The Ancient Roman GhettoThe Jews in Italy - Before and after the Second World War
The fascist ideology certainly interested, in
addition to a part made up of Christians, also
a part made up of Italian Jews.
In
spite of its intolerance, the fascist government
did not attack the Jews until 1937.
The
first laws against the Jews (racial laws) were
issued in 1938. It was forbidden for the Jews
to study or teach in the higher institutions
of education; mixed marriages were forbidden;
no Jew was accepted in the military career or
in civil service; the Jews could not have Aryan
domestic help; they could not have radios, they
could not go to vacation places….
1938:
expulsion of the Jews who immigrated to Italy
after 1919 (whoever has at least one Jewish
relative is considered a Jew).
1931:
census of the Jews in Italy: 47,500 (in 1939:
35,100).
1938-39:
3,910 conversions to Christianity (101 in '36-'37).
25
July 1943: fall of the fascist regime; Italy
signs the armistice with the Allies.
8
September 1943: the south is in the hands of
the Allies; the center and north are controlled
by the Germans.
16
October 1943: at dawn, raid in the homes of
the Jews in Rome: more than one thousand Jews
are taken.
A
total of 2,091 Jews are sent to concentration
camps; almost all of them die in Auschwitz.
At
the end of the war the Jewish population in
Italy numbered 29,117 persons, as well as 26,300
refugees (in transit on their way to the land
of Israel).
FOSSE ARDEATINE - 24 MARCH 1944 - ROME Inscription on the marble plaque of the Portico d'Ottavia in Rome: "Here on October 16th began the ruthless hunt for the Jews and two thousand ninety one Roman citizens were sent to a cruel death in the Nazi extermination camps, where they were joined by another six thousand Italians, victims of infamous racial hatred. The few who escaped the slaughter, the many who sympathize invoke love and peace from humanity and invoke pardon and hope from God." *
On March 23, 1944, a bomb placed in Via Rasella
killed 32 German soldiers from the army of occupation
and wounded 38.
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