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Over
the
past few weeks
(as of May 2007), a number of items have caught my interest. Among them:
—The
UNESCO World Heritage List (which so far includes 830 natural and
cultural properties
in the world having “outstanding universal value”) is
considering adding the Campi Flegrei
and adjacent area of the Bay
of Pozzuoli to the list. The area is significant
geologically because of
ongoing
bradiseismic phenomena and archaeologically because of the presence of
large-scale Roman ruins (submerged and on the surface), including those
of the
ancient Portus Julius, the homeport of
the Western Imperial Fleet. Other areas
in the Campania region of Italy
already on the list are the 18th-century
Royal Palace at Caserta with the park,
Carolino
aqueduct (built by Vanvitelli), and San
Leucio Complex; the Herculaneum
and Pompeii archaeological sites; the Amalfi
coast; and the Cilento national park
(including Paestum and the Padula
monastery);
—The Union of Islamic
Communities and Organizations in Italy has purchased the
large and
abandoned building on via Arenaccia that used to house SIP (the old
phone
company and one of those that merged to form Telecom Italia in the
1990s). The
building is to become a mosque. There are two schools of thought: (1)
We don’t
want more “creeping Islam” in Italy;
(2) The new structure will help rejuvenate one of the most decrepit
areas in
the city. It would; I am betting on number two. Economics trumps
ideology every
time (See also "Islam in
Naples" and "Early Islam in Italy");
—What is now called
“Chinatown” has mushroomed up behind the main train station and runs
along the
industrial port
of Naples into
the
adjacent communities of San Giuseppe Vesuviano, Terzigno, Ottaviano,
San
Gennaro, Poggiomarino and Boscoreale. There are now about 800 small
enterprises: wholesale stores, restaurants, grocers, small warehouses,
and manufacturers
of textiles, shoes, and general leather goods, etc. The Chinese
community
numbers about 6,000 and is represented by Si.Ci.Na (Sindacato Cinese
Nazionale—Chinese National Labor Union). To some extent, the
Chinese-run enterprises
in Naples
employ
local Neapolitan labor—a big plus in a city with rampant unemployment.
The bad
news is that they have to pay off “the mob” to stay open
(See also "Immigration" items in the index);
—In Naples,
there
are more than 3000 school
children whose native language is either Arabic or Chinese. In Caserta,
there are 2000 and in Salerno
1500. The Campania
region has commissioned the printing of textbooks on Italian geography
and
history in those two languages in order to accommodate members of these
linguistic minorities who might require them. Parents of children
requiring the
texts may request them by email;
—The Great Naples
Copper Caper. I had
never heard copper referred to as “red gold” until a number of items
started
appearing in the papers about copper theft at industrial sites. In Naples, there
now appears
to be a small band of grave robbers dedicated to stealing copper from
local
cemeteries. So far, about 40 copper funerary vases have disappeared.
They are
generally mounted on wall crypts and used to hold flowers;
—The Neapolitan comic, Antonio
De
Curtis (in art known as “Totò”), was the most popular
Italian film comic of
the 20th century. (“No one is in second place,” as they
say.) A
number of complaints in the paper have noted that the city can’t seem
to get its
own unfunny act together enough to buy the comic’s
home
on Via Santa
Maria
Antesaecula, a site where they could open a decent museum dedicated
to Naples’
“favorite
son.” The house has been up for sale a
number of times and the city has done nothing (but see this update);
—The number of “child
brides” (by definition, below the age of 18) continues to fall in Italy
(from 1,562
in 1993 to 456 in 2002). Of that number, however, half (233) were in
the Campania region, of which Naples is the
capital.
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