Issue 294 commemorates the 150th anniversary of the
birth of the great Italian anarchist Errico Malatesta,
with a report on the convention held in Naples to celebrate
this major figure.
Also remembered in this issue is Ivan Illich, on the
1st anniversary of his death, with articles by Filippo
Trasatti, Pietro M. Toesca and Francesco Scotti and
an interview by Filippo Trasatti with Paolo Perticari
on Illich and Foucault.
On 7th November an alternative general strike
was held, called by Italys non-aligned trades
unions, in support of pensions, social services and
a series of other concerns; Cosimo Scarinzi discusses
the issues involved.
Iraq is always with us, and Antonio Cardella reports
on the secondary effects of the war there.
Are human beings the most arrogant of the species? That
is the question posed by Francesco Codello. Speaking
of arrogance, an article by Sergio Onesti on Italian
football, which is becoming less about sport and more
and more about money and business, particularly with
the emergence of Sky as a major player.
In the Fatti & Misfatti column, two
reports, one by Emergency on the work of the Goderich
Surgical Centre for the injured and traumatised of Sierra
Leone, and one on the demonstration in Modena against
the eviction of the Libera social centre.
Naga is a voluntary association operating
in Milan to help immigrants and nomads with health problems;
Paolo Cottino, a young anarchist architect, reports
on the project, in an extract from his recent book La
Città Imprevista.
Andrea Papi writes an article, a society within
society, in which he says that the social context
must be transformed internally, at grass roots level,
in a libertarian direction. This is perhaps the remedy
to the malaise of Berlusconi, which, according to Massimo
Ortalli, is based on the instrumentalisation of the
pettiness and mean-spiritedness to which Italys
citizens are so often subject. And on the subject of
Berlusconi, he recently attempted some historical revisionism
on the subject of Mussolinis good
dictatorship; Patrizio Biagi sets the record straight.
This month Alessio Legas regular column on singer
songwriters looks at the great Georges Moustaki.
In A nous la liberté, Felice Accame
considers the usefulness of the supplementary
information that we find surrounding us today.
To the other side of the world, and an article by Jean
Jacques Gandini on Hong Kong, in the vice-like grip
of the government of Beijing.
This month only Massimo Ortalli hands over Ritratti
in piedi to Gianni Alioti, and the subject is
Italian emigration to South America, specifically Brazil,
and the testimony of Zélia Gattai, writer, photographer
and wife of Jorge Amado.
The issue closes with letters by Mauro Massafra (on
animal rights) and Chiara Bellini (complimenting Andrea
Papi on his article Lo stato delle cose).
by Leslie Ray
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