- Roberto Farinacci
Roberto Farinacci (
October 16 1892 —April 28 1945 ) was a leading Italian Fascist politician, and important member of theNational Fascist Party (PNF) before and duringWorld War II , and one of its ardentanti-Semitic proponents.Early life
Born in
Isernia ,Molise , he was raised in poverty and dropped out of school at a young age, moving toCremona and beginning working on a railroad there in 1909. Around this time period, he became an irredentist socialist and, whenWorld War I began, a major advocate of Italy’s participation in the war. After the war, Farinacci was an ardent supporter ofBenito Mussolini and his Fascist movement. He subsequently established himself as the "Ras" (local leader, a title borrowed from theEthiopia n aristocracy) of the Fascists in Cremona, publishing the newspaper "Cremona Nuova" - later on "Il Regime Fascista" - and organizingBlackshirts combat squads in 1919. The Cremona squads were amongst the most brutal in Italy, and Farinacci effectively used them to terrorize the population into submission to Fascist rule. In 1922, Farinacci appointed himself mayor of Cremona.Prominence
Quickly rising as one of the most powerful members of the National Fascist Party, gathering around him a large number of supporters, Farinacci came to represent the most radical right wing faction of the party, one that thought Mussolini to be a too liberal leader (likewise, Mussolini believed Farinacci was too violent and irresponsible). Nevertheless, Farinacci’s career continued to rise, and he played a considerable role in establishing Fascist dominance over Italy in 1922, during and after the
March on Rome .In 1925, Farinacci became the second most powerful man in the country when Mussolini appointed him secretary of the Party. He was then used by Mussolini to centralize the PNF. Mussolini used him to purge the party of thousands of its radical members. Mussolini then removed Farinacci and he disappeared from the limelight, and practiced law for much of the late 1920s and early 1930s. In a
Time magazine in 1929, Farinacci was nicknamed the "castor oil man" of Fascism, based on his use of physically forcing opponents of Fascism to swallow castor oil which he called the "golden nectar of nausea". [cite news
author=
title=Black Farinacci
date=1929-02-04
work=Time Magazine
url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,737257,00.html
accessdate=2008-08-10] The effects of swallowing castor oil would cause the victims to suffer severe diarrhea followed by dehydration. [ [http://www.straightdope.com/classics/a4_028.html The Straight Dope: Did Mussolini use castor oil as an instrument of torture? ] ] The Time article also claims that as secretary of the Fascist party, Farinacci allowed the murderers of Italian Socialist Party deputyGiacomo Matteotti to be let free in 1926. [cite news
author=
title=Black Farinacci
date=1929-02-04
work=Time Magazine
url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,737257,00.html
accessdate=2008-08-10] In 1935 Farinacci fought in theSecond Italo-Abyssinian War , as a member of the "Voluntary Militia for National Security" (MVSN) - the new official name of the Blackshirts, and eventually attained the rank oflieutenant general . He lost a hand after fishing with a grenade.In the same year, he joined the
Grand Council of Fascism , thus returning to national prominence. In 1937, Farinacci participated in theSpanish Civil War , and in 1938 became a governmental minister and enforced the Anti-semiticracial segregation measures inspired byNazi Germany .In World War II
When World War II began, Farinacci sided with Germany: he frequently communicated with the Nazis, and became one of Mussolini’s advisors on Italy’s dealings with Germany. For his part, Farinacci urged Mussolini to enter Italy into the war as a member of the Axis. In 1941, Farinacci became Inspector of the Militia in Italian-occupied
Albania .In July 1943 he took part in the Grand Council of Fascism meeting which led to Mussolini’s downfall. While the majority of the council voted to force Mussolini out of the government, Farinacci didn't side against the "
Duce ". After Mussolini's arrest, Farinacci fled to Germany in order to escape arrest.The Nazi hierarchy considered putting Farinacci in charge of a German-backed Italian government in Northern Italy - the
Italian Social Republic - but he was passed over in favor of Mussolini when the dictator was rescued byOtto Skorzeny in September (through the raid known asUnternehmen Eiche ). Afterwards Farinacci went back to Cremona without taking part in political life. He was executed atVimercate by Italian partisans in 1945.Notes
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