Gino Bartali: The cyclist who saved Jews in wartime Italy
"He had everything to lose. His story is one of the most dramatic examples
Film director Oren Jacoby is describing
During his lifetime, Bartali didn't talk about his wartime activities.
It was only after his death in 2000 that details
Bartali, a villager from a poor Tuscan family, was reaching the peak of his career
"Mussolini believed that if an Italian rider triumphed in the Tour it would show
that Italians too belonged to the master race," says Bartali's son Andrea in Jacoby's film.
"It was a matter of national pride and fascist prestige that my father won the 1938 Tour, so he was under real pressure."Bartali was invited to dedicate his win to Mussolini, but refused. It was a grave insult to il duce and a big risk to take.
In the middle of that year's Tour, Mussolini had published a Manifesto on Race, which led later to Jews being stripped of citizenship or any position
Italy remained, however, a country in which Jews could take refuge, until it surrendered to the allies in 1943. The German army then occupied northern and central parts of the country and immediately started rounding up Jews and sending them to concentration camps.
At this point Bartali, a devout Catholic, was asked by the Cardinal of Florence, Archbishop Elia Dalla Costa, to join a secret network offering protection to Jews and other endangered people.
His role in the network was uniquely suited to his talents - he became a courier. On the face of it he was undertaking the long training
"We've seen documentation that he travelled thousands of kilometres across Italy, travelling the roads between cities as far apart as Florence, Lucca, Genoa, Assisi, and the Vatican
arrested
and questioned by the head of the Fascist secret police in Florence, where he lived.
By taking on this role, he put himself at huge risk. At one point he was In addition to this, Bartali hid his Jewish friend Giacomo
"He hid us in spite of knowing
"He was risking not only his life but also his family. Gino Bartali saved my life and the life of my family. That's clear because if he hadn't hidden us, we had nowhere to go."
Approximately 80% of Italian and refugee Jews living in Italy before World War Two survived, partly thanks to the efforts of Italian sympathisers.
It's taken a lot of detective work, by a number
Andrea Bartali says that eventually little by little his father told him about his actions
According to Jacoby, Bartali's reticence is a
"defining characteristic" of many of the Italians who were willing to
risk their lives in World War Two.
Last September he was posthumously awarded with the honour Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem, the Holocaust memorial and education
"When Bartali was stopped and searched, he specifically asked that his bicycle not be touched since the different parts
Andrea Bartali says his father refused to view
"When people were telling him, 'Gino, you're a hero', he would reply: 'No, no - I want to be remembered for my sporting achievements. Real heroes are others, those who have suffered in their soul, in their heart, in their spirit, in their mind, for their loved ones. Those are the real heroes. I'm just a cyclist.'"
http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-27340358
A Year in Wartime Florence : http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-25463904
A Gay Island Community created in Fascist Italy: http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-22856586
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