3,000 can be investCd each year in a single company P.E.P. Consequently, if a person decides to arrange a unit trust ,or investment trust regular savings plan as in (A2) above, it is, likely to be more advantageous within (rather than outside) a P.E.P. However, a P.E.P. should be 'regarded' as a medium to long term investment. (A4) School Fees Educational Tnist: is a way of paying school fees in advance. Regular premiums (or, indeed, lump sums) are paid into a trust for a child, which pays part or all the fees when they are needed. Payments arc made until, literally, the final term in which the fces are ,needed " ,with each premium purchasing a guaranteed level of fees ,provided by way of'il deferred annuitY arranged through the 'educalional trust. This method may be of particular significance to higher rate taxpayers, where there is only a short period remaining before the school fees commence. , In ,cases' where school fees falling due some' time in the ,future' are financed from parents disposable income, it is important to consider the position that may arise if the main source of income ceaSes, due, for example, to such .factors as: premature death, illness; disability or redundancy. Consideration should be given to effecting an appropriale policy to safeguard the future provisions of fees. ([he' Information ab<we is based on our understanding of current legislation and tax regulations which are both subject 10 change. RichardSi/via. Guardian Royal Exchange Anan.. clalManagement Limited. Dove House. Arcadia Awnue. Flnchtey. London NJ 2/U (O81 J4J 4j56)~ Appointed representalive of Guardian Royal Exchange marketing group (member of which are memben ofUlUTROandIMRO) ono/ for the purposes ofadvising on and selling life iusurance~ pe,ulon "nit trust and personal equity plan products bearing Guardian Royal Ex~ change"s name.) Continued next month February 94 :1J;~UA COMIJNITA' ITALIANA Eras Ramazzotti ,, Yves Hello, Pierre. Fancy meeting you here! I thought your record buying days were over. what with the family commitments, and all that. Pierre Well, that's right, in a way: I buy compact discs mainly these days. Anyway you can still find me in a record shop now and again, if I'm after something in particular. As a maller of fact, I've got an album today that a young chap like you might like. . Yves Oh, yenh...and whnt's that? "Fmnk Sinatm sings Bnuhaus"?!? Pierre You cun mock, but I think you should give it a whirl. It's thilt new one from that ltali3l1 singer Eros R.1mazzolli. Not he:ird' of him? Yves Nope. Sounds like a Footballer from Serie B. Pierre You read the wrong music reviews,' male. This chap is hot stuff. He's renlly famous in Italy, you know, he's in the process of emcking the Ameriean'market and just about ready io take a pop at the OK charts. Yves Hang on. Isn't he the onc with the video on MfV,. you know, the onc directed by Spike Lee? What's that song cullcd... I remember:' "Cose Dclla Via". Tasty Vid! Pierre That's the onc. He's renlly well known in Italy and Europe. D'you know, they reckon he's knocked up &~Ies of over six million albums and 25 platinum discs worldwide' in the last five yems. R3IlIazzoui has got to be onc of the most suceessful contemporary It.~lian canlaulori. And.,. Yves ...yc.~h, well, that's all very wcll, bnt what is the llIusie' like? After all Joe Dolce did pretty well, worldwide, didn't he? Pierre 'I've only heard a fe'" tmcks, llIyself, but the productiOlI is superb. And he uses rc.