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  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019:  un professore di pasticceria e i suoi alunni nel lavoraborio di pasticceria dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: nell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Vice-President of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" Marco Riccio (25) juggles with a teenagers during the circus activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Founder and President of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" Giovanni Savino (38) is seen here with elementary school children during after-school activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Secreatry Pietro Esposito (21) is seen here at work at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: (L-R) Founder and President of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" Giovanni Savino (38) discusses with Save The Children project coordinator Luigi Malcangi at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Uno studente taglia del pesce spada nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019:  un professore di pasticceria e i suoi alunni nel lavoraborio di pasticceria dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Vito Pecoraro (52 anni), dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Vito Pecoraro (52 anni), dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: (L-R) Members and Instructors of "Il Tappet o di Iqbal" Carlo Epifani (19), Mattia Formicola (22, top), Pietro Esposito (21, bottom), Ciro Grimaldi (22), Founder and President Giovanni Savino (38), Caterina Spezzaferri (29, top), Chiara Scognamiglio (20, bottom), Michelangelo Ravone (23), Antonio Bosso (25) and Vice-President Marco Riccio (25) pose for a portrait at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Founder and President of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" Giovanni Savino (38) is seen here with elementary school children during after-school activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Teenagers followed by their instructors walk out of the gym after practicing parkour at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Aerial Dance instructor Caterina Spezzaferri (29) teaches aerial dance to teenagers at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Aerial Dance instructor Caterina Spezzaferri (29) teaches aerial dance to teenagers at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: (R-L) Circus instructor Antonio Bosso (25) hugs Carllo Borrelli (23)  at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: (L-R) Antonio Bosso (25), Carllo Borrelli (23) and Carlo Epifani (19), workers of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" pose for a portait at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Teenagers pratice juggling during the circus activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Buildings of the Barra neighborhood are seen here from the gym of  "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: A teenager standing on stilts looks at the Barra neighborhood from the gym during the circus activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Michelangelo Ravone (23, right) teaches diabolo to a teenager at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: A teenagers holds jigglings balls during the circus activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Aerial Dance instructor Caterina Spezzaferri (29) teaches aerial dance to teenagers at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Aerial Dance instructor Caterina Spezzaferri (29) teaches aerial dance to teenagers at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Aerial Dance instructor Caterina Spezzaferri (29) teaches aerial dance to teenagers at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Claves and balls used during the circus activity are seen here at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Teenagers practice aerial dance and trapeze at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: A teenagers is seen here during the circus activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Aerial Dance instructor Caterina Spezzaferri (29) teaches aerial dance to teenagers at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Circus and Parkour Instructor Antonio Bosso (25) juggles with a teenager during the circus activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: (R-L) Carlo Borrelli (23, Janitor), Pietro Esposito (21, Secretary) and Marco Ravone (19, circus teacher) are seen here at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: A child's painting quoting "The right to study" is seen here at the headquarters of  "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Angela Cuccaro (19), an aerial dancer, poses for a portrait at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Angela Cuccaro (19) is seen here as she performs aerial dance at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Angela Cuccaro (19) is seen here as she performs aerial dance at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Angela Cuccaro (19) is seen here as she performs aerial dance at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Teenagers watch their instructor Mattia Formicola (22, center) teach a parjour class at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Founder and President of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" Giovanni Savino (38, center) looks at a teenager who missed school and a potential school-dropout as he walks away,  here at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Founder and President of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" Giovanni Savino (38, center) talks to a teenager who missed school and a potential school-dropout, while  Vice-President Marco Riccio (25, left) listens to the conversation, here at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Elementary school children watch "Inside Out", a 3D animated comedy-drama, during after-school activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: (R-L) Vice-President of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" Marco Riccio (25) and  Save The Children project coordinator Luigi Malcangi walk together toward the offices of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Teenagers are seen here during a warm-up session before a parkour class at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Vault horses are seen here in the gym of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Founder and President of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" Giovanni Savino (38) is seen here at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: (R-L) Marco Riccio (25) and Mattia Formicola (22) are seen here while teenagers warm-up before a parkour class at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Teenagers do yoga during a warm-up session before a parkour class at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Teenagers are seen here during a warm-up session before a parkour class at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • 19 luglio 2010. Palermo. Domenico Di Fatta, preside dell’Istituto Comprensivo Giovanni Falcone del quartiere ZEN di Palermo. contrasta la criminalità e punta a educare e istruire i giovani senza compromessi e ammiccamenti.<br />
