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  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) votes in a elementary school in Palermo, Italy, on February 24, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 24 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio,vota in una scuola elementare a Palermo il 24 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per l'ONU.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del P
    CIPG_20130224_ELE2013_INGROIA_VOTO_P...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) votes in a elementary school in Palermo, Italy, on February 24, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 24 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio,vota in una scuola elementare a Palermo il 24 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per l'ONU.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del P
    CIPG_20130224_ELE2013_INGROIA_VOTO_P...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) votes in a elementary school in Palermo, Italy, on February 24, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 24 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio,vota in una scuola elementare a Palermo il 24 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per l'ONU.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del P
    CIPG_20130224_ELE2013_MISC__MG_9868.jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) votes in a elementary school in Palermo, Italy, on February 24, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 24 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio,vota in una scuola elementare a Palermo il 24 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per l'ONU.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del P
    CIPG_20130224_ELE2013_MISC__MG_9688.jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) votes in a elementary school in Palermo, Italy, on February 24, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 24 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio,vota in una scuola elementare a Palermo il 24 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per l'ONU.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del P
    CIPG_20130224_ELE2013_MISC__MG_9682.jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) votes in a elementary school in Palermo, Italy, on February 24, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 24 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio,vota in una scuola elementare a Palermo il 24 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per l'ONU.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del P
    CIPG_20130224_ELE2013_INGROIA_VOTO_P...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) votes in a elementary school in Palermo, Italy, on February 24, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 24 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio,vota in una scuola elementare a Palermo il 24 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per l'ONU.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del P
    CIPG_20130224_ELE2013_INGROIA_VOTO_P...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) votes in a elementary school in Palermo, Italy, on February 24, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
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PALERMO, ITALIA - 24 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio,vota in una scuola elementare a Palermo il 24 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per l'ONU.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del P
    CIPG_20130224_ELE2013_INGROIA_VOTO_P...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 24 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) votes in a elementary school in Palermo, Italy, on February 24, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 24 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio,vota in una scuola elementare a Palermo il 24 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per l'ONU.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del P
    CIPG_20130224_ELE2013_INGROIA_VOTO_P...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 5 FEBRUARY 2013: Leader of Civil Revolution and candidate for Prime Minister Antonio Ingroia (53) leads a press conference on research and business growth in Rome, Italy, on February 5, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
ROMA, ITALIA - 5 FEBBRAIO 2013: Antonio Ingroia (53 anni), leader di Rivoluzione Civile e candidato alla Presidenza del Consiglio, tiene una conferenza stampa sulla ricerca e il rilancio delle imprese nel suo comitato elettorale a Roma il 5 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per
    CIPG_20130205_ELE2013_INGROIA_Roma__...jpg
  • PALERMO,  ITALY - 9 FEBRUARY 2013: Candidates for the Parliament and former antimafia magistrates Antonio Ingroia (54, Civil Revolution) and Pietro Grasso (68 Democratic Party), meet for the first time since the beginning of the campaign and after the controversy between their candidacy, during a debate organized by Addio Pizzo in Palermo, Italy, on February 9, 2013.<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 9 FEBBRAIO 2013: I candidati per il parlamento ed ex-magistrati Antonio Ingroia (54 anni, Rivoluzione Civile) e Pietro Grasso (68 anni, Partito Democratico), si incontrano per la prima volta dall'inizio della campagna elettorale dopo la polemica scoppiata tra i due, ad un dibattito organizzato da Addio Pizzo a Palermo, il 9 febbraio 2013.<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento italiano – la Camera dei deputati e il Senato della Repubblica – si terranno domenica 24 e lunedì 25 febbraio 2013 a seguito dello scioglimento anticipato delle Camere avvenuto il 22 dicembre 2012, quattro mesi prima della conclusione naturale della XVI Legislatura. I principali candidate per la Presidenza del Consiglio sono Pierluigi Bersani (leader della coalizione di centro-sinistra "Italia. Bene Comune"), il premier uscente Mario Monti (leader della coalizione di centro "Con Monti per l'Italia") e l'ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi (leader della coalizione di centro-destra).