~1 musicians, none of your computer tick-toek here. If you had a Discman on you,. you could have a listen to it now. Bnt I don't suppose... Yves ... it's fnnny yon' should &~y Febbraio94 Lorenzo Stella but it's not a pure clear voice... that, 'cos I have! Pime ...that never stopped ZucchPierre Ohl Well •... in that ero, did it? case...perhaps... Yves Ab, well Zucchero has a , Yves ... greall Give us it here, then. (Yves inserts CD) It starts like Pearl much more soulful voice. Anyway, it's a maller of taste. Talking of iI Jam, and then turns inlo Twin Peaksl ·,PierrelPcan·t be judged on the Fornaciari, 'these songs by Ramazzotti first few seConds! You need to give it arc unmistakeabiy Italian, aren't theY? a felY good hearings. I reckon it's the I mean power ballads, with washes of sort of record that grows on you. Sure keyboards, ehhning guitars, and a couple of the traeks start to slide topped off with,a sweet sax solo towards that cesspit that is europap, we've heard it all'before! Pie"e As you say, it's all a maller bul no record ,is going 10 be perfect.. Yves Sorry, ,vhar did you say? .. of taste. I happen to like this sort of thing. Anyway he. can't be doing he's gelling quile earned away, now. Pierre I said no record is going to everything wrong: Eros started his Career' in a New Voices competition, be perfect! , progressing, after securing a record contract, to singing at the Sanremo Festival in 1984, 1985, and winning outright in 1986. H,e!d notched _up four suoo;ssful albums by '1988, a year ,in which he did a 'massive tour -----in Europe to a total audienCe ·.·.1 of more than a million people. In 1990 he released "In 1 Ogni Senso", whose -I 3,000,000 worldwide sales '~_,!j catapulted Eros Ramazzoiti into the stadium league. I .•.!,i supPose it's not surprising that they then released "Eros In Concert". And now "Tulle Slorie". Yves I'm sorry but I havcn'theard a word you said... too busy listening... this is prcuy good isn't ill Thcre's a rocky onc called "In Compagnia"...hey. I know what: how about you lending me this CD for a few days? Pierre Er. well... Yves ... great, thanks! Pierre I suppose it just goes to show: you con be taught some Eras Ramazalli new tricks by an old dog. Yves OK. OK! No necd 10 shout! I don't know about' not being perfect: sounds prelly good to me. I've fast forwarded, and Iislened 10 a few of "Tulle Slarie" is available on BMG, 74321 /43329 2(CDJ, the songs, and there's a bit of George 74321 143294(MC) Miehael in lhere, bul wilhoul the emotive voice. NOlthal the singing is half bad. This Eros sounds like he rc.~lIy me.1ns it, he has ,some po\\cr. . . i .33 -b~ . ~ RIVISl'A DELLA COMUNITA'ITALIANA THE ·GARTH HOTEL BANQUETING & CONFERENCE SUITES The hotel. has two new purpose built conference and banqueting suites capable of accommodating up to .300 people. Each suite is elegantly ,furnished and equipped to the highest standards with purpose built bars, full audio visual and lighting faciliti<;s,. which help to provide the atmosphere. for any occasion. A selection of menus are available for banquets with an emphasis on Italian cuisine. For more information or a brochure pack please contact Mr Marino at the Hotel. O~" GARTHHOTEL Hrodon w.y· Cricklcwood· London NW2 2NL RESERVATIONS 081-209 1511 34 February. 94 :1J;~ELLA COMUNITA'ITALIANA Photography & Video Production 5 Backhill, London ECl Tel: 071·278 6722 *, ** * ** ';;, ;;, Weddings Portraits Christenings Video Wedding Invitations, Wedding Cars Passport Photos Selection of Designer Albums from Italy ~~~ High quality service at affordable price ~:;~~~ The studio is located next to the Italian Church ~:;~~~ Open every day including Sunday morning FELIX BUREAU AOENZIA DILA VORO SPECIALIZZATO PER PERSONALE ALBERGHlERO HA A DISPOSIZIONE POSTI V ACANTI PER PERSONALE QUALIFICATO NEL SETTORE FOR ALL CATERING STAFF EMPLOYMENTBUREAU GUARDIAN ROYAL EXCHANGI!' FINANCIAL MANAGEMI!NT I.IMITI!D FINANCIAL PEACE OF MIND You can plan to achieve financial security by using Guardian Royal Exchange Financial Management's computerised financial planning report. The service is Complimelltaryalld without obligatioll. To Learn More Telephone RICHARD 081-3434556 NOW! MANAGERS, HEAD WAITERS, WAITERS, WAITRESSES,lsl/2nd/3rd CHEFS, VEG COOKS, KITCHEN PORTERS, SNACK BAR COUNTER HANDS AND' STAFF ETC... 80 SHAFTESBURY AVENUE LONDONWl TEL: 071-437 8513 OR 071-4714/4840/4467 Richard J. Silvio B.A.