Filed Under Poster

7 gennaio

(January 7)

On January 7, 1978, five members of the Movimento Sociale Italiano's (Italian Social Movement, MSI) youth group, the Fronte della Gioventù (Youth Front, FdG), were ambushed by five Lotta Continua (Ongoing Struggle) militants in front of one of the MSI's social centers in Rome's Tuscolano neighborhood (Fig. 1). Franco Bigonzetti was shot dead at the scene, and Francesco Ciavatta died in an ambulance shortly afterwards. Later on that day, a large demonstration in the courtyard outside of the neighborhood headquarters on Via Acca Larenzia quickly turned violent. Following a confrontation between Roman police officers and a number of far-right demonstrators, shots were fired into the crowd. A third young man, Stefano Recchioni, was struck by a police bullet. He died two days later.

This poster was produced to publicize the 2019 commemoration ceremony of the Acca Larenzia "martyrs." A large flame dominates the poster, evoking the logos of both the MSI and the FdG. It is also the central symbolic component of Fratelli d'Italia's (Brothers of Italy, FdI) logo (Fig. 2). Indeed, the flame is an enduring symbol of interwar Fascism, and draws "a tacit connection with the fascist regime while referring to the 'cult of the dead' and the funerary imagery," providing "a potential space both for memory investments and emotional projections" (Aït-Aoudia et al. 2011: 12).

Every year on January 7, Rome's neo-fascists commemorate the deaths of Bigonzetti, Ciavatta, and Recchioni. Informally organized by CasaPound Italia (House of [Ezra] Pound Italy, CPI), this annual ceremony involves a procession through the surrounding neighborhood's streets and culminates in the gathering of participants in front of the former MSI social center on Via Acca Larenzia (Figs. 3 and 4). Typically, the leader of the ceremony stands in front of participants, who are organized in tight military-style rows, and shouts out the names of Bigonzetti, Ciavatta, and Recchioni (Fig. 5). Participants respond with the cry "Presente!" (Present!) – a common mnemonic device deployed during Benito Mussolini's twenty years in power which signified the imagined eternality of the Blackshirt militiamen who were killed in clashes with left-wingers in Italy during the Red Biennium uprisings (1919-20) or during the regime's various military conquests during the 1930s (Fig. 6).

In addition to the CPI-led ceremony, members of Forza Nuova (New Force, FN) and Comunità Politica di Avanguardia (Vanguard Political Community) gather annually in Rome's Verano Cemetery to honor Italy's various far-right "martyrs." Similar to the Via Acca Larenzia commemoration, this ceremony involves a procession through the cemetery, stopping to honor those deemed as part of Italy's right-wing heritage, including the Risorgimento-era patriot, poet, and writer of Italy's national anthem, Gofredo Mameli (2024), neo-fascist victims of the Years of Lead (1968-82), and the 1933 Chapel of Fascist Martyrs, where the commemorative procession ends. "For years now, we have chosen the Verano chapel as a symbol of all comrades who died on the path of honor," remarked Vincenzo Nardulli, a leading figure in Rome's neo-fascist community, explaining his group's decision not to hold their January 7 ceremony at the site of the Acca Larenzia killings. Nardulli and Giuliano Castellino, both FN operatives, were sentenced to five years and six months' imprisonment in 2020 after attacking two Express journalists who were documenting the January 7, 2019 Acca Larenzia commemoration (2019a; 2019b; Federici 2020).

Beyond Italy's openly neo-fascist community, a number of the country's prominent politicians regularly commemorate the Acca Larenzia massacre. Indeed, every year Giorgia Meloni (Meloni 2021), along with her party, circulate Internet graphics and physical posters in Italy honoring the "fallen" at Via Acca Larenzia, placing Meloni and her party firmly within the commemorative practices of Italy's neo-fascist community (Figs. 7, 8, and 9).

Video

Fig. 5 A group of neo-fascists perform the Roman salute while chanting "Present!" in the piazza in front of the Italian Social Movement's former social center on Via Acca Larenzia in Rome where Franco Bigonzetti, Francesco Ciavatta, and Stefano Recchioni were killed in January 1978. Source: Video by La Repubblica, "Roma, i saluti fascisti alla commemorazione di Acca Larentia," YouTube (January 8, 2019).