    CIPG_20130209_INGROIA-GRASSO_Palermo...jpg
  • PALERMO,  ITALY - 9 FEBRUARY 2013: Candidates for the Parliament and former antimafia magistrates Antonio Ingroia (54, Civil Revolution) and Pietro Grasso (68 Democratic Party), meet for the first time since the beginning of the campaign and after the controversy between their candidacy, during a debate organized by Addio Pizzo in Palermo, Italy, on February 9, 2013.<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 9 FEBBRAIO 2013: I candidati per il parlamento ed ex-magistrati Antonio Ingroia (54 anni, Rivoluzione Civile) e Pietro Grasso (68 anni, Partito Democratico), si incontrano per la prima volta dall'inizio della campagna elettorale dopo la polemica scoppiata tra i due, ad un dibattito organizzato da Addio Pizzo a Palermo, il 9 febbraio 2013.<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento italiano – la Camera dei deputati e il Senato della Repubblica – si terranno domenica 24 e lunedì 25 febbraio 2013 a seguito dello scioglimento anticipato delle Camere avvenuto il 22 dicembre 2012, quattro mesi prima della conclusione naturale della XVI Legislatura. I principali candidate per la Presidenza del Consiglio sono Pierluigi Bersani (leader della coalizione di centro-sinistra "Italia. Bene Comune"), il premier uscente Mario Monti (leader della coalizione di centro "Con Monti per l'Italia") e l'ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi (leader della coalizione di centro-destra).
    CIPG_20130209_INGROIA-GRASSO_Palermo...jpg
  • PALERMO,  ITALY - 9 FEBRUARY 2013: Candidates for the Parliament and former antimafia magistrates Antonio Ingroia (54, Civil Revolution) and Pietro Grasso (68 Democratic Party), meet for the first time since the beginning of the campaign and after the controversy between their candidacy, during a debate organized by Addio Pizzo in Palermo, Italy, on February 9, 2013.<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 9 FEBBRAIO 2013: I candidati per il parlamento ed ex-magistrati Antonio Ingroia (54 anni, Rivoluzione Civile) e Pietro Grasso (68 anni, Partito Democratico), si incontrano per la prima volta dall'inizio della campagna elettorale dopo la polemica scoppiata tra i due, ad un dibattito organizzato da Addio Pizzo a Palermo, il 9 febbraio 2013.<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento italiano – la Camera dei deputati e il Senato della Repubblica – si terranno domenica 24 e lunedì 25 febbraio 2013 a seguito dello scioglimento anticipato delle Camere avvenuto il 22 dicembre 2012, quattro mesi prima della conclusione naturale della XVI Legislatura. I principali candidate per la Presidenza del Consiglio sono Pierluigi Bersani (leader della coalizione di centro-sinistra "Italia. Bene Comune"), il premier uscente Mario Monti (leader della coalizione di centro "Con Monti per l'Italia") e l'ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi (leader della coalizione di centro-destra).
    CIPG_20130209_INGROIA-GRASSO_Palermo...jpg
  • PALERMO,  ITALY - 9 FEBRUARY 2013: Candidates for the Parliament and former antimafia magistrates Antonio Ingroia (54, Civil Revolution) and Pietro Grasso (68 Democratic Party), meet for the first time since the beginning of the campaign and after the controversy between their candidacy, during a debate organized by Addio Pizzo in Palermo, Italy, on February 9, 2013.<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 9 FEBBRAIO 2013: I candidati per il parlamento ed ex-magistrati Antonio Ingroia (54 anni, Rivoluzione Civile) e Pietro Grasso (68 anni, Partito Democratico), si incontrano per la prima volta dall'inizio della campagna elettorale dopo la polemica scoppiata tra i due, ad un dibattito organizzato da Addio Pizzo a Palermo, il 9 febbraio 2013.<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento italiano – la Camera dei deputati e il Senato della Repubblica – si terranno domenica 24 e lunedì 25 febbraio 2013 a seguito dello scioglimento anticipato delle Camere avvenuto il 22 dicembre 2012, quattro mesi prima della conclusione naturale della XVI Legislatura. I principali candidate per la Presidenza del Consiglio sono Pierluigi Bersani (leader della coalizione di centro-sinistra "Italia. Bene Comune"), il premier uscente Mario Monti (leader della coalizione di centro "Con Monti per l'Italia") e l'ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi (leader della coalizione di centro-destra).