(HONS), ALIA(dip) 01 ..Ilk.. aad 1ft MUll,bm 01 Lawo aDd IMRO) REIot 1ft btarto&; Febbraio94 .t AppU».ted IttpnRD.Utln 'Of Cvu\1iu 10)". ExCltoUI~ lllluttdrtt lI'OQp(mtm.bfn Imra.-. pt~ GGUli:lll Ro)'al E:tdl,lllote'. '*' trust • ..s 'or lbt pwpose 01 adYbf,az 011 ptrlODd eqWl1 pi•• prodlKts Ilolmf. 35 -b ~ tvI<AJIt- . RIVISl'A DELLA COMUNlTA'ITALlANA Sportlight Richard Evans Very sadly, 1994 has begun ii-Uhe most tragic way possible with the death of two of sports greatest gentlemen, Brian Johnston and Sir Mall Busby. We must ensure that with their passing, it is not the end of an era but rather a new epoch where we adopt the standards by which they lived their lives. As men who always saw the best in their sports, it is pleasing 10 report that I have a very optimistic opinion about 1994. You could, of course, say that mallers can only improve after 1993. At the time of writing, it is. far from c1C<1r whelher Terry Venables will or will not be the next England Manager. I find it quite remarkable that the Football Association c.1n manage to create such a farce. Will they never learn? Regular readers of this column will know that I have been advoc.1ting. "El Tel"· as England's saviour since well before the 1990 World Cup. 11 is unlikely, .therefore, that you will be hearing from me that he is not the most suit.1ble coach. What I do not understand is why therc is now so much haste to appoint him when just under four YC<1rs ago, at a time when his credentials were unimpeachable, the Football Associa.lion effectively brushed him out of the way in their rush to appoint Graham Taylor. So have thc po\vers that be finally sccn the light? Cert.1inly they appear via Jimmy Armfleld to have taken professional soundings. But even the choice of the ex-Blackpool and England full back to assist them was a strange one. He has bcen out of professional management for well over ten YC<1rs and as a 'commentator had publicly announced his support for Keegan only a maller of days before his appointmenl. After the debacle last summer in Norway, I advocated in these pages the immediate dismissal of Taylor and the appoinlment of Trevor Francis or Kevin Keegan bec.1use I felt wilh a new manager there was still a chance that England might win in Holland and qualify for Americ.1. I explained that the only reason for the transfer of my allegiance was that Venables was under investigation following allegations made by Alan Sugar over the 36 One olsports great gentlemen financial running of TOllenham Hotspur FC. The FA duly set up an inquiry and so could hardly make an immediate appointment of a man who in forthcoming months may find himself on the end of disciplinary charges. The same considerations are still applicable now. Only two days ago Alan Sugar was called 10 the FA to give evidence to their inquiry and allempted a shr!lwd piece of public negotiation by saying t1ml if Venables was appointed. England Manager, the FA must, in" turn, acquit TOllenlmm Hotspnr of any financial impropriety. Good for Sugar. Bert Millichip, a solicilor by profession, had walked straighl into that one by sayiug a few days c<1rlier that he thought it would be marvellous publicity to have Venables installed as the England Manager for the draw for the European Nations Cup Ihe following weekend. We all know now thal Terry Venables is Ihe preferred choice but what we do not know, for certain, is whether anything is going 10 come oul of the woodwork aboul his finailcial dC<1lings which may prejudice' his standing in the game. In my opinion none of these deliberations should have been made public. Venables should' not be prevented from being the nexl England Manager if he is entirely innocent of any irregularity in his business dealings. By the