<br />
©2010 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    CIPG_20100719_ATRE-ECONOMIE_Zen2_MG_...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Uno studente taglia del pesce spada nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Uno studente taglia del pesce spada nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Uno studente taglia del pesce spada nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Vista dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Vista dell'ingresso dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Vito Pecoraro (52 anni), dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Vito Pecoraro (52 anni), dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Vito Pecoraro (52 anni), dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Vito Pecoraro (52 anni), dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Vito Pecoraro (52 anni), dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • PALERMO - 21 NOVEMBRE 2019: Degli studenti preparano la cena per un ricevimento nel laboratorio di cucina dell'Istituto Professionale di. Stateo per i Servizi di Enogastronomia e l'Ospitalità Alberghiera (I.P.S.S.E.O.A.) "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo il 22 novembre 2019.<br />
<br />
La Corte di Cassazione ha stabilito che il dirigente scolastico è ritenuto garante della sicurezza di studenti e personale lavorativo e che può, pertanto, andare incontro a una condanna penale nel caso di infortunio di una persona allinterno dell'istituto.<br />
<br />
Da questo punto di vista Vito Pecoraro, dirigente scolastico dell'Istituto Alberghiero "Pietro Piazza" di Palermo, può essere considerato il preside più "stressato" d'Italia: il suo istituto conta più di 2900 alunni e 300 dipendenti scolastici.
    CIPG_20191121_SETTE-Alberghiero-Pale...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Abstract paintings made by children during their after-school activity are seen here at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Abstract paintings made by children during their after-school activity are seen here at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Elementary school children are seen after their after-school activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Aerial Dance instructor Caterina Spezzaferri (29) teaches aerial dance to teenagers at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Teenagers standing on stilts are seen here during the circus activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: A teenager practices diabolo during the circus activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Vice-President of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" Marco Riccio (25) juggles with a teenager during the circus activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Vice-President of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" Marco Riccio (25) juggles with a teenager during the circus activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Founder and President of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" Giovanni Savino (38) is seen here with elementary school children during after-school activity at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Secreatry Pietro Esposito (21) is seen here at work at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: The interior of the headquarters of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Teenagers followed by their instructors walk out of the gym after practicing parkour at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Teenagers walk out of the gym after practicing parkour at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Teenagers practice parkour at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Angela Cuccaro (19), an aerial dancer, poses for a portrait at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Angela Cuccaro (19) is seen here as she performs aerial dance at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018:  A teenagers is seen here during a warm-up session before a parkour class at "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 16 MARCH 2018: Vault horses are seen here in the gym of "Il Tappeto di Iqbal" (Iqbal's carpet), a non-profit cooperative in Barra, the estern district of Naples, Italy, on March 16th 2018.<br />
<br />
Il Tappeto di Iqbal (Iqbal’s Carpet) is a non-profit cooperative founded in 2015 and Save The Children partner since 2015 that operates in the Naple’s eastern neighborhood of Barra children in the arts of circus, theater and parkour. It was named after Iqbal Masih, a Pakistani boy who escaped from life as a child slave and became an activist against bonded labor in the 1990s.<br />
Barra, which is home to some 45,000 people, has the highest rate of school dropouts in the Italian region of Campania. Once a thriving industrial community, many of the factories were destroyed in a 1980 earthquake and never rebuilt. The resulting de-industrialization turned Barra into a poor, decaying neighborhood. There are no cinemas, theaters, parks or public spaces in Barra.<br />
The vast majority of children from poor families are faced with the choice of working in the black economy or joining the ranks of the organised crime.<br />
Recently, Save the Children Italy opened a number of educational and social spaces in Barra. The centers, known as Punti Luce, or points of light, aim to help local kids stay out of the ranks of the organised crime and have also become hubs for Iqbal's Carpet to work.
    CIPG_20180316_CAUSETTE_NapoliBarra_M...jpg
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