In Sicily, Defying the Mafia
Fed up with extortion and violent crime, ordinary citizens are rising up against organized crime
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Francesco Lastrucci
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2010, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Maniaci led me up a narrow flight of stairs to his second-floor studio, its walls covered by caricatures and framed newspaper clips heralding his journalistic feats. He flopped down in a chair at a computer and fired up another cigarette. (He smokes three packs a day.) Then he began working the phones in advance of his 90-minute, live daily news broadcast. He was attempting to ferret out the identities of those responsible for torching the cars of two prominent local businessmen the night before. Leaping out of his chair, Maniaci thrust a news script into my hands and asked me to read it on the air—despite my rudimentary Italian. “You can do it!” he encouraged. Maniaci often asks visiting foreign reporters to join him on camera in the belief the appearances will showcase his international clout and thereby protect him from further Mafia attacks.
Telejato, which reaches 180,000 viewers in 25 communities, is a family operation: Maniaci’s wife, Patrizia, 44, works as the station’s editor; his son, Giovanni, is the cameraman and his daughter, Letizia, is a reporter. “My biggest mistake was to bring in the whole family,” he told me. “Now they are as obsessed as I am.” The station functions on a bare-bones budget, earning about €4,000 ($5,000) a month from advertising, which covers gasoline and TV equipment but leaves almost nothing for salaries. “We are a little fire that we hope will become a big fire,” Maniaci said, adding that he sometimes feels he is fighting a losing battle. In recent months, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s government had introduced legislation that could weaken Sicily’s anti-Mafia campaign: one measure would impose stricter rules on wiretapping; another gave tax amnesty to anyone who repatriated cash deposited in secret overseas bank accounts, requiring them to pay only a 5 percent penalty. “We have Berlusconi. That’s our problem,” Maniaci told me. “We can’t destroy the Mafia because of its connection with politics.”
Not every politician is in league with the Mafia. The day after speaking with Maniaci, I drove south from Palermo to meet Corleone Mayor Antonino Iannazzo, who, since his election in 2007, has been working to repair the town’s reputation. The two-lane highway dipped and rose across the starkly beautiful Jato Valley, passing olive groves, clumps of cactus and pale green pastures that swept up toward dramatic granite ridges. At last I arrived in central Corleone: medieval buildings with balustraded iron balconies lined cobblestone alleys that snaked up a steep hillside; two giant sandstone pillars towered over a town of 11,000. In the nave of a crumbling Renaissance church near the center, I found Iannazzo—an ebullient, red-bearded 35-year-old, chomping on a cigar—showing off some restoration work to local journalists and business people.
In three years as Corleone’s mayor, Iannazzo has taken a hands-on approach toward the Mafia. When Salvatore Riina’s youngest son, Giuseppe Salvatore Riina, resettled in Corleone after getting out of prison on a technicality five and a half years into a nine-year sentence for money laundering, Iannazzo went on TV to declare him persona non grata. “I said, ‘We don’t want him here, not because we’re afraid of him, but because it’s not a good sign for the young people,’” he told me. “After years of trying to give them legal alternatives to the Mafia, one man like this can destroy all of our work.” As it turned out, Riina went back to prison after his appeal was denied. By then, says Iannazzo, Riina “understood that staying in Corleone wouldn’t be a good life for him—every time he went out of the house, he was surrounded by the paparazzi; he had no privacy.” Iannazzo’s main focus now is to provide jobs for the town’s youth—the 16 percent unemployment rate is higher here than in much of the rest of Italy—to “wean them off their attraction to the Mafia life.”
Iannazzo got into my car and directed me through a labyrinth of narrow streets to a two-story row house perched on a hillside. “This is where [Riina’s successor] Bernardo Provenzano was born,” he told me. The municipality seized the house from the Provenzanos in 2005; Iannazzo himself—then deputy mayor—helped evict Provenzano’s two brothers. “They took their things and left in silence—and moved 50 yards down the street,” he recalls. Iannazzo was remaking the house into a “laboratory of legality”—a combination of museum, workshop and retail space for anti-Mafia cooperatives such as Libera Terra. The mayor had even had a hand in the design: stark metal banisters suggest prison bars while plexiglass sheets on the floors symbolize transparency. “We’ll show the whole history of the Mafia in this region,” he said, stopping in front of the burned-out remains of a car that had belonged to journalist Pino Maniaci.
Iannazzo still faces major challenges. Under a controversial new law passed by Italy’s parliament this past December, a confiscated Mafia property must be auctioned off within 90 days if a socially responsible organization has not taken it over. The law was intended to raise revenue for the cash-strapped Italian government; critics fear it will put properties back into the hands of organized crime. That’s “a ridiculously short period,” said Francesco Galante, of Libera Terra, who said it can take up to eight years for groups like his to acquire confiscated Mafia assets. And few citizens or even cooperatives can match the Mafia’s spending power. “Judges all over Italy protested against this bill,” Galante told me. “We got signatures and held events to try and stop this decision, but it didn’t work.” He estimates that some 5,000 seized properties could revert to the Mafia. (Since then, a new national agency was created to manage seized assets; Galante says it may mitigate that danger.)