same token, with an FA inquiry having been commenced, he cannot be appointed UJltil if has been completed and the authorities are 100% .satisfied all the mud slinging has finished and none has stuck. Ultimately, if Venables is not given the job then it appears that Gerry Francis is the most likely person to be given the nod. I think that would be unfortunate. He is clearly a promising manager but has not yet been exposed to the European stage nor, in spite of being England Captain, did he really enjoy much international experience as a player. I remain of the view that Keegan or the other Francis should be given the job. Certainly the prospect of Venables as Manager perhaps with Keegan being appointed as his number two in 1996 with a view to taking over after the 1998 World Cup is a thrilling prospect for the future of English football. The more I· think about the World Cup in '94, the more angry I become about Graham Taylor. With Seaman in goal, Parker at full back, Plall, Gascoigne, Waddle and Ince' in midfield, and any two from Ferdinand, Wright, Shearer and Cole up front, how can England possibly have failed to qualify? Watch out in years to come for Flitcroft, Anderton and Lee Clarke and you will sec why I believe there are real grounds for optimism. As for the summer, I hope I am not going to upset anyone by tipping an Italian victory - the only trouble is the World Cup Final falls on the day of the Procession. I happen to believe that July could be a very exciting time for us all because it also sees the return of South Africa to the English Cricketing scene. Wilh a new Captain in Mike Atherton, bowling attack led by Fraser with Robin Smith giving mature support to the middle order, England's cause in the West Indies this winter is not necessarily a lost one. Crawley has had a marvellous A tour and I will be astonished if along with Dominic Cork he does not break into the Test side at some stage during the summer. The talent is there it just needs time to develop. See you next month. February 94 . :&~FJU COMUNlTA'ITAUANA Italsport Volley: La Federvolley ha Ollenuto un mutua di 5 miliardi e un contributo dal Coni di 1300 milioni per azzerare le pendenze di bilancio. Sci Nordico: Azzurri del fondo in ombra a Kavgolovo (Russia) dove si e' svolla la IS km classica di Coppa del mondo: ha vinto Smirnov (Kaz) Sll Dahlie (Nor) e Mllllula (Fin); dal naufragio si e' in parte salvato Fauncr, scsto. Boxe: Sara' Giorgio Petriccioli iI nuovo allenalore di Gianfranco Rosi, dopo che Giovanni Bocciolini ha prefcrito dcdicarsi csclusivmncl\lc a Giovanni Parisi. I due ilaliani combatteranno, mondiale in palio, il 4 marzo rispellivamene contro Pellway e Chavez. Sandro Pratoli Ciclismo: A Citta' di Messieo Franccsco Moser (SOllO), iI grande signore dell'ora ehevoleva iscrivere ancora una volta iI proprio nome nel'albo d'oro, mellendosi in cima alia graduatoria capeggiata da Chris Boardman, ha fallito I'uliimo assallo in quota: cielo nuvoloso e vento sono risullati imballibili. Ha eomineiato ""sparalo", per sedici giri e' rimaslo abbondantemenle sotto iI Iimile dei 23", poi sui taellone luminoso sono comineiali ad apparire numeri preoc'cupanli: 23"40, 23"46, 23"24, 23"14,23"39, la pedalata si e' falla pes.~nte prima ancora ehe iI venlO seuOlesse una bandiera messa sui rettilineo .0pPoSlo a modi anemomelro. Pagliuc.~ Difensori Formula Uno: La Ferrari ha uffiI'assunzione dell'ingcgnere giapponcse Osamu Goto, ehe scguira' I'allivita' di progettazione, ricerea e sviluppo. cializz,~to CalCio: 11 petrolicre Dino Armani, gia' vice-prcsidente del Milan, che nell'S6 s.