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News in 2006


13th February 2006


Di Canio to meet Nazi death-camp survivors


Paolo Di Canio, a self confessed facist, has been summoned by the mayor of Rome to listen to fellow Italians who survived the Nazi death camps.


The veteran Lazio striker has been requested to attend a meeting next Thursday along with teammates by city mayor, Walter Veltroni.


The move is part of an initiative by the mayor that has already brought AS Roma players and officials face to face with Holocaust survivors in the city hall.


For almost two hours on Thursday, Francesco Totti and the other members of the Serie A side listened in silence as former concentration-camp inmates appealed to them to stop playing as soon as they saw Nazi symbols in the crowd.


Shocked


Mr Veltroni told the Guardian Newspaper that he had been shocked into doing something after learning that a swastika and two similar symbols had been hung from the terraces of Rome's Olympic stadium during Roma's game against Livorno on January 29.


The mayor said he wanted to give players and officials "a chance to learn of the gravity of what happened directly, in the words of those who endured the hell of the Shoah".

Council officials described how Alberto Sed, a 77-year-old survivor of Auschwitz and lifelong Roma supporter, broke down as he read out a letter he had written to the club as a young man.


Mr Sed, who was sent to Auschwitz under the anti-semitic laws passed by Italy's fascist regime, was reported to have turned to the Roma captain and said: "Totti, before they deported me, at the age of 15, I was smarter with the ball than you." Mr Sed was among 17 Holocaust survivors at Thursday's meeting.


Another told footballers that it was irrelevant that only a minority of far-right activists was involved. "There are [only] 50 cretins in the stadium?" Piero Terracina was quoted as asking the players and officials. "Nazism also started with 50 cretins."


The Hungarian writer, Edith Bruck, author of the Holocaust memoir, Who Loves You Like This, described how her life had been saved by the actions of individuals at where she was interned. She was reported to have said that a single footballer who stopped playing could restore dignity to the game.


Extremists


Although Roma has some far-right fans, Lazio, and one of its supporters' groups, the Irriducibili or "Indomitables" who have been accused of racism and fascism the camps.


Last December the Italian football federation fined and suspended Di Canio for making the "Roman salute" in games against Livorno and Juventus.


Mr Veltroni, a leader of the moderate wing of the formerly communist Left Democrats, said he hoped the meetings he was organising would "help restore dignity to Italy's, and Europe's, most popular sport".