Observing Memories Issue 3 | Page 43

the privileged point of contact; each side sought recognition of its legitimacy from the other in order to cement the new bipolar political structure born in the 1990s in which these two parties took centre stage after being excluding from government under the First Republic. One of the leading promoters of the move to reconcile the “opposing memories” was the ex- magistrate and member of parliament for the PDS, Luciano Violante, who, as President of the Chamber of Deputies, engaged in a close dialogue with Fini on the subjects of the foibe and the “boys of Salò”. The compromise between the two political leaders was cemented on the controversial memory of the foibe, as evidenced by the DS’s support for the establishment of the Day of Remembrance in 2004 and the decision of many left-wing local councils to name streets and squares after the martyrs. Rather than proposing its “critical” version of this memory, the left has accepted the strong nationalist version favoured by the right wing describing the Italians of the foibe as the “innocent victims” of a frantic “ethnic cleansing” and thus absolving the Fascist regime of its guilt. The search for a political compromise also underpinned the legislation of July 2000, which introduced the Day of Remembrance in memory of the Holocaust on 27 January. This is the most important of the commemorations recently established in the country. Promoted by the left to remember “the Italian persecution of Jewish citizens” and other victims of deportation, the law never uses the word “Fascism”. Among its purposes it includes the recognition of the aid given to the Jews by the Italians of all political persuasions. The commemoration of those who helped the victims of persecution was also one of the aims of the declaration of the 2000 Stockholm International Forum on the Holocaust. In Italy, however, the commemoration has had significant consequences. Among the many tributes held since January 2001 dedicated to the memory of the Jews persecuted by the Nazis and the Fascists and of the deportation of Italian military and politicians to German Giorgio Perlasca bust in Budapest | Hollósy József via Hungar- ian Wikipedia concentration camps, there is a clear tendency EUROPE INSIGHT 41