~lvo' dal fallimnto prima dcll'arrivo di Bcrlusconi, ha aequislato il pacchcllo di maggioranza dcl Novam. Sci: Con 110 milioni di lire, Alberto Tomba guida la classifiea dei Vela: Uffieialc: la Coppa America guadagni slagionali dei campioni dello non avm' sfidanti italiani. La ha reso sei. Precede Mader (SS milioni) e noto il comitato organizzalore. Locher (65). Calcio: Stefan Elfcnbcrg non nc puo' piu' di Firenze: "Voglio andare Nuoto: A Hong Kong nella scconda al Re:ll Madrid - ha alfcnnato il giornata della World Cup in vasca da presidcntc' Cecchi Gori mi ha dcllO 25m, caratlcrizZc11a dalla confcrma che sc giochcro' bene. sc la Fiorcndclle nuotatrici einesi, I'llalia ha con- tina verm' promossa in serie A e se ci quistato un doppio secondo' posto. sa ra' una buona offcrt3. potro' Luca Sacchi c' giunto alle spalle del andarmcnc. Prima ehc mi loglicsscro tcdcsco Keller nei 200 misti; Luis la fascia di capitano avevo gia' L.~cra nei 100 farfillla s'e' inchinato pcnsato di restituirla" solo al msso Pankr:ltov. Entr:lmbi gli azzurri erano saliti sui podio nella Calcio: L'assemble.1 degli azionisti prima giornatn: Sacchi avcvn pcrso da ha elcllo Enrico Mantovani. 31 anni, Keller :\IIche i -lOO misli, mcntrc nuovo presidcntc della Sampdoria. L.~era era stato ter/.o nei SO farfillla. Succcdc al padre, Paolo. Febbraio 94 Calcio: Nclla partita Reggiana-Milan (risultato 0-1) i rossoncri sono slati costretti a soffrire in dieci per un'ora causa I'ultima follia di Papin. 11 francese si e' fatto cacciare infatti su segnalazione del guardalinee Ramicone quando maneavano dieci minuti all'intervallo. Una testata al difcnsore reggiano !,a~ato, (prcmeditala e quindi doppiamenle.grave) daI quale in prccedcnza aveva rimediato un caleione durante un ordinario contrasto di gioeo.' Atletica: 11 mezzofondista sieiliano Salvatore Anlibo, argento all'Olimpiade di Scul nei 10 mila e doppio campione europco nci 5 e 10 mila nel '90 a Spalalo, sta sOlloponendosi a una scrie di visile per risolvere il problema alia caviglia sinistra che gli impedisce di allenarsi. Se la situazionc non sara' ehiara, e' previsla una tmsferta finlandese per un consulto con il professor Orava. Calcio: Da Sacchi; cceo le iSlmzioni per l'Usa 1994. Nella Iista di ventidue ci sono gia' dieiaselle posti occupali. La siluazione 01010 per 01010 e' iI seguenle: Giocatori SicUT; Portieri Marchegiani F. Barcsi Bcnarrivo Costacurta Maldini Panucei Cenlrocampisti Albertini D. Baggio Donadoni Er:\IIio Evani Signori Stroppa Attaccanti R. Baggio Casiraglli R. Maneini __. - Calcio: In Samp-Napoli, Vierchowod, 35 anni, ha festeggialo le 400 partite in scrie A. Esordio' iI 14 sellembre 'SO. In A ha giocato con Como, Fiorentina, Roma e Samp: due seudetti. Basket: Due giorni di sciopero nicnle allcnamenti e, per iI futuro, nuove forme di 101la. I ceslisti della New Print di Napol; (A2) hanno dcciso di aprire un fronte di lolla nci confronti dl presidcnlc De Piano, rco di non pagare gli stipendi dal 10 agosto scorso. 37 - -btvltAtll- . ~ . RlVJSl'A DELLA COMUNlTA'ITAlJANA Anglo Italian Football League ANGLO-ITALlAN FOOTBAll lEAGUE [ ~.,~~, n,,~A__ A/T~""",~J-"'-IwII"'"""w- .. SPONSORED BY: -, ~ League Tables - Classifica Up to-Fino 16.1.94 Division One Played Won Drawn Lost For Agst Pnts G1oc' V1nto Par Perao Per Sub' Punt1 , A.C. VALCENO, 7 4 2 1 21 13 14 VALTARO ALIVINI 5 4 0 1 13 4 12 DE MENNATO TAILORS 6 3 1 2 6 8 10 ClBORIO F.C. 5 3 2 0 14 7 8 A.C.PIACENZA 6 2 2 2 12 12 8 ITALIA UNITA 4 2 0 2 8 9 6 A.C.ITALIA 5 2 0 3 7 11 6 ITALIA WASTEELS Jnrs 4 1 0 3 5 6 3 DI SO'ITO. ICE CREAM 4 0 1 3 3 9 1 H.R.S·AZZURRI 4 0 0 4 4 14 0 . Vincenzo Pallotti azioni dessero, allo Slesso lempo. infinila gloria a Dio e .infinila umiliazjone a lui. continua da pagina 14 apostolo, c' un dovcrc della cre<1lura di Dio, menare una vita che sia di . edificazione agli nltri Societa'. Che cosa puoi fnre come apostolo? San Vincenzo ehiamo' tutti all'apoSlolalo. ma iI' discorso era rivolto Prima di lullo cerca di formnrti un particolarmente ai Laici. Anche essi gruppello che condivida il luo propsono falli a immagine di Dio. che osilo. perche' iI bcnc che si fn da solo VlIole lulli 5.1lvi, E questo