In Rome not only are there the many initiatives promoted
by the Catholic Church for the Jubilee. In the first
few days of July there will also be an international
meeting and a march that the Pope would never like to
see in "his" Rome during "his" Jubilee: the days devoted
to gay pride events. Michele Pisicchio discusses this
in the opening article of issue 263 (May 2000) of the
anarchist magazine "A". In his usual ironic piece, Carlo
Oliva deals with the advertising of a "Jubilee pen",
one of the tons of gadgets (indirectly) marketed by
the Vatican. The central dossier in this issue is devoted
to war and includes 4 pieces. Maria Matteo analyzes
conflicts in general in this age: her article is significantly
entitled "The Normality of Horror". Seven members of
the Banda degli Ottoni (a musical-libertarian group
from Milan) give us their impressions of a trip to Bosnia,
where they went to participate in the Winter Festival
in Sarajevo. The writer Pino Cacucci (one of the major
experts in Italy on Latin-America, friend and translator
of Sepulveda, Paco Ignacio Taibo II, etc.) denounces
Nato's criminal role during the "humanitarian" war in
Kosovo a year ago: in particular, he refers to the expulsion
of the whole Jewish Kosova community by the Albanians
(supported by Nato). Laura Di Martino interviews Sergio
Bonelli, a surgeon working with "Emergency", on the
construction of a hospital in the north of Afghanistan,
on the characteristics and role of the Red Cross and
other "humanitarian" organizations, etc.. On the Fatti&Misfatti
page, Nadia Agustoni discusses Chechnya, Paolino Bruschi
reports on the women's march on 8th March in San Cristobal
de las Casas in Chiapas, Amnesty International denounce
the racist behaviour of the Austrian police even before
the rise of Haider, Massimo Ortalli reports on the opening
of two new anarchist historical archives in Reggio Emilia
and Rimini. Maria Mesch, an artist involved in the European
TransEuropeHalles project, begins her collaboration
with "A" with an amusing piece on art forgeries. In
the Libertarian Review we present 2 new books, a magazine
and a film. The books are "Red Emma. Un'anarchica in
America" (on Emma Goldman) and "Il cristallo di quarzo"
[The Quartz Crystal] (a story by Marco Sommariva). The
magazine is "ApARTe", a sumptuous art and anarchy magazine,
the first issue of which has recently come out. The
film is "Faber", devoted to singer songwriter Fabrizio
De André, who died a year ago (may we remind you that
"A" magazine has produced a special issue devoted to
him, which is also extensively advertised in this issue
of "A"). We must also mention the usual columns by Marco
Cagnotti (Internet), Carlo E. Menga (Advertising), Felice
Accame (who this time discusses dining out), Marco Pandin
(4 pages packed with music info) as well as the traditional
"Tamtam" with information on events, publishing initiatives,
etc.. Five letters are published: two discuss gypsies,
one Spanish anarcho-syndicalism, one drugs at discos
and the last is a long series of criticisms of certain
"clichés" present in the alternative and libertarian
world.
translated by Leslie Ray
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