Monday, September 20th, 2010 - by admin - No Comments

fivizzano treesThere is nothing like a few days of bad weather-tension to unleash a giddy happiness with at the critical moment, the atmospheric dénouement that comes at the first peek of a sun thought to be lost.

You see, it seems we arrived in Italy only to spend our first two days in the rain. Out back, Enrico’s garden was a soggy mess. At night it thundered, although the thunder blended seamlessly with the canone they put out at the perifery of the polenta corn fields to blast away at the cinghiale, the wild boar crazy for corn.

apennine viewThen came Sunday. The skies cleared early. Sun, glorious sun, poured in the windows.

It was time for a road trip. I loaded the cameras. Martha took the wheel. The backroads were ours.

(Ok, so they weren’t truly ours—there were other vehicles on the twisty, narrow bits of tarmac fringed by a tangle of well-fed and watered rainforest undergrowth we had chosen as our route. As we squeezed by, spooky tendrils of greenery brushed the car ever so gently.)

fivizzanoWe headed over to the town of Fivizzano on these backroads. Then back home by another route. We were not afraid of getting lost; our car has GPS.

Such technology, we’d come to find out, wasn’t much help in the outback of Tuscany. In the Lunigiana the screen showed a tangle of roads. Unmarked. The towns were sometimes identified but the names often misspelled. Oddly, the misspellings often involved the letter “g”. Either the g was missing, or it was added to a name that didn’t naturally contain one.

Anyway, the pictures in this article came from that drive. Pretty, eh? You can tickle them with your mouse and click them and they will puff up nicely for you. Unless they disappear under your browser window, the shy little buggers…

 
Sunday, September 19th, 2010 - by - No Comments

Italy’s national statistics office often has some interesting reports on Italy buried within its web site.  One such report is ‘Italy in Figures 2009′.  This report contains lots of information and facts about Italy. Here is some information on Italy relating to basic demographics and territory.

Italy Map

Italy

This information on Italy might interest a few people, and putting it here might save such people having to unearth this report on the ISTAT site, and plough through it.

But seeing as I am a helpful kind of blogger, I’ll provide a link to the ISTAT Italy in Figures 2009 document a little later on.  I’ve also put the metric figures into imperial numbers, which might help those interested understand it more quickly.

Here goes.  But before you start looking at the figures, two questions:  What’s a mountain? And, What’s a hill?  If you don’t know, you soon will.

Italy Facts

Italy Facts – Demographics and Territory
Data from ISTAT 2009 Italy in Figures report Metric Imperial
Total Territory 301,336 km2 116,346 mile2
Total areas of woodland and forest
68,571 km2 26,475 mile2
Total length of coastline 7,375 km 4,583 miles
High seismic risk areas 28,026 km2 10,821 mile2
Protected areas (national parks, areas of outstanding natural beauty) 57,325 km2 22,133 mile2
Highest mountain in Italy – Monte Bianco / Mont Blanc 4,810 m 15,781 feet
Longest river in Italy – the Po 652 km 405 miles
Rail network 16,356 km 10,163 miles
Road network 175,442 km 109,015 miles
Number of regions in Italy 20
Number of provinces in Italy 107
Number of municipalities in Italy 8,100
Total resident population 59,619,290
Number of foreign residents in Italy (actual number higher) 3,432,651
Number of households 24,282,485
Average number of members in each household 2.4
Population density 198 per km2 76.4 mile2

What is a Mountain in Italy?

Officially in Italy, to be classified as a ‘mountain’, a geographical mass must be over 600 metres (1,968.5 feet) – but read on. There are, funnily enough, two types of hills in Italy.  In northern Italy, a hill is a mass under 600 metres, whereas in the central and southern areas, a hill is a mass which is under 700 metres.  Just why this should be the case, I don’t know, but I’m sure someone out there will.

Anyway, at least you now know the difference between hills and mountains.  I have to admit, I was not sure, before I wrote this.

Here’s the link to the ISTAT Italy in Figures 2009 report I promised you earlier: Italy in Figures 2009


Copyright © blogfromitaly.com 2005 – 2010
This feed is for personal, non-commercial use only.
Please note that GlobalPost.com and Shesdaily.blogspot.com have permission to use blogfromitaly.com content.
The use of this feed on other websites breaches copyright. If this content is not in your news reader, it makes the page you are viewing an infringement of copyright.