dcsiderio di c' poco; se 5.1rele in due, le mani ~uanno quaUra salvezza 'di lulli C .., se sarete deve essere emquallro le mani cace. per /hr onore alia somiglianza sarnnno aUo. e I'opera non finche hanno con Dio ira- se tu ti amPadre. Che cosa c' mali. Poi guar·neeess.1rio per fnr dali inlorno e parte di qucslo Sovedi.. se .c·c' cicla'? Rendersi porlareunsorriso conto che esscrc 38 qualcuno inlorno a. le che ha una neeessil:{ che lu puoi alleviare, se puoi portare un sorriso dove e'e' un dolorc, sc puoi portare la luce di Gcsu' Crislo a qualcuno che non I'ha, se puoi cssere slrumento di pace per qualcuno. Va' prima, dove piu'· acuto e'· iI bisogno, dovc pensi che Dio possa essere maggiormenle onoralo, 0 dove c'c' bisogno che iI suo onore venga rislabililo. Dove non puoi arrivare da le. cerea un amico che 10 faccia per le, 0 con le. Non avere paura della lua inadegualezza; se ti muovi davvero per amorc di Gesu' Crislo, lui sara' con le. February 94 :1J;~LLA ,-----------:.;..,.-=----, , COMUNlTA' ITAuANA UROPE Maria ...XPRESS Grace 125 SYDENHAM ROAD,LONDON, SE26 5HB Registered residential Care home for the Elderly TEL - 081-776 7556 OR 081-778 8260 FAX - 081-776 7606 CONTINENTAL ROAD TRANSPORT AND REMOVALS Welcome to Maria Grace residential Care Home WEEKLY SERVICE TO AND FROM ITALY DOOR TO DOOR PACKING AND STORAGE * Home/rom Home * The Home where individual SPECIALISTS IN FINE. ART For Details Please Call :. (0622) 755859 AND ANTIQUES 31 Buckland Road, Maidstone ME16 OSL tradition value is the nonn. Providing 24 hour long tenn Residential Care. Short TennJRespite Care, Day Care, Community/Domiciliary Care. ESTABLISHED IN 1969 Mr. & Mrs. Cirelli Resident Proprietors & Managers FOR FREE ESTIMATE OR ADVICE Registered Nurses.Specialists in the Care of the Elderly. CALL. TONY MORGAN OR JOHN CAREY MEMBER OF K.C.H.A. tranChi ======'locks&tooIs o HAND & POWER TOOL SPECIAlISTS o PlANT HIRE & POWER TOOL REPAIRS o ARCHlIECTlJRAl & BU1LOERS NEGRONI. THE ITAUAN STAR AT. YOUR TABLE IRONMONGERS olOCKSMlIHS ·,\ He:Id OffICe: 278 HolIoway Road. \.OndOn Nl6NE SoIel)(~ 1>~N!o1Of1otld. 2oI,.,.....Wro'~oo.1.\ondonNl«t,W ()1IJ$37(\.l26 ~~IJU7086Q ~nXlb ~!SO.{; tu.t"o!Wll:l$h.l'oW1'IAoad:.,l'Ol'lOOntffl.006 ~:07Htll22CQ ~:071·2673m Febbraio94 .39 -b~ . ~ RIVISrA DELLA COMUNITA'ITALIANA . AT 3 BACK HILL YOU WILL FIND: Italian and English A First-Class Newspape~&Magatines Watch Repairer GEORGE & GRAHAM Newsagents Tel: 071-278 1 770 WTCWATCH REPAIRERS Tel: 071-278 4502 j I, , ... and you will also find A. FRANCE & SON ,, Catholic Undertakers SERVIZI FUNEBRI ALL'ITALIANA FUNERALS ARRANGED IN LONDON, THE COUNTRY, AND ITALY HI .. • ~~f'· '~ . Also At: 4S Lambs Conduit Street, London WCI W W 40 071·4054901 071-4052094 41 Monmouth Street, London WC2 14 Watford Way, London NW4 166 Caledonian Road, London NI February 94 1, :J!;~FJLA COMUNlTA' ITAlJANA Tempo Libero WHAT IS IT? DAVVERO? NON Cl CREDOl Betlemme, la citta' in cui nacque Gesu', ha nelle Iingue ebraica cd araba nomi simili nella forma ma singolarmente diversi nella sostanza: iI prima e' Bet Lchem, che significa «La casa del pane», e Ialtro e' Baitlahm, che signifiea « La casa della came». Il cinghiale comune e' alto un'ottantina di centimetri e pesa quasi dueeento chill. Ma nelle foreste alle pendici de/l'Himalaia vive un cinghiale nano (Sus sislvania), che non raggiunge i trenta centimetri d'altezza. Nel 1861, vivevano in Italia circa un milione di persone di oltre 65 anni. Dopo un solo secolo, net 1971, erano 6 milioni le persone comprese in tale fascia d'eta'. 11 numero degli anziani e' destinato ad aumentarc sempre piu': gia' nel 1987, infatti, essi erano oltre.7.5 milioni. Nell'antichlta', erano detti <<pianeti>> il Sole. la Luna, Glove,. Mar/e,. Mercurlo, Saturno e Venere, ossia tUlti I corpl della sfera celeste allora conosciuti che non occupavano una poslzlone flssa. In greeo, il vocabala « pianeta» slgnifiea infatti «errabondo•. vagante». • v c:. .J ..... 