    CIPG_20130209_INGROIA-GRASSO_Palermo...jpg
  • PALERMO,  ITALY - 9 FEBRUARY 2013: Candidates for the Parliament and former antimafia magistrates Antonio Ingroia (54, Civil Revolution) and Pietro Grasso (68 Democratic Party), meet for the first time since the beginning of the campaign and after the controversy between their candidacy, during a debate organized by Addio Pizzo in Palermo, Italy, on February 9, 2013.<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 9 FEBBRAIO 2013: I candidati per il parlamento ed ex-magistrati Antonio Ingroia (54 anni, Rivoluzione Civile) e Pietro Grasso (68 anni, Partito Democratico), si incontrano per la prima volta dall'inizio della campagna elettorale dopo la polemica scoppiata tra i due, ad un dibattito organizzato da Addio Pizzo a Palermo, il 9 febbraio 2013.<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento italiano – la Camera dei deputati e il Senato della Repubblica – si terranno domenica 24 e lunedì 25 febbraio 2013 a seguito dello scioglimento anticipato delle Camere avvenuto il 22 dicembre 2012, quattro mesi prima della conclusione naturale della XVI Legislatura. I principali candidate per la Presidenza del Consiglio sono Pierluigi Bersani (leader della coalizione di centro-sinistra "Italia. Bene Comune"), il premier uscente Mario Monti (leader della coalizione di centro "Con Monti per l'Italia") e l'ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi (leader della coalizione di centro-destra).
    CIPG_20130209_INGROIA-GRASSO_Palermo...jpg
  • PALERMO,  ITALY - 9 FEBRUARY 2013: Candidates for the Parliament and former antimafia magistrates Antonio Ingroia (54, Civil Revolution) and Pietro Grasso (68 Democratic Party), meet for the first time since the beginning of the campaign and after the controversy between their candidacy, during a debate organized by Addio Pizzo in Palermo, Italy, on February 9, 2013.<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 9 FEBBRAIO 2013: I candidati per il parlamento ed ex-magistrati Antonio Ingroia (54 anni, Rivoluzione Civile) e Pietro Grasso (68 anni, Partito Democratico), si incontrano per la prima volta dall'inizio della campagna elettorale dopo la polemica scoppiata tra i due, ad un dibattito organizzato da Addio Pizzo a Palermo, il 9 febbraio 2013.<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento italiano – la Camera dei deputati e il Senato della Repubblica – si terranno domenica 24 e lunedì 25 febbraio 2013 a seguito dello scioglimento anticipato delle Camere avvenuto il 22 dicembre 2012, quattro mesi prima della conclusione naturale della XVI Legislatura. I principali candidate per la Presidenza del Consiglio sono Pierluigi Bersani (leader della coalizione di centro-sinistra "Italia. Bene Comune"), il premier uscente Mario Monti (leader della coalizione di centro "Con Monti per l'Italia") e l'ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi (leader della coalizione di centro-destra).
    CIPG_20130209_INGROIA-GRASSO_Palermo...jpg
  • PALERMO,  ITALY - 9 FEBRUARY 2013: Candidates for the Parliament and former antimafia magistrates Antonio Ingroia (54, Civil Revolution) and Pietro Grasso (68 Democratic Party), meet for the first time since the beginning of the campaign and after the controversy between their candidacy, during a debate organized by Addio Pizzo in Palermo, Italy, on February 9, 2013.<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 9 FEBBRAIO 2013: I candidati per il parlamento ed ex-magistrati Antonio Ingroia (54 anni, Rivoluzione Civile) e Pietro Grasso (68 anni, Partito Democratico), si incontrano per la prima volta dall'inizio della campagna elettorale dopo la polemica scoppiata tra i due, ad un dibattito organizzato da Addio Pizzo a Palermo, il 9 febbraio 2013.<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento italiano – la Camera dei deputati e il Senato della Repubblica – si terranno domenica 24 e lunedì 25 febbraio 2013 a seguito dello scioglimento anticipato delle Camere avvenuto il 22 dicembre 2012, quattro mesi prima della conclusione naturale della XVI Legislatura. I principali candidate per la Presidenza del Consiglio sono Pierluigi Bersani (leader della coalizione di centro-sinistra "Italia. Bene Comune"), il premier uscente Mario Monti (leader della coalizione di centro "Con Monti per l'Italia") e l'ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi (leader della coalizione di centro-destra).
