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SEXISM

Italian schools to tackle ‘machismo and sexism’ after student’s murder

Italian schools are “to address the issue of sexism, machismo and psychological and physical violence against women,” Education Minister Giuseppe Valditara said on Wednesday, as part of a new push to prevent femicide.

Italian schools to tackle ‘machismo and sexism’ after student's murder
A mural shows figures with the names of women who have been killed by men in Italy to mark the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on November 25th. (Photo by FILIPPO MONTEFORTE / AFP)

“A big mobilisation is underway, for the first time in Italy,” Valditara said as he presented the plan to the Senate.

“School is to deal with the cultural phenomenon, that prevailing male chauvinism, that manifests itself in so many situations in daily life, at school, at work, in the street.”

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni had earlier this week announced new measures were on the way to tackle Italy’s problem with violence against women after the murder of 22-year-old student Giulia Cecchettin shocked the country and dominated headlines.

Cecchettin’s ex-boyfriend, suspected of killing her and dumping her body near a lake in northern Italy, is to be extradited from Germany where he was arrested on Saturday after fleeing Italy in his car.

“Every single woman killed because she is ‘guilty’ of being free is an aberration that cannot be tolerated and that pushes me to continue on the path taken to stop this barbarism,” said Meloni, who is Italy’s first woman prime minister but does not describe herself as a feminist.

Cecchettin’s murder was the latest in a string of high-profile cases of femicide in Italy.

READ ALSO: Almost half of Italian women report suffering sexual harassment

There have been 102 homicides with female victims in Italy so far this year, 82 of whom were killed by family members or current or former partners, according to interior ministry data.

This compares with 51 killed by their partner or ex partner in the same period of 2022, and around 70 in both 2021 and 2020.

A demonstrator holds a collage of pictures of victims of femicide reading “Not one more” during a rally condemning violence against women in downtown Rome. (Photo by FILIPPO MONTEFORTE / AFP)

Italy’s anti-violence and stalking hotline 1522 said calls had more than doubled in the last two days following reports of Cecchettin’s murder, with many calls from teenagers as well as parents concerned about their daughters’ safety.

Womens’ rights campaigners say attitudes must change in Italy, where cases of violent crimes committed against women by their partners or ex-partners are often portrayed in the media as tragic stories of love gone sour, with the killers described as “jealous”.

READ ALSO: 11 statistics that show the state of gender equality in Italy

The education project, which will initially be open to schools on a voluntary basis, will incorporate civic education from elementary to high school, including a discussion group project targeting high school students, Valditara said.

Teachers are also being asked to “introduce the culture of respect” in all school activities, he added.

The project “took its cue from events last summer, in Palermo and Caivano, from a strong desire to say ‘enough is enough’ to the residual macho culture that continues to pollute the country,” said Valditara, referring to two incidents of gang rape in southern Italy allegedly perpetrated by minors.

“It is unacceptable that women should suffer harassment, violence, up to the tragic events of these last few days,” he said.

“Students will be made aware of the criminal consequences that their behavior can have; too often there is a total lack of knowledge of the penal code,” the minister said.

The Senate on Wednesday also unanimously approved a bill drafted by Family and Equal Opportunities and Family Minister Eugenia Roccella which she said would strengthen restraining orders and introduce heightened surveillance on men found guilty of gender-based violence.

The measures aim to allow authorities to “act promptly and effectively” to “interrupt the cycle of violence,” Roccella said.

“Patriarchy certainly exists, but the protagonists of change must be men, while we must give women the tools to recognize violence and defend themselves,” Roccella said at a press conference in the Senate

“Violence is a symptom of the inability to accept women’s freedom,” she added.

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OPINION AND ANALYSIS

OPINION: Why ending violence against women will be a tough task in Italy

Italy’s government has announced measures to tackle a culture of ‘machismo and sexism’ following yet another femicide, but recent history shows why it will be hard to change attitudes, writes Silvia Marchetti.

OPINION: Why ending violence against women will be a tough task in Italy

Every night lately the evening news is once again flooded with reports on the most recent atrocious crime against a woman, dubbed in Italian ‘femminicidio’.

It’s a bit frustrating to see how the media treat these murders as if they were something always ‘new’ when they are actually really, really old. It’s like playing a broken record: each year so many women die in this way. 

It’s as if all of a sudden people wake up and realise that there is too much violence against women, and policy-makers understand last-minute that they have to do something about it.

READ ALSO: Giulia Cecchettin: How Italy is facing up to gender violence after student’s murder

I remember when several years ago there was a big fuss over a new law against stalking, which apparently has led nowhere given the fact that violent crimes against women keep rising, with 105 killed so far this year according to the latest official data. 

It is going to be really hard to overcome this problem, no matter how many laws or how many police procedures are put in place to prevent femminicidi

The real issue is that such violence is still deeply ingrained in Italian society, particularly in the mentality of Italian men who have been accustomed for millennia to viewing women as inferior beings – be it their girlfriend, wife, mother or sister. 

I was shocked a couple of days ago when, following the recent murder of yet another woman, I heard on the news that one young boy threatened to inflict upon his girlfriend the same ‘punishment’ if she did not shut up and behave according to his wishes. He told her “you will end up like she has, dead”. And this boy was just a teenager. 

Few people know that up until as recently as 1981 Italian law envisaged the so-called delitto d’onore which allowed men to actually kill the woman or wife who had betrayed them with another man, or who had simply ‘attacked’ their reputation or ‘honour’, and receive a heavily reduced sentence.

In many areas in Italy, for example the deep south, it is no secret that fathers tend to be still very possessive of their daughters and of their wives. 

Protesters in Milan hold a banner reading 'If tomorrow it's me, if tomorrow I don't come back, sisters, destroy everything!' on November 22nd.

Protesters in Milan hold a banner reading ‘If tomorrow it’s me, if tomorrow I don’t come back, sisters, destroy everything!’ on November 22nd. Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP.

I remember when my grandparents told me about this delitto when I was a little girl, it sounded like it was part of some kind of cruel mafia story. I thought it was just a crazy ritual that still survived in remote areas of Sicily or Sardinia. 

But actually it was nationwide, and even though Italy had already approved the law in favour of divorce, the delitto d’onore was something still very much alive, and legal, until I was born. 

So this makes me wonder how we can expect Italy’s new generations to think ‘violence free’, without stereotypes of gender against women.

Even though today’s youth was born after the abolishment of the Italian honor crime, it takes a long time for society to fully absorb such change and mould it into a new mindset.

READ ALSO: Italian schools to tackle ‘machismo and sexism’ after student’s murder

I still believe the key to changing the general mentality is by working on the young generations at an early stage, but even then, what kind of social ’rehab’ could be introduced remains a conundrum. 

The recent announcements by the government about education programs in schools left me quite baffled. Do we need to see a woman die every day for the government to rethink key policies? 

Unfortunately I believe this initiative is going to make little difference, at least in the short term. It sounds to me like too little, too late. 

It really all comes down to the family, which is the nucleus of society, especially in Italy. If there is no social education within the home, then how can we expect teachers to deliver such education at school, where kids only spend a few hours per day?

If parents, and fathers and older brothers in particular, continue making ‘funny’ jokes about women or displaying biased gender views, I’m afraid things will never change.

Perhaps the only way is to empower women with more knowledge on how to pre-emptively recognise violent men and take action against them. It would also be extremely helpful to educate police authorities on how to speedily intervene at the appropriate moment without wasting precious days once a woman has made a stalking complaint. 

The trouble is, as we so often see in news reports, and as I know from personal experience, too many cops are biased men with their own questionable attitudes towards women.

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