Images

7 gennaio
7 gennaio This poster was produced to commemorate the forty-first anniversary of the Acca Larenzia killings in Rome. It features a flame illustration reminiscent of the Italian Social Movement and Youth Front logos, evoking "a tacit connection" with both Cold War-era and interwar fascisms "while referring to the 'cult of the dead' and the funerary imagery" (see also Fig. 2). Source: Photograph by Brian J Griffith (December 28, 2020).
Fig. 1
Fig. 1 Description: A photograph of the façade of the Italian Social Movement's former social center on Via Acca Larenzia in Rome where Franco Bigonzetti, Francesco Ciavatta, and Stefano Recchioni were killed in January 1978. Source: Unknown source. 1978.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2 An illustration highlighting the evolution of Italian neo-fascism in three political party logos from 1946 to 2012. Logo 1: The Italian Social Movement's (1946-95) "tricolor flame" logo. Logo 2: The National Alliance's (1995-2009) logo, which featured the Italian Social Movement's tricolor flame. Logo 3: The Brother of Italy's (2012-) logo, which, like the National Alliance's logo, features the Italian Social Movement's tricolor flame, emphasizing a line of ideological continuity between the founding of the openly neo-fascist Italian Social Movement and today's far-right community in Italy, informally led by the former Italian Social Movement member and National Alliance youth division leader Giorgia Meloni. Source: Illustration by Brian J Griffith (July 12, 2024).
Fig. 3
Fig. 3 The façade of the Italian Social Movement's former social center on Via Acca Larenzia in Rome, featuring a mural with a Celtic Cross and a Roman centurion. Source: Fabrizio Federici, "Acca Larentia, protesta FNSI per l'aggressione di due giornaliste nell'anniversario della strage," L'Opinione della Libertà (January 9, 2020).
Fig. 4
Fig. 4 A large Celtic Cross in the piazza in front of the Italian Social Movement's former social center on Via Acca Larenzia in Rome. Every January 7, Italian neo-fascists stand in military-style formation on the Celtic Cross while delivering a Roman salute to commemorate the deaths of Franco Bigonzetti, Francesco Ciavatta, and Stefano Recchioni. Source: Photograph by Brian J Griffith (January 11, 2019).
Fig. 6
Fig. 6 An illustration in the interwar periodical, Our People, depicting the fascist dictatorship's "cult of martyrs." The illustration features the names and photographs of several Italian officers and soldiers who perished during their years of service in the Italian military. Below the martyrs' names is an oversized "Present!," alluding to their imagined eternal presence. Source: "Presente!," Gente Nostra: Illustrazione Fascista (August 18, 1935), p. 5.
Fig. 7
Fig. 7 The Brothers of Italy commemorate the forty-first anniversary of the deaths of Franco Bigonzetti, Francesco Ciavatta, and Stefano Recchioni on Via Acca Larenzia in Rome via their Instagram account. Source: Fratelli d'Italia, "La nostra #terra ha conosciuto l'odio e il furore ideologico," Instagram (January 7, 2019).
Fig. 8
Fig. 8 Student Action – one of the Brothers of Italy's two far-right youth groups – commemorates the forty-second anniversary of the deaths of Franco Bigonzetti, Francesco Ciavatta, and Stefano Recchioni on Via Acca Larenzia in Rome via their Instagram account. Source: Azione Studentesca, "7 gennaio 1978," Instagram (January 6, 2020).
Fig. 9
Fig. 9 National Youth – one of the Brothers of Italy's two far-right youth groups – commemorates the forty-third anniversary of the deaths of Franco Bigonzetti, Francesco Ciavatta, and Stefano Recchioni on Via Acca Larenzia in Rome via their Instagram account. Source: Gioventù Nazionale, "7 GENNAIO 1978 // 7 GENNAIO 2021," Instagram (January 6, 2021).

Location

Related Resources

Acca Larenzia, “7 gennaio,” Where Monsters Are Born: Documenting a Fascist Revival in the Streets of Rome, 2018-2019, accessed October 22, 2024, https://wheremonstersareborn.com/items/show/9.