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Authors: John Dickie
I owe a special debt to Lesley Lewis for allowing me to consult her late husband Norman’s diaries—the notes he drew on while writing his profoundly compassionate and yet disillusioned observations in
Naples ‘44
.
Laura and Giulio Lepschy were for me, as for so many Italianists in the UK, an endless source of linguistic wisdom. Maria Novella Mercuri helped me work out some of the trickier, ungrammatical passages in some manuscripts.
I have had the great boon of being able to consult a number of journalists who are immersed in the subject of organised crime on a day-to-day basis. In Sicily, Lirio Abbate, Attilio Bolzoni, Salvo Palazzolo, and Dino Paternostro offered advice, material or both. In Calabria, Pietro Comito passed on a rare copy of Serafino Castagna’s autobiography. Peppe Baldessarro knows as much about the ’ndrangheta as any journalist: it was enriching to chat with him in the course of several visits to Calabria. Several of these names are among the all too many courageous and professional Italian journalists who have had to face death threats from the clans.
Yet again my biggest thank you goes to my wife, Sarah Penny. I am constantly astonished by her ability to juggle work, family and my seemingly endless demands for time. She has my gratitude and my love, always. The book is dedicated to her, to our two children Elliot and Charlotte, and to their baby sister, Iris.
I
LLUSTRATION CREDITS
Image Source
page
xxxiv Above: © Corbis / photo Ina Fassbinder Below: photo Armin Thiemer
xxxvi Private collection
8
Illustrated London News
, 1859
9 A. De Blasio,
Usi e costumi dei camorristi
, 1897
17 © The British Library (from F. De Bourcard,
Usi e costumi di Napoli e contorni descritti e dipinti
, vol. II, 1858)
18 © The British Library (from F. De Bourcard,
Usi e costumi di Napoli e contorni descritti e dipinti
, vol. II, 1858)
22
L’Illustration
, 1860
24 A. Comandini,
L’Italia nei cento anni del secolo XIX
, vol. 3
25
L’Illustration
, 1860
26 © The British Library Newspapers, Colindale (from
Il Mondo Illustrato
, 1860)
29 A. Comandini,
L’Italia nei cento anni del secolo XIX
, vol. 3
31 © The British Library Newspapers, Colindale (from
Il Mondo Illustrato
, 1860)
33
Illustrated London News
, 1860
36
Illustrated London News
, 1859
51
Illustrated London News
, 1860
71 © Corbis / photo Armin Thiemer
80 Private collection
96 A. De Blasio,
Il tatuaggio
, 1905
98 A. De Blasio,
Usi e costumi dei camorristi
, 1897
100 Biblioteca Nazionale ‘Vittorio Emanuele II’, Naples, reproduced by kind permission of the Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali, Italy
103 Above: © Getty Images. Middle and Below: private collection
104 Museo Pitré, Palermo, reproduced by kind permission of the Comune di Palermo
109 C. Del Balzo,
Napoli e i napoletani
, 1885
111 © The British Library Newspapers, Colindale (from
Le Monde Illustré
, 1893)
122 © John Dickie
136 © John Dickie
143 E. Morselli,
Biografia di un bandito
, 1903
150 Above: Reproduced by kind permission of the Archivio di Stato di Reggio Calabria. Middle and Below: E. Morselli,
Biografia di un bandito
, 1903
151
Illustrated London News
, 1902
152
Illustrated London News
, 1902
159 Private collection
170
L’Illustrazione Italiana
, 1899
171
L’Illustrazione Italiana
, 1901
172
L’Illustrazione Italiana
, 1901
174 Private collection
191
Il Mattino
, 1911
203
La Scintilla
, 1911
206
La Scintilla
, 1911
207 A. De Blasio,
Usi e costumi dei camorristi
, 1897
208
Illustrated London News
, 1911
210
La Scintilla
, 1911
246 E. Morselli,
Biografia di un bandito
, 1903
256 © Getty Images
261 Reproduced by kind permission of Istituto Luce, Rome / Archivio Fotografico
264 Above left and right, below left: Private collection. Below right: Top-Foto Topham Picturepoint
268 Left: reproduced by kind permission of
Gazzetta del Sud
, 1986. Right: private collection
302 Courtesy of Archivio de
L’Unità
307 Lux Films / RGA
308 Private collection
309 Private collection
322 © Bettmann / Corbis
331 Private collection
348 © Getty Images / Mondadori
349 © Bettmann / Corbis
364 © Enzo Brai / Pubblifoto, Palermo
374 © Getty Images / Gamma-Keystone
385 © Enzo Brai / Pubblifoto, Palermo
395 Courtesy of archive of Pasquale Capellupo
405 © AP / Press Association Images
413 Archivio Carabinieri, Palermo
416 © AP / Press Association Images / Raul Fornezza
