Observing Memories Issue 3 | Page 24

DEEP VIEW Predappio and the memory of the dictatorship Marcello Flores Historian, professor at the Università degli Studi di Siena Carlo Giunchi cultural manager I t was recently announced that the mayor of the town of Predappio had decided to use a large disused building, the former Casa del Fascio e dell’Ospitalitá, as a site for the study, dissemination and narration of Italian history under Fascism. The news sparked a debate and a controversy that is still alive and bears witness to the difficulty that surrounds any public discussion of Fascism. Instead of exploring how a museum on Fascism in Italy might have to be designed, the debate focused –exclusively– on the problem of the political and moral expediency of this choice. The main problem, in fact, seemed to be in the site selected for the museum, the town of Predappio. The events that helped to build the myth of Mussolini during the twenty years of Fascism in Italy (and in the post-war years as well, up until the most recent times) are closely linked to this small town. It is not simply the town near where, in a small village called Dovìa, Benito Mussolini was born on 29 July, 1883; nor is it just a town of houses leaning against a medieval fortress, similar to many others scattered in the hills of Romagna, a bustling region in the heart of Italy. Today Predappio’s fame has spread beyond the country’s borders. It is a new town that was built in twenty years, completely obliterating the preexisting one. So, if it was the old Predappio that gave birth to Mussolini, it was Mussolini himself that gave birth to the new Predappio. The first stone of the new town was laid on 15 April, 1925, in the presence of the main authorities of the regime. From the beginning it was clear that the function of Predappio was to celebrate the myth of the origins of the founder of Fascism. These origins had to be rooted in the people, and so the need for sobriety was repeatedly stressed; indeed, Mussolini himself intervened on several occasions to tone down some aspects he considered excessively luxurious, even removing tombstones that were too ornate or demolishing the sumptuous staircase that had been built to approach his place of birth. Predappio Nuova can therefore be considered as the first of those one hundred or so cities and large districts 22 Observing Memories ISSUE 3