Giuseppe_Alessi_(politician)

Giuseppe Alessi

Giuseppe Alessi

Italian politician (1905–2009)


Giuseppe Alessi (29 October 1905 – 13 July 2009) was an Italian politician.

Quick Facts 1st and 3rd President of Sicily, Preceded by ...

Biography

Alessi was born in San Cataldo, Caltanissetta, Sicily. He was one of the founding members of the Christian Democratic (Democrazia Cristiana) party on the island and became the first elected President of the Regional Government of Sicily. He was a member of the reform wing of the DC. From 1968-72, he was a member of the Italian Chamber of Deputies.

Journalist Alexander Stille interviewed Alessi in the 1990s and asked him about the relations between the Christian Democrats and the Mafia: "It happened this way. Some people in the Christian Democratic Party approached the separatists, whose backbone were these Mafia bosses and invited them to join the national parties ... [T]he Mafiosi were looking for the road to power, to secure the support they needed for their economic affairs. If the mayor was Republican, they became Republican, if he was Socialist, they were Socialist, if he was Christian Democrat they became Christian Democrat." Alessi defended them as a necessary evil of the Cold War period: "The Christian Democrats subordinated their ideals for a supreme interest of national importance: saving the democratic state. The victory of Communism would have meant Italy ended up behind the Iron Curtain."

Political views

Alessi's justification of his party's dealings with the Mafia is based on a romantic view of the Mafia of the 1940s and 1950s: "They weren't criminals, they were local potentates, neighbourhood bosses, proud men of prestige. Their crimes were basically economic - fraud, forgery, illegal appropriation of property - but they disliked real crime."[1]

Death

Alessi died in Palermo, aged 103, on 13 July 2009.

Honour

  •  Italy: Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic (10 may 1974)[2]

References

  1. All The Prime Minister's Men Archived 2008-05-11 at the Wayback Machine, by Alexander Stille, The Independent on Sunday, 24 September 1995.
  2. "Le onorificenze della Repubblica Italiana". www.quirinale.it. Retrieved October 24, 2022.

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