    CIPG_20130209_INGROIA-GRASSO_Palermo...jpg
  • PALERMO,  ITALY - 9 FEBRUARY 2013: Candidates for the Parliament and former antimafia magistrates Antonio Ingroia (54, Civil Revolution) and Pietro Grasso (68 Democratic Party), meet for the first time since the beginning of the campaign and after the controversy between their candidacy, during a debate organized by Addio Pizzo in Palermo, Italy, on February 9, 2013.<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 9 FEBBRAIO 2013: I candidati per il parlamento ed ex-magistrati Antonio Ingroia (54 anni, Rivoluzione Civile) e Pietro Grasso (68 anni, Partito Democratico), si incontrano per la prima volta dall'inizio della campagna elettorale dopo la polemica scoppiata tra i due, ad un dibattito organizzato da Addio Pizzo a Palermo, il 9 febbraio 2013.<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento italiano – la Camera dei deputati e il Senato della Repubblica – si terranno domenica 24 e lunedì 25 febbraio 2013 a seguito dello scioglimento anticipato delle Camere avvenuto il 22 dicembre 2012, quattro mesi prima della conclusione naturale della XVI Legislatura. I principali candidate per la Presidenza del Consiglio sono Pierluigi Bersani (leader della coalizione di centro-sinistra "Italia. Bene Comune"), il premier uscente Mario Monti (leader della coalizione di centro "Con Monti per l'Italia") e l'ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi (leader della coalizione di centro-destra).
    CIPG_20130209_INGROIA-GRASSO_Palermo...jpg
  • PALERMO,  ITALY - 9 FEBRUARY 2013: Candidates for the Parliament and former antimafia magistrates Antonio Ingroia (54, Civil Revolution) and Pietro Grasso (68 Democratic Party), meet for the first time since the beginning of the campaign and after the controversy between their candidacy, during a debate organized by Addio Pizzo in Palermo, Italy, on February 9, 2013.<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 9 FEBBRAIO 2013: I candidati per il parlamento ed ex-magistrati Antonio Ingroia (54 anni, Rivoluzione Civile) e Pietro Grasso (68 anni, Partito Democratico), si incontrano per la prima volta dall'inizio della campagna elettorale dopo la polemica scoppiata tra i due, ad un dibattito organizzato da Addio Pizzo a Palermo, il 9 febbraio 2013.<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento italiano – la Camera dei deputati e il Senato della Repubblica – si terranno domenica 24 e lunedì 25 febbraio 2013 a seguito dello scioglimento anticipato delle Camere avvenuto il 22 dicembre 2012, quattro mesi prima della conclusione naturale della XVI Legislatura. I principali candidate per la Presidenza del Consiglio sono Pierluigi Bersani (leader della coalizione di centro-sinistra "Italia. Bene Comune"), il premier uscente Mario Monti (leader della coalizione di centro "Con Monti per l'Italia") e l'ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi (leader della coalizione di centro-destra).
