Pietro Nenni

Pietro Nenni
Pietro Nenni
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
December 12, 1968 – August 5, 1969
Prime Minister Mariano Rumor
Preceded by Giuseppe Medici
Succeeded by Aldo Moro
In office
October 18, 1946 – January 28, 1947
Prime Minister Alcide De Gasperi
Preceded by Alcide De Gasperi
Succeeded by Carlo Sforza
Lifetime Senator
In office
1970 – January 1, 1980
Preceded by New Constituency
Succeeded by None
Secretary of the Italian Socialist Party
In office
1943–1945
Preceded by New Party
Succeeded by Sandro Pertini
In office
1948–1949
Preceded by Alberto Jacometti
Succeeded by Francesco De Martino
Personal details
Born February 9, 1891(1891-02-09)
Faenza, Italy
Died January 1, 1980(1980-01-01) (aged 88)
Rome, Italy
Political party Partito Socialista
Profession Politician
Religion Roman Catholic

Pietro Sandro Nenni (February 9, 1891, Faenza, Emilia-Romagna – January 1, 1980) was an Italian socialist politician, the national secretary of the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) and lifetime Senator since 1970. He was a recipient of the Stalin Peace Prize in 1951. He was a central figure of the Italian left from the 1920s to the 1960s.

Contents

Biography

Early life and career

He was born in Faenza, in Emilia-Romagna. After his peasant parents died, he was placed in an orphanage by an aristocratic family. Every Sunday Nenni recited his catechism before the countess and if he did well received a silver coin. "Generous but humiliating", he recalled.[1]

He affiliated with the Italian Republican Party. In 1908 he became editor of a Republican paper in Forlì. The socialist paper in the town was edited at the time by Benito Mussolini - the later Fascist dictator of Italy. Nenni was imprisoned in 1911 for his participation in the protest movement against the Italo-Turkish War in Libya, together with Mussolini.[2]

First World War

When the First World War broke out, he advocated the intervention of Italy in the war. In 1915 he volunteered for the Isonzo front. After he was wounded and sent home, he became an editor of the Republican paper Mattine d'Italia. He defended Italy's participation in the war, trying not to alienate his socialist friends. In the last years of the war Nenni served at the front again.[2]

When the war was over, he founded, together with some disillusioned revolutionary ex-servicemen, a group called "Fascio" which was soon dissolved and replaced by a real Fascist body.[2] While the socialist Mussolini became a fascist, the republican Nenni joined the Socialist Party in 1921, at the moment of its split with the wing that would form the Communist Party (PCI).

In 1923 (after the Fascist March on Rome, he became the editor of PSI's official voice, Avanti!, and engaged in anti-Fascist activism. In 1925 he was arrested for publishing a booklet on the Fascists' murder of Socialist leader Giacomo Matteotti. When the Avanti offices were set aflame and the paper prohibited in 1926, he took refuge in France, where he became secretary of the PSI.

In exile

In Paris, where he had worked as correspondent of the Avanti in 1921, he became acquainted with Léon Blum (socialist Prime Minister of France from 1936 to 1937), Marcel Cachin, Romain Rolland and Georges Sorel. Nenni went on to fight with the International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War. He was the cofounder and political commissar of the Garibaldi Brigade. After the defeat of the Spanish Republic and the victory of General Francisco Franco he returned to France. In 1943 he was arrested by the Germans in Vichy France and then imprisoned in Italy on the island of Ponza.

After being liberated in August 1943, he returned to Rome to lead the Italian Socialist Party which had been reunified as the Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity. After the surrender of Italy with the Allied armed forces on September 8, 1943, he was one of the political officials of the National Liberation Committee - the underground political entity of Italian Partisans during the German occupation.

Post-war politics

In 1944, he became the national secretary of the PSI again, favouring close ties between his party and the PCI. After the Liberation, he took up government responsibilities, becoming Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for the Constituent Assembly in the government of Ferruccio Parri and the first government of Alcide De Gasperi. He was Minister for the Constitution, and in October 1946 he became Minister for Foreign Affairs in the second De Gasperi government.

The close ties between the PSI and the PCI caused the Giuseppe Saragat-led anti-Communist wing of the PSI to leave and form the Italian Socialist Workers' Party in 1947 (later merged into the Italian Democratic Socialist Party, PSDI).

In 1956 Nenni broke with the PCI after Soviet Union's invasion of Hungary.[3] He returned the Stalin Prize money ($25,000).[1] Subsequently, he slowly led his party into supporting membership of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and closer European integration, and sought cooperation with the leading party, the Christian Democrats.

Opening to the centre-left

In the early 1960s he facilitated an "opening to the centre-left" enabling coalition governments between the PSI and the Christian Democrats and leading the Socialists back into power for the first time since 1947.[4] He formed a centre-left coalition with Saragat, Aldo Moro and Ugo La Malfa, and favored a reunion with the PSDI. From 1963 to 1968 he was Deputy Prime Minister in the three successive governments led by Moro and in December 1968 he became Minister for Foreign Affairs in the first government of Mariano Rumor, but resigned in July 1969 when the centre-left alliance collapsed.

Although the reunification attempts between the socialists and Giuseppe Saragat's breakaway Social Democrats resulted in the formation of a joint list Unified PSI–PSDI, both parties faired poorly in the 1968 Italian General Election. In 1969, a disillusioned Nenni virtually retired and Francesco De Martino took his place.[5] He resigned as head of the PSI and was made a senator for life in 1970 and in 1971 he ran unsuccessfully for president of Italy. In June 1979 was elected president of the Senate. He died in Rome on January 1, 1980. A daughter, Vittoria "Viva" Daubeuf, died in Auschwitz. She is memorialized in the writings of Charlotte Delbo.

References

  1. ^ a b Italy's New Partnership, Time Magazine, December 13, 1963
  2. ^ a b c Crisis of Italian Socialism, Europe Speaks, March 3, 1947
  3. ^ Pietro & Paul, Time Magazine, April 23, 1965
  4. ^ "A Sinistra?", Time Magazine, January 12, 1962
  5. ^ Obituary Francesco De Martino, The Guardian, November 22, 2002

External links



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