Rome Festivities

The festivities of the city of Rome in Italy. Not only Roman Catholic celebrations, but also Jewish and folkloric ones, for a tradition that has been going on for thousands of years.

Miniaturize Yourself in Italy!

Italia in Miniatura, or Miniature Italy, is a fun theme park for all ages that will miniaturize you!

Palio of Siena Tragedy

Should the Palio of Siena be suppressed? And what should happen to hippodromes?

Sicilian Cassata Recipe

A classic from Italian culinary tradition, a Sicilian dessert to prepare at home.

Italian Eco Friendly Aperitif

Sugheritivo is the eco friendly aperitif en-vogue in Italy since 2011. Bring a cork in, get a free glass of wine!

Wonderful Ischia Thermal Spas

Ischia has it all, and its thermal baths are a gift from the gods since ancient times.

Showing posts with label events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label events. Show all posts

Monday, November 14, 2011

The Day After....Berlusconi


Traveling through a country does not only involve the often superficial activity of moving from place to place watching the world around you as if you were in a zoo. The real traveler, though short his visit may be, always tries to get to the ore of things, and however a hard job this is, it rewards her much in the end.

Traveling through Italy, or any other country for that matter, also involves talking about its political happenings. Even more so if you are armchair traveling while reading my subjective and instinctively written articles. It is the right way of traveling as it adds a third dimension to your point of view, giving you the instruments to get a rounder picture even on more ephemeral subjects I will be addressing in later posts.

The big news of these days is that, after Papandreu's leave of office in Greece, Berlusconi, Italy's (former) prime minister, resigned from his post to give way to a technical government headed by Mr. Monti.

What is a technical government? Non-Italians like me might have a hard time grasping this concept at first. It is a concept that speaks of Italian culture. This type of government, literally, is one set in place to "get the job done". Yes, it sounds absurd. What are non-technical governments there for, then?

First of all, governments elected through regular elections, such as the one that just fell in Italy, are supposedly formed by politically prepared people that have good leadership. They are managers, but need (economy, medicine, education, transportation) expert consultants to run the show. During the so-called technical government, one that was not elected by the Italian people but appointed by the leaving government and the President of the Republic, you just have these expert consultants running the show. It's like a company downsize, when marketing and PR are trimmed to fuel the R&D department.

Berlusconi's government was really (REALLY!) big in marketing and PR, however lacked much expertise, and the ability to pull it together into a synergistic strategy. The mix was composed of very young ministers, of whom many coming from the show business, others without a properly developed cultural background, but most importantly of frail alliances that always threatened the stability of the government and brought to a stalling legislative motor.

The Lega Nord party especially leveraged on its small number of seats that nevertheless allowed Berlusconi to remain the Prime Minister of Italy, while pushing towards its pet interests at the expense of the whole country.

This brings about the new electoral law that 1.2 million Italians dearly desire to the point of subscribing a referendum request on this matter. You see, in Italy at this stage any party is a big box that gets voted, then filled with all sorts of people. You elect a brand, not the people representing you. This was supposed to create stability in a country that up to the end of the 20th century had had more than fifty governments in less than fifty years with hundreds of parties represented. However, stability (and democracy) was compromised by allowing medium parties to partner up with smaller ones, so to reach the minimum required number of seats to gain the majority and govern. Problem is, these parties often come from very different ideological backgrounds. As a result, and to much dislike of electors, if one wants to vote for the left wing alliance, she will end up giving her vote also to center-right parties participating into the alliance. And if that alliance wins, then you will probably see "your" government act in favor of ideologies totally foreign to its original intents. And this is done just to foster stability (or keep their well-paid seat, as they say in Italy). Otherwise their political allies might abandon the crew and let the boat sink (as Lega Nord continuously threatened to do).

On the part of Italians, Berlusconi's demise was reason to carousel along the streets of many cities, as if Italy had won the World Cup. The vast majority of Italians could not stand his empty promises served on a plate decorated with sexism, racism, egocentrism, bad manners and bad taste anymore. On my part, I will remove the poll on this blog with the question "Do Italians Deserve Berlusconi?" and give it a resounding "no" as an answer.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

My Take on the Palio of Siena


The Palio of Siena on July 2 was run after a long day of heavy downpour that almost flooded the city and turned the Piazza del Campo into an enormous sludge field. So much water threatened to make it impossible for the Palio be run on that day. It would have been quite tragic for many tourists that usually book until the very day of the Palio and leave the day after. This did not happen and everyone could enjoy the Palio. In this edition, however, there was an event that cast a shadow over the event. It was something quite different from last year's accident that saw a French tourist killed by a piece of stone that detached from a terrace during a dinner. However, it was quite just as dramatic. During one of the test runs a horse hit a stone post at one corner of Piazza del Campo injuring itself to death and overthrowing the jokey that reported minor consequences.
This of course brought up strong protests by animal rights organizations.

While I think what happened is a tragic accident that should be avoided at all costs, I also do not feel that the Palio of Siena should stop as a consequence of similar accidents. However, some things should be changed. For example these marble posts should be equipped with some serious shock absorption system, not visually offensive or cumbersome for horses. Moreover, it is a tradition for jockeys to be held free of any responsibility on their doings, especially in case of accidents such as the one in question. I think that since they are paid dearly by the "contrade" that engage them, they should be held responsible for such errors, especially during such an unimportant event as a test run, which has none of the tremendous tension and heat of the Palio race. If a driver has to pay for its misbehavior, why should a jockey be any different? This would make them more cautious for sure. Remember that these guys are the equivalent of extreme sports champions, since they run with silk trousers over an unsaddled sweaty horse zipping at full speed through a narrow cornered path flanked by little or no protection whatsoever. If you expect them to be cautious for their own sake, forget about it!

I do agree that the Palio should do anything to avoid animals any suffering, but at the same time much was done, especially thanks to protesters in favor of animal rights, such as the institution of a residence for injured horses that can continue to graze although not able to run anymore. Moreover, these occurrences are quite rare, fortunately. Much more effort should be put into completely obliterating commercial animal races (horses, dogs, etc.) that are tied to pure economic return and massacre thousands of young animals at the first sign of weakness or minor injury. The Palio is bound to a long history and tradition, and a horse is given maximum respect, and hailed as a hero when victorious.

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