    CIPG_20130209_INGROIA-GRASSO_Palermo...jpg
  • PALERMO,  ITALY - 9 FEBRUARY 2013: Candidates for the Parliament and former antimafia magistrates Antonio Ingroia (54, Civil Revolution) and Pietro Grasso (68 Democratic Party), meet for the first time since the beginning of the campaign and after the controversy between their candidacy, during a debate organized by Addio Pizzo in Palermo, Italy, on February 9, 2013.<br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
PALERMO, ITALIA - 9 FEBBRAIO 2013: I candidati per il parlamento ed ex-magistrati Antonio Ingroia (54 anni, Rivoluzione Civile) e Pietro Grasso (68 anni, Partito Democratico), si incontrano per la prima volta dall'inizio della campagna elettorale dopo la polemica scoppiata tra i due, ad un dibattito organizzato da Addio Pizzo a Palermo, il 9 febbraio 2013.<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento italiano – la Camera dei deputati e il Senato della Repubblica – si terranno domenica 24 e lunedì 25 febbraio 2013 a seguito dello scioglimento anticipato delle Camere avvenuto il 22 dicembre 2012, quattro mesi prima della conclusione naturale della XVI Legislatura. I principali candidate per la Presidenza del Consiglio sono Pierluigi Bersani (leader della coalizione di centro-sinistra "Italia. Bene Comune"), il premier uscente Mario Monti (leader della coalizione di centro "Con Monti per l'Italia") e l'ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi (leader della coalizione di centro-destra).
    CIPG_20130209_INGROIA-GRASSO_Palermo...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait in front of the acitivist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304358.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait outside the acitivist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304382.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait outside the acitivist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304372.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait in front of the acitivist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304352.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait outside the acitivist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304369.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait as he kneels in sign of respect in front of the activist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304319.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait inside the acitivist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304284.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait inside the acitivist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304276.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait as he kneels in sign of respect inside the activist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304255.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait as he kneels in sign of respect inside the activist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304242.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait inside the acitivist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304169.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020:The house of  American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304125.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: The doorknob of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304106.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: A door hangs inside American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, here on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304073.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: A window of the Royal Palace is reflected through the window of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M303999.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: A view the window and the interior of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304418.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait in front of the acitivist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304347.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait as he kneels in sign of respect in front of the activist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304339.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait as he kneels in sign of respect inside the activist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304241.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait as he kneels in sign of respect inside the activist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304194.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: American artist Ryan Mendoza (49), who preserved and rebuilt the house of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks, poses for a portrait as he kneels in sign of respect inside the activist's house, on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304182.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020:The entrance door of  American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304122.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020:The house number (2672 South Deacon Street in Detroit) of  American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304119.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: A window of the Royal Palace is seen through the window of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304114.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: The interior of of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304095.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: A door hangs inside American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, here on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304076.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: The interior of of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304025.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: The interior of of American civil rights icon Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here on display in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304021.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304536.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304531.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304528.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304521.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304525.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304519.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304507.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304499.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304495.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304483.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 12 SEPTEMBER 2020: Rosa Parks' house, preserved and rebuilt by American artist Ryan Mendoza, is seen here in the Courtyard of Honour of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy, on September 12th 2020.<br />
<br />
In 2017, Rosa Parks' wooden house went on display in Berlin after it was rescued from demolition in Detroit. Then Brown University acquired it, and it went back to the United States, where it moldered in storage while artist Ryan Mendoza campaigned to erect it on the White House lawn. After years of trying, Mr. Mendoza decided the next best thing would be to rebuild it in the courtyard of the Royal Palace in Naples, Italy:<br />
the project "Almost Home - The Rosa Parks House Project" by the artist Ryan Mendoza  will be unveiled there on Sept. 15th 2020.<br />
<br />
The project came about in 2016, when Rhea McCauley, Ms. Parks’s niece, met Mr. Mendoza in Detroit. As part of an art project that explored his own sense of home, as well as the American subprime mortgage crisis, Mr. Mendoza successfully transported an abandoned house from Detroit to Europe, winning the trust of Detroit community members along the way. Ms. McCauley told him she had managed to buy back the family house for $500, but she could not find anyone interested in saving it from demolition. Mr. Mendoza, who makes his living as a fine-arts painter, agreed to help. He raised a little over $100,000 by selling some of his paintings, and set out for Detroit. There, he worked with a local team to take apart the house, which had fallen into extreme disrepair.<br />
He then shipped the wooden exterior to Berlin, where he spent the winter painstakingly rebuilding it, mostly alone, by hand. “It was an act of love,” he said.