4 \u Get down from that horse - I'll show you how to meke him jump! LE ASSICELLE ~ A .!) c. ? B ., ) u ::> Solution to last month's "Spot the difference" Febbrai094 Due cani che hanno fatto conoscenza in un parco, si scambiano confidenze. - E' slrano - dice uno. Anche iI mio nome e' «Vai a cuccia»! , r. '" CHE RISATA! ·Un falegname ha praticato nell'assicella "N' un solo laglio, ottenendo tre pezzi con i quali ha fonnato quella "B". Come ha fatlo? 41 :tJ;~EU-A COMUNITA'ITALlANA Mamma's Ricetta Fritelle di Ricotta Mrs M~G. "Fritelle" or Fritters of Ricotta PastelIa Batter Ingredienti: 150gr farina 2 uova I cucehiaino di Iievito per dolci 100ml di latte 0 circa 10 cucehiai I cucehiaino di essenza di vaniglia pizziceo di sale Ingredients: 60z flour 2 eggs I leaspoon baking powder 4 fl oz of milk or 10 tbspns I tspn vanilla essence pinch of salt Metodo: Sbattcte le uova. Aggiungete iI latte, la farina, iI Iievito, variiglia e sale. Sbattete tutli gli ingredienti insieme finche' avrete una pastella liscia. Lasciate riposare la pastella per un paio di ore. Method: Beat the eggs. Add the milk, flour, baking powder, vanilla essence and sail. Beat all the ingredients together to obtain a lump-free cream. Allow to rest for about 2 hours. \, Ripieno di Ricotta Ricotta Filling Ingredienti: 350gr di. ricotla 2 tuorli d'uova 50gr di zucehero semolalo I cucehiaio di cannella in polvere Un po' di farina e zucehero semolalo Ingredients: 140z ricotta 2 egg yolks 20z castcr sugar Itbspn of cinnamon little flour and caster sugar Metodo: Lavorate insieme la ricotta. i tuorli. 10 zucehero e la cannella. Con queslo composto fale delle palle grosse circa come una noce. Infarinatele. Immergetele nella pastella. Friggetele nella padella .dei fritli in olio abbondante. Quando saranno dorate. scolatele e mettetele su carta di cucina. Cospargetele con zucehero semolato e servilele. Method: Mix the rieotla. egg yolks. sugar and cinnamon together. With this mixture make balls about the size of a walnul. Coat the ricotla balls with flour and then with battcr. Deep fry in plenty of hot oil. Whcn they are golden drain them then place them on kitchen paper. Sprinkle with caster sugar and serve. Fritelle di Frutta Fruit Fritters ", , FritelIe di Mele Apple Fritter Ingredienti: 4 mele renette I Iimone 0 3 cucchiai di rum 3 cucehiai di zucchero semolato zucehero a parte Ingredients: -4 eming apples I lemon or· 3'lablesp of rum 3 tbspns of caster sugar extra sugar 1. Metodo: Sbuceiate le mele. Togliele iI torsolo. Taglialele a dischi di circa I cm di spessore. Coprite con rum e zucehero e lascialeli macerare. 2. Metodo: Strofinate le fette di mele con iI Iimone. Cospargetele con 10 zucehero. Immergete le fette di mele nella pastella. Friggetele nella padella dei fritli. Quando saranno dorate sgocciolalele e melletelc su carta di cucina. Cospargelele con 10 zucehero semolalo c servitele. 1. Method: Peel the apples. Remove the core. Cut thcm into slices about 1/4in thick. Pour the nun over thcm and sprinklc with sugar. Let them soak for a while. 2. Method: Rub the slices of apple with the Icmon. Sprinkle the sugar ovcr thcm. Dip the slices of apple in thc batter. Fry them in the chip pan until golden. Drain thcm. Pul them on kitchen paper to remove any excess oil. Sprinkle wilh caster sugar and serve. I J 1 ,FritelIe di Pere Pear Fritters Sbuggiate 4' pcre. Tagliatele in quattro pcr iI lungo. Togliete iI torsolo. Taglialele in spicehi. Imniergelele nclla paslella. Friggelele comc quelle di mela. Take 4 pears. Peel the pears. Cut thcm into quarters, lengthwise. Remove core. Cut into slices. Dip into the batter. Fry them as with applc fritters. FritelIe di Ananas Pineapple Fritters Sbuggiate 6 fctte di ananas di circa Icm di spessore. Taglialc le fettc a mela'. Immcrgete nclla pastclla e falc friggcre come quelle di mela. Take 6 slices of pinc.