 
Saturday, September 18th, 2010 - by - No Comments

Il Fatto Quotidiano, an Italian newspaper, and, now, a website with a taste for reporting on all that is not well with Italy is now on display with all the other Italian national newspapers at our local news-stand here in Milan.  Before, as it was not on display, I had to ask for a copy of Il Fatto Quotidiano.

I also noticed that whereas before the newsagent only had a few copies of Il Fatto Quotidiano, now it has a decent bundle.  And this is Milan, very much the heartland of Italy’s right wing.  It seems that even the prosperous Milanese are curious to know what is going on in the murkier corners of Italy.  Yes, I know this is only one news-stand out of the hundreds which exist in Milan, but it is still interesting to see the profile of this new newspaper being raised.  It sounds as if sales of Il Fatto Quotidiano are on the up – otherwise, why would the news-stand owner have put it on display?

Il Fatto Quotidiano - Cover of 18 September 2010 Edition

Il Fatto Quotidiano – Cover of 18 September 2010 Edition

Il Fatto Quotidiano probably sells well because the paper seems to relish firing regular broadsides at the Italian establishment, and especially at Silvio Berlusconi and his cohorts.

Some Italians appear to think Il Fatto Quotidiano leans to the left.  This is understandable, seeing as the paper’s Editor-in-Chief Antonio Padellaro used to run an Italian newspaper which is very much on Italy’s political left – L’Unità.

Certainly, Il Fatto Quotidiano does focus its reporting on many people within and with connections to the current Berlusconi run Italian government.  And when someone goes against the directives and policies of Silvio Berlusconi, that someone is inevitably labelled as being a communist.  For Silvio Berlusconi there is only one left, and it is extreme and wants to turn Italy into something like the now extinct Soviet Union.

Seeing as Il Fatto Quotidiano publishes articles which can be read as being critical of Berlusconi, it is seen by some as commie newspaper.  But then things are very clear cut in Italian politics: left is very left, and right is very right.  By definition, therefore, Italian investigative journalist Marco Travaglio, who writes for Il Fatto Quotidiano, and has written several books on skulduggery within Italian politics, is a commie.

But is it true that Marco Travaglio swings to the left?

Marco Travaglio – Communist or Journalist?

The German Association of Journalists which awarded Marco Travaglio its 2009 prize for Freedom of the Press, consider Travaglio to be a “brave and critical colleague [...] exposing continually the attempts of Italian politicians, especially Silvio Berlusconi, to influence the media to their advantage and to negate critical reports.”. In other words, Travaglio is no more than a journalist who is doing his job.  He’s no different from Messrs Woodward and Bernstein, the two Washington Post journalists who brought the attention of the American public to that now famous case of political skulduggery – Watergate.  This is an observation I’ve made before on Il Fatto Quotidiano, I admit.

To an extent, journalists, like Travaglio, Woodward and Bernstein, plus countless others, keep politicians in check.  By performing this, er, ‘service to society’, journalists serve to underpin democracy, and can help prevent certain regimes from descending into totalitarianism.

Providing such services, it is inevitable that journalists are sometimes labelled as ‘commies’ or ‘nazis’, even if this is not really the case.

Il Fatto Quotidiano – Informing Italy

Back to Il Fatto Quotidiano.  The work of Padellaro, Travaglio, and all the others who write for Il Fatto Quotidiano, communists or not, is bringing the attention of Italy’s population to situations which are not clear.  The fact that Il Fatto Quotidiano is now on show at my local news-stand indicates that Italians want to know more, hopefully, so that they can choose their future leaders with more care.  In doing so, Italians might help Italy live up to its huge potential, in which case Il Fatto Quotidiano will have done its job – which is to inform.

Il Fatto Quotidiano Hypocritical?

The only aspect of Il Fatto Quotidiano which comes across as slightly hypocritical, from what I have heard from some aspiring young journalists I know, is that Il Fatto Quotidiano is cliquey.

Apparently the journalists who make up the staff of the newspaper all know each other rather well – in the Italian way, and unlike another recent journalistic start up – the informative, but markedly less controversial, Il Post – Il Fatto Quotidiano did not take on any budding young journalists, unless, and I have not checked, they were friends of friends. Not exactly the thing to do for a newspaper which often rails against nepotism and cronyism in Italy, now is it?

Such is Italy, but Il Fatto Quotidiano is still an interesting publication, despite such, admittedly unsubstantiated, rumours.

Perhaps Berlusconi’s people might like to take a look into this aspect of Il Fatto Quotidiano?  If they have not done so already, that is.  But then, Il Fatto Quotidiano’s people know that any attack from such a direction would be a huge case of the pot calling the kettle black.