    CIPG_20200912_NYT-RosaParks_7M304481.jpg
  • CARINI, ITALY - 24 FEBRUARY 2013: A poll in a secondary school in Carini (province of Palermo, Italy), on February 24, 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader of Civil Revolution with mayor of Naples Luigi de Magistris, started his career as a magistrate in the Antimafia pool of Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino who were killed in 1992 by the Mafia. After investigating on the secret talks between the Italian state and the Mafia in the early 1990s aimed at bringing a campaign of murder and bombing to an end, Antonio Ingroia became chief of investigations of the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG). <br />
<br />
A general election to determine the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate, the two houses of the Italian parliament, will take place on 24–25 February 2013. The main candidates running for Prime Minister are Pierluigi Bersani (leader of the centre-left coalition "Italy. Common Good"), former PM Mario Monti (leader of the centrist coalition "With Monti for Italy") and former PM Silvio Berlusconi (leader of the centre-right coalition).<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
CARINI, ITALIA - 24 FEBBRAIO 2013: Un seggio a Carini, Palermo,  il 24 febbraio 2013.<br />
<br />
Antonio Ingroia, leader di Rivoluzione Civile insieme al sindaco di Napoli Luigi de Magistris, ha iniziato la sua carriera da magistrato nel pool antimafia di Giovanni Falcone e Paolo Borsellino, uccisi dalla mafia nel 1992. Dopo aver indagato sulla trattativa Mafia-Stato (un accordo che avrebbe previsto la fine della stagione stravista in cambio di un'attenuazione delle misure detentive previste dall'articolo 41bis), Antonio Ingroia è stato chiamato a dirigere l'unità di investigazione per la la lotta al narcotraffico in Guatemala per l'ONU.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2013 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento italiano – la Camera dei deputati e il Senato della Repubblica – si terranno domenica 24 e lunedì 25 febbraio 2013 a seguito dello scioglimento anticipato
    CIPG_20130224_ELE2013_MISC__MG_9877.jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019: A backstage scene of a Roman soldier resting by a cross during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019: The impenitent thief (on the left of Jesus Christ) is seen here shortly before filming the scene of the crucifixion during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    SMAS_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019: The backstage of the scene of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ is seen here during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    SMAS_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019: Swiss theatre director Milo Rau (42) poses for a portrait after shooting the crucifixion scene in his film "The New Gospel", in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019:  Yvan Sagnet (34), a political activist and former exploited tomato farmer, is seen here performing Jesus Christ in the scene  of the crucifixion in "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019: A view of Matera, the set for Milo Rau's "The New Gospel" (2019),  Pier Paolo Pasolni's "The Gospel According to Matthew" (1964) and Mel Gibson's "The Passion of the Christ (2004), is seen here during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019:  Yvan Sagnet (34), a political activist and former exploited tomato farmer, is seen here performing Jesus Christ in the scene  of the crucifixion in "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019: Director Milo Rau (42) is seen here walking back from the scene of the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, performed by  Yvan Sagnet (34, center, a political activist and former exploited tomato farmer) and the two thieves  during the production of "The New Gospel" in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019: cis seen here backstage during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019: A backstage scene of a Roman soldier resting by a cross during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019: (L-R) Vito Castoro (37, farmer), Yussif Bamba (founder of the NGO AIIMS) and Papa Latyr Faye (aka Hervé, President of the NGO “Ghetto Out Casa Sankara”), respectively performing the roles of Jesus Christ's Apostles Bartholomew, Matthew and Peter, pose for a portrait during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and huma
    CIPG_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019: The second assistant camera operates the clapperboard before the scene of the crucifixions during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY -6 OCTOBER 2019: The actors performing the roles of the Pharises are seen here in the backstage of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 6th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191006_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY - 5 OCTOBER 2019: Yvan Sagnet (34, center), a political activist and former exploited tomato farmer, performs a scene of the Via Crucis in the role of Jesus Christ during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 5th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191005_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY - 5 OCTOBER 2019: Yvan Sagnet (34), a political activist and former exploited tomato farmer, is seen here in the backstage of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 5th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191005_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY - 5 OCTOBER 2019: Director Milo Rau (42, center) is seen here in the backstage of his film  "The New Gospel" together with actors in Matera, Italy, on October 5th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191005_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY - 5 OCTOBER 2019: Director Milo Rau (42) is seen here directing the scene of the condemnation, in which Jesus Christ is brought by Roman soldiers before Pontius Pilate in his film  "The New Gospel",in Matera, Italy, on October 5th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191005_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY - 5 OCTOBER 2019: The scene of the condemnation, in which Jesus Christ is brought by Roman soldiers before Pontius Pilate, is seen here during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 5th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191005_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY - 5 OCTOBER 2019:  Yvan Sagnet (34, center), a political activist and former exploited tomato farmer, performs Jesus Christ in the scene of the encounter with the Pharisees in "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau in Matera, Italy, on October 5th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191005_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY - 5 OCTOBER 2019: Yvan Sagnet (34, center), a political activist and former exploited tomato farmer, performs a scene of the Via Crucis in the role of Jesus Christ during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 5th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191005_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY - 5 OCTOBER 2019: Yvan Sagnet (34, center), a political activist and former exploited tomato farmer, performs a scene of the Via Crucis in the role of Jesus Christ during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 5th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191005_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • MATERA, ITALY - 5 OCTOBER 2019: Yvan Sagnet (34, center), a political activist and former exploited tomato farmer, performs a scene of the Via Crucis in the role of Jesus Christ during the production of "The New Gospel", a film by Swiss theatre director Milo Rau, in Matera, Italy, on October 5th 2019.<br />
<br />
Theatre Director Milo Rau filmed the Passion of the Christ  under the title “The New Gospel” with a cast of refugees, activists and former actors from Pasolini and Mel Gibson’s films.<br />
<br />
The role of Jesus is performed by Yvan Sagnet, a Political activist born in Cameroon and who worked on a tomato farm when in 2011 he revolted against the system of exploitation and led the first farm workers’ strike in southern Italy. In a series of public shoots in the European Capital of Culture Matera, Jesus will proclaimed the Word of God, was crucified (October 6th 2019) and finally rose from the dead in Rome, the capital of Catholic Christianity and seat of one of the most xenophobic governments in Europe (October 10th 2019).<br />
 <br />
Parallel to the film, the humanistic message of the New Testament was transformed into the present: at the beginning of September, the campaign “Rivolta della Dignità” (Revolt of Dignity), which demanded fair working and living conditions     for refugees, global freedom of travel and civil rights for all, started with a march from the southern Italian refugee camps. “It’s about putting Jesus on his feet,” director Milo Rau said. Led by Jesus actor Yvan Sagnet, the campaign fights for the rights of migrants who came to Europe via the Mediterranean to be enslaved by the Mafia in the tomato fields of southern Italy and to live in ghettos under inhumane conditions. The campaign and the film thus create a “New Gospel” for the 21st century, a manifesto of solidarity with the poorest, a revolt for a more just and humane world.
    CIPG_20191005_NYT_MateraNewTestament...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 17 JANUARY 2019: A document, issued by the registry office of the municipality of Palermo to migrants requesting residence in the municipality of Palermo, is seen here in the registry office of Palermo, Italy, on January 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Mayor of Palermo Leoluca Orlando, together with the mayors of Naples, Florence and Parma, are rebelling against Interior Minister Matteo Salvini by refusing to implement the new controversial security law which reduces the rights of asylum seekers.<br />
The "Salvini decree", passed in November 2018 by the far-right government, removes humanitarian protection status – one of the three forms of asylum offered by Italy – which means thousands of people would no longer be entitled to state shelter.<br />
“It is not an act of civil disobedience or conscientious objection, but the simple application of the constitutional rights that are guaranteed to all those who live in our country”, Leoluca Orlando said.
    CIPG_20190117_NYT_Palermo_M3_8835-BW.jpg
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