Franco Nicastro, president of the Society of Sicilian Journalists, considers his organization lucky to have acquired one of the most powerful symbols of the island’s dark past before the deadline: the former home of Salvatore Riina in Palermo, where The Beast had lived under an assumed name, with his family, before his capture. A tasteful split-level villa with a date-palm garden beneath mountains a few miles away, it could be a screenwriter’s retreat in the Hollywood Hills. The house provided an atmosphere of suburban comfort to the man who had plotted the murders of Falcone, Borsellino and scores of others in the early 1990s. “He never met any fellow Mafiosi in this place,” Nicastro told me, throwing open shutters and allowing sunlight to flood the empty living room. “This was strictly a place for him, his wife and children.” This year it will reopen as the society’s headquarters, with workshops and exhibitions honoring the eight reporters who were murdered by the Mafia between the late 1960s and 1993. “Riina could kill journalists, but journalism didn’t die,” Nicastro said, leading the way to a drained swimming pool and a tiled patio where Riina liked to barbecue. Acquiring mob properties like this may become more difficult if Italy’s new law takes hold. But for Sicilians awakening from a long, Mafia-imposed nightmare, there will be no turning back.
Writer Joshua Hammer, who is a frequent Smithsonian contributor, lives in Berlin. Photographer Francesco Lastrucci is based in Italy, New York and Hong Kong.
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Comments (6)
jesus christ i must admit i'm impressed by the turn out against mafia crimes i myself a victim of a terrible act a quoted sicilian car bomb blew up my skull by the grace of god i survived suffering a coma for three days crushed eye socket eye ball contusion blindness cranial damage crushed nasal arch injury to my spine and brain stem suffering traumatic brain injury life long illness and injury i am very pleased with this out come god bless you all
Posted by yolanda jones on December 18,2011 | 01:48 PM
I am really impressed with the guts of those who would stand up to the Mafia. I for onr will reward them by taking a trip to Scicily and spending my tourist dollars.
Posted by Lee Robinson on December 9,2010 | 06:18 PM
Joshua Hammer’s article is brilliant. However, it’s a shame that the mayor of Corleone, (my home town), Nino Iannazzo didn’t tell you about the anti mafia centre in the centre of Corleone that was created with government and UN money in the year 2000 to create a firm standing point to fight the mafia adopting an educational and cultural route. The reason? Well I and five other people used to work there, servicing over six thousand visitors per year; many from GCT travel in the states. When Iannazzo won his term in office, he couldn’t be bothered to seek funding for the centre, citing a legal battle with the outgoing mayor, Nicolosi, for control of the centre as his excuse; thus we areout of work. Fair enough, but now that he has control? He isn’t capable of obtaining funding. Instead he has opened a centre promoting anti mafia using a confiscated building. Why spend money there when you already have an anti mafia centre? Well he took care of some of his friends. It’s also a shame he didn’t explain why he sold the public water network in Corleone and placed it in private hands………..the reason? Take a look at some of the new employees…………..all friends of the mayor! Our water bills have now quadrupled! Nino is a competent lawyer, no doubt, but a “hands-on anti mafia campaigner? NO. Under his administration, we haven’t taken such a retrograde step in years.
Posted by Gino Felicetti on November 4,2010 | 07:14 AM
Joshua Hammer makes reference to "stark granite mountains" and "dramatic granite ridges". Quite probably the only granite in Sicily is on kitchen counter tops. Mr. Hammer is most likely referencing the limestone hills that dot the central Sicilian plains and are a fascinating geological story in themselves.
Posted by Rick Whitman on October 21,2010 | 03:51 PM
I was born in Sicily,I red the article and it took me back to my town. The writing is absolutely interesting, the pictures re visualized my memory. I will read any new article written by Mr Hammer,related to Sicily. Also hope to see things get better for the locals dealing with this for ever environment. Beautifully written.
Posted by Nick Cervegnano on October 18,2010 | 04:44 PM
Joshua Hammer's outstanding article, "Defying the Godfather"(October 2010)was a revelation about courageous Sicilians taking on the Mafia. Interestingly, the Mafia's prime nemesis in past years was Benito Mussolini. As distinguished historian,Robert Leckie noted, "He waged successful war against Sicily's entrenched Mafia, putting 400 top mafiosi in prison and reducing Palermo Province's annual murder rate from 278 to twenty-five."
Posted by Louis C. Kleber on October 8,2010 | 03:30 PM