Copyright © blogfromitaly.com 2005 – 2010
This feed is for personal, non-commercial use only.
Please note that GlobalPost.com and Shesdaily.blogspot.com have permission to use blogfromitaly.com content.
The use of this feed on other websites breaches copyright. If this content is not in your news reader, it makes the page you are viewing an infringement of copyright.

 
Saturday, September 18th, 2010 - by - No Comments

A morning of rain after a night of rain.

There is always a rush, when we return to Italy, to get into the spirit immediately. Before even opening our front door we head to a restaurant, any decent one, to take in the Italian spirit of eating as much as to ingest the food. It’s all in the passionate voices, the hand waving, the smell of hot pasta arriving in bowls, the heat the comes in puffs as the pizzaiolo catches the edge of your quattro stagione with his crude peel and gives it a flip to rotate it on the hot stone floor of the wood-fired oven, the waitresses who scurry to fill orders…

Then shopping. A joy, even in the rain. A hundred salami, who can choose just one? Bread, “forno a legno, per favore!“ Cheap wine, then maybe a great one because you can afford it, too. Then those chicken legs that roast so well, the skin rendering its fat and transforming itself into a thin and tasty parchment wrapper, grease free—a trick American soggy, water-chilled chickens cannot learn. But you needn’t buy chicken if your cravings are fowl, there’s dark-flesh piccione, hacked pheasant, quail.

Lunch: Anchovies in green sauce, garlicky salame, torta delle erbe, a special, “Piccante” type of Gorgonzola with an exotic place of origin you’ve never heard of, fragrant bread to stack it upon.

And after lunch? The sun arrives. We are home.

 
Tuesday, September 14th, 2010 - by - No Comments

Our son returned to school after his three month summer break on Monday this week.  He’s now in his second year of elementary school in Italy, and we were happy with the school and his progress.  Year two is not off to a great start thanks to the reforms of Italy’s education minister Mariastella Gelmini.

Off School

Off School

Today, we received an official notification from the Milan state school that owing to the incomplete nomination of teachers, the children will be sent home at 2:30pm, not 4:30pm.  Not sure about next week.  This administrative mess-up comes, coincidentally, at the same time as the so-called Gelmini reforms to Italy’s education system come into effect.  The result of this mess up is major disruption to the lives of many parents, and parent’s problems may affect productivity in Italy too.

Obviously the three month break was not long enough for Gelmini’s minions to sort the placement of teachers out.

We are not happy parents, and we are not alone.

Lots of Discontent Parents in Italy

As I said, we are not alone in our discontentment. And there are other problems, like potentially illegally large post-reform class sizes in some of Italy’s schools.

Over on the website of Italian newspaper La Repubblica, there is a long list of comments from unhappy parents around Italy.  There are even some comments from Italians who are not yet fathers and mothers who are considering sending their future progeny to private schools.  It’s not clear whether this was the intention behind Education Minister Gelmini’s ‘reforms’.

It’s sad really, aside from mass lay-offs of teachers with temporary employment contracts, the reforms did seem to be quite sensible in some respects.  What is a real shame though, is that Gelmini, in her ministerial wisdom, paid no heed to that old adage ‘if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it’ which applied to Italy’s efficient primary education system.

Marks Out of Ten for Gelmini

Marks out of ten to Gelmini for the general intentions behind the education reforms: 7.

Marks out of ten for the implementation of the reforms so far: Zero.

Still, let’s look on the bright side, at least Gelmini has tried to reform Italy’s education system, which was in need of reform, in much the same way as certain school buildings in Italy need shoring up to ensure they don’t collapse on the heads of pupils.  Actually, collapsing schools should not be a problem because if there are not enough teachers there will not be many kids in the schools.  Maybe this was Gelmini’s intention – her reforms are really a cleverly disguised safety measure.

Gelmini’s Lack of Experience?

I suppose the problems should come as no real surprise, seeing as minister Gelmini really had no experience of implementing large scale reforms.  At least she’s young.  She even has a young child, but I’m willing to bet her child will end up in a private school, and not necessarily in Italy.

Hey, ho, it’s on with life in Italy we go.


Copyright © blogfromitaly.com 2005 – 2010
This feed is for personal, non-commercial use only.
Please note that GlobalPost.com and Shesdaily.blogspot.com have permission to use blogfromitaly.com content.
The use of this feed on other websites breaches copyright. If this content is not in your news reader, it makes the page you are viewing an infringement of copyright.