Observing Memories Issue 3 | Page 38

major Western European neo-Fascist party, now rebranded as Alleanza Nazionale (AN). The MSI-AN was especially a party with historical and cultural roots diametrically opposed to the heritage of anti-Fascism and the Resistance. Following a new electoral law in August 1993, the change from the proportional system centred on the constitutionalist parties to a majority system that favoured a bipolar arrangement, with one pole dominated by forces alien or even opposed to anti-Fascism, triggered a fierce confrontation that was based on an unprecedented use of history for political purposes. One of the main factors behind the struggle for memory in the country was the need of the centre- right to legitimize Gianfranco Fini’s MSI-AN as a force fit to sit in government, after its electoral victory under Berlusconi in April 1994. With varying degrees of conviction, all the parties in the governing coalition converged on a course of action aimed at neutralizing anti-Fascism as a factor of political legitimization and replacing 1 it with anti-totalitarianism as the new point of reference. Anti-Fascism and the memory of the Resistance were depicted as politically obsolete and even dangerous ideals for Italy’s “new Republic”, a country in need of a somewhat “patriotic” renewal. From this point of view, the Italian case bears similarities to the processes in Central and Eastern Europe which, at roughly the same time, erased the previous memorial structure based on the cult of the Resistance and on the role played by the Communists and built new memories that cultivated the traditions and values of the homeland. The traditional criticism of the Resistance, described as being a “fratricidal civil war” sought by the Communists, quickly led to the demand for an alternative public and institutional memory. For this purpose, the right wing called for “pacification” between Fascists and anti-Fascists with the aim of creating a new “shared memory”. A traditional demand of the far-right MSI, notably the idea of national “pacification” was invoked with a rhetorical emphasis on the recognition of the “good faith” and “ethical patriotism” of the young Italians (benevolently called “the boys of Salò”) who, after 8 36 Observing Memories ISSUE 3 2 1. Silvio Berlusconi during a meeting in March 6, 2008 | Lorenza e Vincenzo Iaconianni via Wikimedia Commons 2. Gianfranco Fini during the closing of the Fiuggi Congress in January, 1995 | Wikimedia Commons