418 © Getty Images / Popperfoto
422 © Alberto Roveri / Rosebud2
425 © Eric Gaillard
432 © ANSA
441 Alessandro Fucarini / Agenzia Fotografica Labruzzo, Palermo
451 © Contrasto / eyevine / Angelo Palma
474 © ANSA
475 Private collection
488 © ANSA
510 Left: courtesy of Centro di Studi ed Iniziative Culturali Pio La Torre, Palermo. Right: Archivio Fotografico Pietro Oliveri, Corleone
516 © ANSA
517 © Contrasto / eyevine / Shobha
518 © ANSA
526 © Corbis / ANSA
553 Alessandro Fucarini / Agenzia Fotografica Labruzzo, Palermo
557 © Rex Features / Contrasto
561 © Tony Gentile
576 © Getty Images / Gamma-Rapho
579 © Corbis / Antoine Gyori / Sygma
582 Archivio Carabinieri, Palermo
609 © AP / Press Association Images / Luca Bruno
612 Archivio Carabinieri, Palermo
619 © AP / Press Association Images / Italian Police
622 © John Dickie
630 © AP / Press Association Images / Salvatore Laporta
635 © AP / Press Association Images / Salvatore Laporta
640 © AP / Press Association Images / Adriana Sapone
646 © AP / Press Association Images / Adriana Sapone
I would like to thank the following for their help in sourcing photographs:
Chiara Augliera of the Cineteca di Bologna; Maggiore Antonio Coppola of the Carabinieri’s Nucleo investigativo–reparto operativo, Palermo; Fabio Cuzzola; Nick Dines; Cecilia Ferretti of the Archivio Unità; Capitano Giuseppe Lumia and the ROS in Gioia Tauro; Vito Lucio Lo Monaco of the Centro Pio La Torre, Palermo; Gabriele Morabito; Nino Sapone; Fabio Truzzolillo.
Every reasonable effort has been made to trace the copyright holders, but if there are any errors or omissions, PublicAffairs will be pleased to insert the appropriate acknowledgement in any subsequent printings or editions.
N
OTES ON SOURCES
FOR SOCIOLOGISTS IT HAS BECOME COMMONPLACE TO TREAT ITALY’S MAJOR CRIMINAL organisations as different aspects of the same set of problems. Historians have been slow to catch up. All the major historians of organised crime in Italy have made often very insightful comparative asides. Yet sustained comparison is very rare indeed.
Blood Brotherhoods
is intended to explore what we can learn by letting the histories of the three mafias run in parallel to one another. It is a task that has presented many challenges, notably at the level of narrative organisation. But the goal is fundamentally a simple one, all the same: a chronicle.
Blood Brotherhoods
is also intended for readers beyond Italy, as well as within its borders, for whom the word ‘mafia’ conjures up visions of Al Pacino before it does the faces of Luciano Liggio, Raffaele Cutolo or the De Stefano brothers. What I hope to do is dissipate some of the confusion generated both by films like
The Godfather
, and by the catchall word ‘mafia’. In an effort to make
Blood Brotherhoods
as accessible as possible, I have not used footnotes or endnotes. Those of us who are university lecturers and therefore lucky enough to read for a living all too easily forget the huge efforts that many people have to make to find the time to read—and to read non-fiction in particular. Perhaps the least we can do to meet such readers halfway is to produce a narrative unencumbered by references, nods to obscure academic debates, and the name-dropping of academic allies and opponents.
That said, footnotes fulfill many duties and afford many pleasures. The following pages can be but a poor substitute for them. My hope is that they will at least serve as a stimulus to further reading, a recognition of my many intellectual debts, an indication of what sources I have used to formulate and substantiate my arguments, and a clue to interesting issues that I did not have time to explore or treat fully. Some of the sources cited are not referred to or quoted from explicitly in the text, but I have included them here all the same, generally for one of two reasons: first, because they make points that I did not have the space to explore and illustrate in the text; second, because they add evidential weight.
Blood Brotherhoods
, as a comparative history, can have no pretentions to being an encyclopedic account of the camorra, the Sicilian mafia and the ’ndrangheta. My approach has been to choose stories that I consider to be exemplary. By including the full range of my archival sources on the picciotteria, for example, I hope to show that my choice of exemplary stories has a broad foundation in firsthand research, whether by me or by other people.