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BREXIT

From ‘grieving’ to ‘ecstatic’: British readers in Italy tell us how they’re feeling on Brexit day

On the last day of Britain's membership of the European Union, The Local spoke to British readers in Italy to find out how they're feeling about the event, and the future.

From 'grieving' to 'ecstatic': British readers in Italy tell us how they're feeling on Brexit day
Photo: AFP

When we asked how British people with close ties to Italy were feeling ahead of Brexit Day we got a flood of responses, but one word that came up repeatedly was “devastated.”

'Depressed', 'dismayed', and 'angry' were also used repeatedly by many readers summing up their feelings today.

At the other end of the scale, a minority of readers say they feel “delighted” about the UK's exit from the EU. For everyone, emotions were running high.

READ ALSO: How the rules for Italian citizenship change for Brits from today

“I feel devastated. Assaulted. A vital part of my identity has been forcibly removed. I also feel very concerned about the future,” says Alexandra Josephy, who has owned a home in Italy for 12 years and currently splits her time between the UK and Italy.

Jane Parkinson, who has lived in Lucca, Italy, for 11 years, says she feels “despairing, dismayed, betrayed and angry.”

“I've felt ashamed to be British at times in the last four years,” she says..

Pro-EU protestors in London. Photo: AFP

For many, the ongoing uncertainty and confusion around arrangements being made by the UK government have only added to the distress.

“None of the arrangements being made for the post-Brexit world, such as they are, take into account people who live in two countries,” Alexandra says. “I think in the future I may well not be able to continue to live as I do. But I realise that I am a fortunate person, and I'll find a way forward.”

Many others already living in Italy says it had pushed them to apply for citizenship and has strengthened their ties with their new home country.

But for 28-year-old Alex, an English language teacher living and working in Bari, there was “nothing positive about it” and Brexit is “not just embarassing for us as a country but we've thrown away our advantages.”

“I feel like I'm grieving in a way,” he says. “But the worst thing is the impact on jobs and opportunities,” he says.

“For example, us Brits had a much easier time than Australians and Americans when applying for teaching jobs in Europe. Not any more.”

“Now my Aussie colleagues are saying it's levelled the playing field, which I get,” he says, “But it is just stupid, honestly, that the UK would deprive its own citizens of that kind of advantage:”

One of the biggest worries among the readers we spoke to was future access to healthcare, and many say they feel particularly sad about losing their EU right to freedom of movement after the transition period.

“My biggest concern is the loss of freedom of movement, particularly for the young,” says Jane.

“I would like to feel still I could live anywhere in Europe: tragically this will not be possible after Brexit.”

READ ALSO: The Local's view – Most Brits in Europe didn't ask for Brexit, but now we have to make it work

As well as the immediate consequences for them personally, many readers were saddened by the bigger picture and concerned that Brexit would have a negative impact on the UK.

“I am concerned about the spread of xenophobic attitudes and the likely effects on people from other EU countries living in and enriching the UK,” says Alexandra, “I feel sad when I think of the narrow and impoverished culture in which my English grandchildren will grow up.”

Jane agrees that the UK is “a meaner, more racist and less tolerant society than before” because of Brexit.

But not everyone was downcast, with a couple of respondents saying that, despite their love for Italy, they were pleased that the UK was leaving the EU.

“I'm ecstatic and delighted that I am still alive to see the day,” says Hugh Eveleigh, who previously lived in Italy for ten years and is now in the UK debating a move back during his retirement.

“My delight in leaving the EU is based solely on having our own sovereignty and a fundamental desire to be governed democratically. All else is secondary,” he explained.

“As to free movement, when I first arrived in Italy such things did not exist but we all managed,” he says, “In the UK, we have always had a fascination for and love of la vita Italiana. This will not change.”

The future for the UK after Brexit, he hopes, “shall be positive and world-embracing.”

“It will be exciting,” he says, adding that he'll be marking the occasion at midnight “with a half bottle of champagne.

Photo: AFP

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ITALIAN CITIZENSHIP

Italy grants citizenship to more people than any other EU country, study finds

Nearly 214,000 people became Italian citizens in 2022, making Italy the EU country with the single highest number of granted citizenship requests, a new study from research body ISMU found.

Italy grants citizenship to more people than any other EU country, study finds

Italy granted citizenship to some 213,716 people in 2022, according to a new study from Italian migration research body ISMU based on data from European statistics bureau Eurostat.

This made Italy the EU country with the highest number of granted citizenship requests, followed by Spain (with 181,581 new citizens), Germany (166,640) and France (114,483).

The number of Italian citizenship claims approved in 2022 was up by around 76 percent compared to 2021 (121,457).

Italy accounted for nearly a quarter (22 percent) of the total number of citizenship requests granted across the bloc: 989,940. 

Of those who acquired Italian citizenship in 2022, around 40 percent came from one of the following three countries: Albania (38,129 successful applications), Morocco (30,953) and Romania (16,302).

The top five was completed by Brazil (11,239) and India (8,509), with no English-speaking nation appearing in the top 20.

READ ALSO: Five surprising Italian citizenship rules you should know about

As for the age of those who gained Italian citizenship in 2022, 37 percent of new citizens were under the age of 20.

According to the study, Italy granted citizenship to a total of nearly 1.5 million people between 2013 and 2022, with 2022 being the year with the highest number of successful applications, followed by 2016 (201,591) and 2015 (178,035).

ISMU’s study provided no details as to which paths to acquire citizenship were the most popular ones in 2022. 

According to the latest data from Italian statistics office Istat, the most common ways to claim Italian citizenship are: ius sanguinis, which allows those who can prove descent from at least one Italian ancestor to claim Italian citizenship; birthplace (or ius soli), which entitles people born and raised in Italy by non-Italian parents to claim Italian citizenship at age 18; and parental transmission, which transfers citizenship to the children of adults who acquire citizenship provided they’re under 18 and living with them at the time.

READ ALSO: The three ways to apply for Italian citizenship

The birthplace or ius soli path has recently been at the centre of nationwide debate after Italian rapper Ghali shone light on the issues faced by second-generation immigrants at the Sanremo music festival.

Italy currently has one of the toughest citizenship regimes in Europe when it comes to children born in the country to foreign parents as they are unable to apply for an Italian passport until they are 18.

READ ALSO: Will my children get an Italian passport if born in Italy?

After turning 18, they have one year to submit their application for citizenship. If the window is missed, claiming citizenship becomes a complex bureaucratic process, which can take at least three years.

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