Nicola Barbato

Nicola Barbato
Drawing of Nicola Barbato, one of the leaders of the Fasci Siciliani.

Nicola Barbato, (Piana dei Greci, 1856 - Milan, May 23, 1923), was a Arbëreshë socialist and politician. He was one of the national leaders of the Fasci Siciliani (Sicilian Leagues) a popular movement of democratic and socialist inspiration in 1891-1894, and perhaps might have been the ablest among them, according to the Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm.[1]

Contents

Early life

Born in Piana dei Greci (now Piana degli Albanesi), he graduated in medicine at the University of Palermo. He devoted himself in the then prevailing positivist climate to study psychiatry. His work on the psychology of paranoia in the journal of the mental hospital of Palermo in 1890, was judged positively by Cesare Lombroso and Enrico Morselli.[2]

He also was active politically, working for the newspaper L'isola (The Island), directed by Napoleone Colajanni in Palermo. Back in Piana, he witnessed the intense misery on the countryside as a medical officer.[2] He became the leader of the Fasci dei lavoratori (Workers League) of Piana degli Albanesi and was known as 'the workers' apostle'.[3] Other leaders included Rosario Garibaldi Bosco in Palermo, Giuseppe De Felice Giuffrida in Catania, and Bernardino Verro in Corleone.

Famous are his Labour Day speeches on May 1 at Portella della Ginestra, where he used to speak to the crowd from a big rock that was later called the "stone of Barbato." The first meeting took place in 1893 and the place became a historic meeting place of local peasantry from the neighbouring towns of Piana degli Albanesi, San Giuseppe Jato and San Cipirello. The tradition was interrupted during the fascist period and resumed after the fall of the Fascist regime. In 1947, Portella della Ginestra was the scene of a massacre that killed 11 people and wounded 33, perpetuated by the bandit Salvatore Giuliano.[1][4]

Arrest and conviction

The leaders of the Fasci Siciliani in the courtroom cage at the trial in April 1894

Following the repression of the Fasci Siciliani by the government of Francesco Crispi, he was arrested in January 1894 and was brought to trial. In spite of an eloquent defence, which turned the Court into a political platform and thrilled every socialist in the country, he was sentenced to 12 years.[5][2][6]

“In front of you,” he said to the judges, “we provided the documents and evidence of our innocence. My friends thought it necessary to support their defence legally; I will not do so. Not because I have no confidence in you, but it is the law that does not concern me. So I do not defend myself. You have to sentence: we are the elements that destroy your sacred institutions. You have to sentence: it is logical, human. I will always pay tribute to your loyalty. But we say to our friends outside: do not ask for pardon, do not ask for amnesty. Socialist civilization should not begin with an act of cowardice. We demand a condemnation, we do not ask for mercy. Martyrs are more useful to the holy cause than any propaganda. Condemn us!” His famous self-defence in the Court has entered the socialist historiography.[6]

The heavy sentence aroused strong reactions in Italy and even in the United States. In Palermo a group of students went to the Teatro Bellini and asked the orchestra to perform the hymn of Garibaldi. And the theater applauded.[6]

Elected and amnesty

In the elections in May 1895, he was elected for the Italian Socialist Party while he was still in detention. He was a candidate in protest against the repression of the Fasci Siciliani in many national electoral districts. His election was annulled by the Council of the Chamber. In the next elections in September 1895, he was elected again in two electoral colleges.[7] He was assigned by lot to the district of Cesena, leaving the fifth district of Milan to Filippo Turati, the grand old man of the socialist, who was elected to the Italian Chamber of Deputies for the first time.[2]

After nearly two years, on March 16, 1896, he was released as the result of a pardon recognizing the excessive brutality of the repression.[8][9] After his release, Barbato and the other Fasci leaders Giuseppe De Felice Giuffrida and Rosario Garibaldi Bosco were met by a large crowd of supporters in Rome, who released the horses form their carriage and dragged them to the hotel, cheering for socialism and denouncing Crispi.[10] When Barbato returned to his home town Piana dei Greci, he was greeted by 5,000 people, more than half the population. At that point he was probably the most popular socialist leader in Sicily.[11]

Prominent Socialist leader

In 1897, he volunteered to go fight with partisans during the Turkish-Greek war in Crete. Returning to Italy in 1898, he was again sentenced for subversive activity.[2] He attained national prominence in the Italian Socialist Party, was elected to Parliament in 1900 and was a member of the National Executive Board of the Party until 1902.[11]

In 1903, Barbato traveled through Europe on a propaganda tour among Italian emigrants, and in 1904 he left for the United States, where he remained until 1909. He was active in the Italian Socialist Federation and within the Italian communities on the East coast. He favoured the association of Italian socialists with the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW).[11]

He returned to Sicily in 1909. In 1913 the Italian Socialist Party appointed Barbato as its candidate in the electoral district of Catania against his former ally of the Fasci Siciliani, Giuseppe De Felice Giuffrida, who had joined the Italian Reform Socialist Party supporting the Italian invasion of Libya. He was beaten but voters also condemned the political attitude of the De Felice Giuffrida abstaining en masse.[2]

His political work among the peasants of his home town led to clashes with the Mafia boss of Piana, Ciccio Cuccia. After the murder of his cousin, Mariano Barbato, and the socialist militant Giorgio Pecoraro in May 1914,[12] and of the Socialist leader of Corleone, Bernardino Verro, in November 1915, he was seriously threatened by the Mafia, and the national leadership of the Socialist party ordered him to leave Piana degli Albanesi for Milan.[6] He was again elected to Parliament in 1919, and died in Milan on May 23, 1923.[11]

References

  1. ^ a b Hobsbawm, Primitive rebels, pp. 103-04
  2. ^ a b c d e f (Italian) Personaggi illustri, Comune de Piana degli Albanesi (Accessed October 31, 2010)
  3. ^ Seton-Watson, Italy from liberalism to fascism, pp. 162-63
  4. ^ (Italian) La strage di Portella della Ginestra, by Umberto Santino, Centro Siciliano di Documentazione "Giuseppe Impastato", published in Narcomafie, June 2005
  5. ^ Sicilian Rioters Sentenced, The New York Times, May 31, 1894
  6. ^ a b c d (Italian) Il «manifesto» di Nicola Barbato La Sicilia, January 10, 2010
  7. ^ Italian Socialists Elected, The New York Times, September 2, 1895
  8. ^ Bruno Cartosio, Sicilian Radicals in Two Worlds, in: Debouzy, In the Shadow of the Statue of Liberty, pp. 120-21
  9. ^ Pardon for Italian Socialists, The New York Times, March 14, 1896
  10. ^ Freed Italians Unrepentant; Many Socialists Greet Giuseppe de Felice, Bosco, and Barbato, The New York Times, March 18, 1896
  11. ^ a b c d Bruno Cartosio, Sicilian Radicals in Two Worlds, in: Debouzy, In the Shadow of the Statue of Liberty, pp. 124-25
  12. ^ (Italian) Il coraggio di Mariano Barbato, La Sicilia, January 17, 2010

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