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ITALIAN OF THE WEEK

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The island carpenter with the Pope’s blessing

When carpenter Franco Tuccio saw boat migrants arriving at his home on the island of Lampedusa, he decided to use his craft to draw attention to their suffering. He speaks to The Local about his work being blessed by the Pope and the impact it is having across Italy.

The island carpenter with the Pope's blessing
One of Franco Tuccio's crosses was blessed by Pope Francis this week. Screenshot: AgenziaTMNews/YouTube

Who is Franco Tuccio?

Franco Tuccio is a carpenter from the island of Lampedusa, Italy's southernmost point.

Why is he in the news?

This week Pope Francis blessed a cross carved by Tuccio, made from the remnants of migrant boats washed up on the shores of Lampedusa.

Nestled between Tunisia and Italy, the island is the arrival point of thousands of people trafficked from North Africa on rickety boats. Lampedusa has seen an uptick in arrivals in recent weeks, many fleeing from fragile or war-torn states such as Syria.

READ MORE: Italy rescues 4,000 boat migrants in 48 hours

Pope Francis Lampedusa cross by Osservatore Romano AFP

Pope Francis blessed the cross made by Franco Tuccio this week. Photo: Osservatore Romano/AFP

Why did Tuccio decide to make the cross?

The cross that arrived at the Vatican is the latest in a series which Tuccio started in 2009, he told The Local.

“The cross was born as a symbolic protest in support of the migrants,” he said. “I wanted everyone to know about the problems and the suffering of these people, to bring the message to the outside world.”

Tuccio saw the cross as a “rebirth” for the migrants who have lost their lives trying to reach Italy, and a way of giving them dignity.

More than 400 people died in two shipwrecks close to Lampedusa in October, while an estimated 20,000 people have lost their lives crossing the Mediterranean in the past two decades.

What impact have the crosses had?

Pope Francis clasped one in his hands during his visit to Lampedusa in July, his first trip outside the Italian capital after being made pontiff, when he celebrated mass and cast a wreath out to sea.

READ MORE: Pope holds mass for perished migrants

The cross blessed by the Pope this week has embarked on a nationwide tour, before ending at a church in Milan frequented by migrants.

“There have been so many requests from associations that the cross’ journey might not finish!” said Tuccio.

The carpenter described the tour as “a beautiful idea” and said that while his creation is a Christian cross, people from all religions are invited to pray in front of it.

“Religions are different, but in the end the suffering affects us all,” he said.

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IMMIGRATION

Italian coastguard comes to aid of Banksy-funded rescue boat

An Italian coastguard vessel came to the rescue on Saturday of a rescue vessel funded by British street artist Banksy, which sent out a distress signal on Saturday with more than 200 migrants onboard.

Italian coastguard comes to aid of Banksy-funded rescue boat
Rescued migrants on board the Banksy-funded rescue ship Louise Michel. Photo: Thomas Lohnes/AFP
The German-flagged MV Louise Michel said it was stranded and needed urgent help after lending assistance to a boat that was carrying at least one dead migrant.
   
The 31-metre (101-foot) vessel's crew said it was overcrowded and unable to move after encountering another boat attempting to cross the expanse of sea dividing Europe and Africa with 130 people on board.
   
“There is already one dead person on the boat. We need immediate assistance,” the Louise Michel crew wrote on Twitter, saying other migrants had fuel burns and had been at sea for days.
   
An Italian coastguard patrol boat was launched from Lampedusa island and took on board the migrants most in need of aid, many of them women and children.
   
“In view of the danger the situation posed, the coastguards sent a patrol boat from Lampedusa… which took on board the 49 people in the most fragile condition — 32 women, 13 children and four men,” the coastguard said in a statement.
 
 
Banksy artwork
 
The vessel's crew of 10 had earlier rescued another 89 people from a rubber boat in distress on Thursday.
   
They said on Twitter that there were a total 219 people on board and that they had requested assistance from the Italian and Maltese authorities.   
 
The boat — named after 19th-century French anarchist Louise Michel — was around 90 kilometres (55 miles) southeast of Lampedusa on Saturday, according to the global ship tracking website Marine Traffic.
   
Thousands of people are thought to have died making the dangerous trip across the Mediterranean to flee conflict, repression and poverty in Africa and the Middle East.
   
Sea-Watch 4, which has rescued 201 migrants and is itself in search of a host port, also decided to help the Louise Michel “in the face of the lack of reaction” from the authorities, a spokesman for the German NGO Sea-Watch, which charters the boat with Doctors Without Borders (MSF), told AFP.
   
The Italian left-wing collective Mediterranea, meanwhile, announced it would send the ship Mare Ionio from the port of Augusta in Sicily to assist.
   
Banksy's decision to fund the high-speed boat follows a body of work by the artist that has levelled scathing judgements on Europe's halting response to the migrant crisis.
   
Painted in hot pink and white, the Louise Michel features a Banksy artwork depicting a girl in a life vest holding a heart-shaped safety buoy.
 
 
 'An anti-fascist fight'
 
The motor yacht, formerly owned by French customs, is smaller but considerably faster than other charity rescue vessels — enabling it to outrun Libyan coastguard boats, according to The Guardian.
   
Its crew is “made up of European activists with long experience in search and rescue operations” and is captained by German human rights activist Pia Klemp, who has also captained other such rescue vessels, the paper reported.
   
Banksy's involvement in the rescue mission goes back to September 2019 when he sent Klemp an email asking how he could contribute. Klemp, who initially thought it was a joke, told the paper she believed she was chosen because of her political stance, The Guardian said.
   
“I don't see sea rescue as a humanitarian action, but as part of an anti-fascist fight,” she told the paper.
   
Early this month, humanitarian organisations said they would resume migrant rescues in the Mediterranean Sea, where none have operated since the Ocean Viking docked in Italy in early July.
   
Before the Ocean Viking's last mission, rescue operations in the Mediterranean had been suspended for months due to the global coronavirus pandemic.
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