~pple. about 1/2 inch thick. Cut thc sliccs in half. Dip into the batter and continue as with applc fritters. 42 1; February 94 r ~-:: ~ Sabato 12 Pedina Val d'Arda Dinner and Dance 7.00pm, Casa Vincenzo Pallotti, 136 Clerkenwell Road EC1 Tel: Mr Perotti 081-769 8497 j'~ ~ Domenica 13 Italiani nel Mondo Sunday Lunch 2.30pm, Casa Vhicenzo Pallotti, 136 Clerkenwell Road EC1 Tel: Mr Sistina 081-961 4019 t-:;; Sabato ~] I "~ ,-"" i Domenica 20 Assemblea Generale Annuale delle FAIE con le votazioni Ore 15.30, Centro Scalabrini, Brixton Road Sabato 26 Catholic Women Association Dinner and Dance 7.30pm, Casa Vincenzo Pallotti, 136 Clerkenwell Road EC1 Tel: Vic 071-278 9402 Sabato =-"" 26 Parmlgiani Val Taro Dinner and Dance Tel: Mr Fugaccla 081·981 7955 for details f~ Sabato 5 Festa della Primavera Circolo Veneto Centro Scalabrini, Brixton Road, Tel: G. Giacon'071-8371966 Domenica 6 Madonna della Neve Lunch 2.30pm, Casa Vincenzo Pallotti, 136 Clerkenwell Road EC1 Tel: Paolo Ficchi 081-458 3834 . Sabato 12 Associazione Trentini Dinner and Dance 7.30pm, Casa Vincenzo Pallotti, 136 Clerkenwell Road EC1 Tel: Paolo Tralnotti 081·804 8730 "'" Domenica 13 Mothering Sunday Lunch Associazione Toscanl 7.30pm, Casa Vincenzo Pallotti, 136 Clerkenwell Road EC1 Tel: Frank Santini 071-739 9104 :;", i '~'-~ ~:,: I. I ,t I', 19 O.G.I. Dinner and Dance £15.00, 7.30pm, Casa Vincenzo Pallotti, 136 Clerkenwell Road EC1 Tel: Vic 071-278 9402 ":0:: r~ ~ ~ Ei ~ ~-:; Sabato 19 Dinner and Dance In favore dell'Associazione Gropparello 7.30pm, Casa Vincenzo Pallotti, 136 Clerkenwell Road EC1 Tel: Sig. Badini 071·272 4432 Domenica 20 AGM dell'Associazione Trentini 7.30pm, Casa Vincenzo Pallotti, 136 Clerkenwell Road EC1 Tel: .Paolo Tralnotti 081·804 8730 - " :~ ~;~fit~f~~D,§[i1f~?~5i~7{~E~~Ir,~~~,,~_~~.;~~~~:~;:~~~~:" .•:;E~ f ,OTTO E MEZZO _ V:IVALDI Directed by Federico FeIlini Friday 11th February at 7.30pm Natiohal Film Theatre, South Bank Tel: 071-928 3232 . Four SeasoiIs.& Gloria Thursday 3rd March at 7.45pm Queen Elizabeth Hall, South Bank " Tel: 071~928 8800 I ' UN BALLO-MASCHERATO RENAISSANCE FLORENCE by Giusepp~ Verdi 12,15,18,21 March Royal Opera House, Coven~' Garden Tel: 071-240 1066, The Age of Lorenzo De'Medici Extended to 28th February "Accademia Italiami ,24.Rutlanq Gate RADIO 3 BROADCASTS ~ Thursday 3rd March RIGOLETIO . ~ Thursday 24th March UN BALLO MASCHERATO . '. ' . , , , .. . ,,' ,,,,,,,,, , ~ ' " ta- - i}LBINONI&. YIVALbl , London HarjJsicord' Ensemble $aturday, 19th February at 7.30pm Purcell.Room, South Bank , Tel:07h9288800 VIVALDI Concertos forA & 2 Violiris Cello Concerto in C minor' 'Sllnday, 20th 'I'ebru'aryitt8~00pm Ptircell Room, South'Bank. .Tel: 071~928 8800 . "" , - '" .~ ''vE~I: RI;:QUI~M ! ~ GRAND OPERA GALA. 'Excerp!s.fromPuccini; Bellini, Verdi, Mascagni & RossiniSaturday 26th February at 7.30 .Royal'Festival Hall, S.outhB~nk . . Tel: 071-928 3002 , , . 'Lecture given by Prof.· Achille Tartaro' Tuesday .lsrMarch at6.39pm Italiari CulturalInstitute 39 Belgrave Square, SWl L'ELISIR D'AMORE . «b'y'Oaetano Donizetti Englisli TouriIig,Opera . _. . 21 to 26 February .. , 'Sadler's Wells'Th~atre"Rosebery Avenue, E<;::l . -' Tel: Q71-77~ 8916 . ·BUjODLINES A photographic exhibitipn • by ScottishfItalians ' . 'Cultural ties and. traditions"of Italian .~ immigrant communities in Britain including :.:..~: the sinking <?f the SS Allflora Star , 4th February to 19th March Tuesdays'to StaurdayslI.OOam -7.00pm Photographers Gallery 5-8 Gt. Newport Street '(Leicesier Square) LondonWC2 Tei: 071-379 6057 DANTE'S ULYSSES 'his predecessors'l\ud successor Lectu~e given by Prof. Piero Boitani Tuesday 27nd F.ebruary at 6.30pm Italian Cultural Institute 39 Bi:lgrave Square, SW1, RIGOLETIO by Giuseppe Verdi . 22,25,28·February, 3,5,9,11' March Royal Opera House, Covent Garden Tel: 071-240 1066 j I