We the Italians December 28, 2014 - 50 | Page 8

TH TH # 50 • DECEMBER 28 , 2014 # 50 • DECEMBER 28 , 2014 on May 16, 2015. The festa will begin with a procession of the blessed Mother carried through the street of our city and brought to the park for the crowning of the blessed Mother. This will be the first year to organize and hold an event of this caliber and we will be keeping this for now to a one-day event. I walked into the exhibit on the opening night I truly felt the presence of my bisnonna, nonno, nonna, uncles and of course my father standing beside me with tears streaming down their faces. For me, it was a heart-warming experience, a moment of triumph not just for me but for each Italian immig rant who made their home in Alabama. I felt honored to have been appointed a Chair of this exhibition La Storia. The exhibition opened on September 19, 2014, and is having a big success. Are you and the Italian American Heritage Society of Birmingham planning to go on with other initiatives about this topic? Yes, the exhibit is opened at Vulcan Park and Museum until Sept 18, 2015. During this time, the IAHS has hosted and will be hosting monthly educational events at VPM and other venues location in Birmingham. To name a few: a seminar on obtaining dual citizenship; a book talk with one of our members who has published several books, one being an award winning bio of his father in World War II; a cooking demonstration, a charity bike ride ending in front of our Cathedral for the blessing of the bikes. 8 | WE THE ITALIANS www.wetheitalians.com A particular mention, among these activities, is deserved by a bus tour of the original mining towns where our immigrants worked and some perished in the mines; of the early Italian cemeteries, where one can view crude grave markers of unknown Italian immigrants; and of the first Catholic Churches for the Italian Immigrants. The guide of this tour is Carlo Roppa, from Carrera, Italy, who worked as a sculptor in Birmingham. Carlo sculpted a beautiful bust and base honoring a priest by the name of Giovanni Canepa born in Genoa, Italy who was sent to Birmingham by the Pope to administer to our ancestors and was very instrumental in establish three Catholic churches in Birmingham. The Italian American Heritage Society of Birmingham will also host “The Magic City of Birmingham’s Italian Heritage Festa” in a very large city park located in the center of Birmingham’s municipal buildings, The IAHS mission statement is to encourage, promote and preserve Italian culture and heritage with its activities centered upon Italian traditions, foods, language, history, religion, folklore, customs, celebrations, music and family genealogy. In order for the IAHS to carry out this mission statement to its fullest we must strive to raise the money to build an Italian American Cultural museum in the city of Birmingham. What's the story of the Italian emigration to Alabama and the South Eastern States? In the years from 1870 to mid1920’s, I would venture to say that 90% of the Italian immigrants came to Alabama from Sicily and southern Italy. What brought them to America was the inability to own land by the oppression of various countries controlling Sicily, drought, hunger, and lack of jobs; but also the American opportunity to work, to be able to earn money to buy food to feed their families and the belief of a better future. Italians are hard workers who believe in ownership. How about the actual presence of Italians in your area, either Italian Americans or Italians born in Italy and now working or studying there? Are there many of them, and who are they? There are no official censuses for the numbers of the Italian Americans in Alabama. I feel that there are possibly hundreds of thousands living in Alabama. In Birmingham and its surrounding areas there are close to forty, maybe fifty thousand persons of Italian American heritage, which includes those who emigrated from Italy over the previous fifty years. There are those who moved into Alabama from other states for various reasons; employment, corporate move, family, education, and our world renowned medical centers in Birmingham such as the University of Alabama Hospital, the Kirkland Clinic, the Children’s Hospital of Alabama and the University of Alabama School of medicine. Which are the most important “Italian” places in Alabama? A neighborhood, a museum, a park, a monument? In Alabama there were neighborhood where Italian immigrants came and build their community: they were farmers. Then their land was bought out to build the Air Museum and then the Birmingham airport. Now there is no more an Italian neighborhood in my town. There are few couples of churches that are still standing, built by the Italian immigrants. And then, as mentioned before, we have Vulcan: that is our Italian monument in Alabama. It is the second tallest statue in the world, behind the statue of Liberty; the largest iron figure ever cast in the world, the biggest statue created in the United States. It was sculpted by an Italian immigrant, and placed upon a stone base built by Italian immigrants. That’s the only land mark and that’s why I fight so hard to open this museum, because we need a place! The mayor of the city of Birmingham, William A. Bell, is behind us 100%. For one year, we can also boast that we have the exhibit “La Storia”. In September 2015, we will have to dismantle it, but I must remain passionate to bring our dream of having an Italian American Heritage Cultural Museum in the Magic City of Birmingham, BY UMBERTO MUCCI Alabama. IMAGES © 1: Mary Jo Gagliano 2: http://visitvulcan.com/uploads/2014/08/VULCANlogo300dpi.jpg 3: https://www.flickr.com/photos/deepfriedkudzu/15272551708/sizes/l 4: https://www.flickr.com/photos/deepfriedkudzu/11935773073/sizes/l 5: http://www.thecomebacktown.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Vulcan-Park.jpg WE THE ITALIANS | 9 www.wetheitalians.com