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  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Saverio Petrillo, director of the Ponitifical Villas, introduces a tour for journalists in "Benedict XVI" room of the Papal Palace in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is descri
    castelgandolfo_05.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, listens to Corps Member Advisor Paul Root, 26, during the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach09.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, attends the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach13.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, attends the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach06.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, attends the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach05.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, attends the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach04.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Artisan Anna Maria Vici Torrigiani poses in her studio with her hand made tunics in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_31.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Religious icons are for sale in Anna Maria Vici Torrigiani's shop in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_30.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Hand made paintings and other objects are shown in the shop window of Anna Maria Vici Torrigiani's shop in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_29.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: On the right, a picture of Stefano Carosi, owner of the Bar Carosi, being introduced to Pope John Paul II, hangs on the wall of Bar Carosi; on the left a picture of Pope John Paul II saluting the crowd from the Papal Palace, in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_27.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Mayor of Castel Gandolfo Milvia Monachesi, 55, is interviewed in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_23.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: The doorman of the Papal Palace open the door on Freedom Square (Piazza della Libertà) in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_09.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: The "Benedict XVI" room of the Papal Palace in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_06.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Father Don Pietro Diletti, priest of the Pontifical Church "San Thomas of Villanuova", is inerviewed in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_03.jpg
  • CASTEL GANDOLFO, ITALY - 28 FEBRUARY 2013: Pope Benedict XVI arrives in Castel Gandolfo to spend the final hours of his papacy before retiring in the summer residence used by popes for centuries, on February 28, 2013...On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. Now that Benedict XVI leaves the papacy, he will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place ?for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,? as it is described on a Vatican Web site...###..CASTEL GANDOLFO, ITALIA - 28 FEBBRAIO 2013: Il Papa Benedetto XVI arriva a Castel Gandolfo per trascorrere le ultime ore del suo papato prima di ritirarsi nella residenza estiva usata dai papi da secoli, 28 febbraio 2013...L'11 febbraio 2013 Papa Benedetto XVI ha informato i cardinali riuniti per il concistoro che aveva deciso di lasciare il papato il 28 febbraio 2013. Il Papa si ritira per due mesi a Castel Gandolfo. la residenza estiva dei papi, prima di trasferirsi nel convento "Mater Ecclesiae" nella città del Vaticano.
    CIPG_20130228_ADAC_Pope-Rome__MG_152...jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, attends the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach14.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, listens to Corps Member Advisor Paul Root, 26, during the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach12.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. The binder of Katherine Atwill, 21, who attends the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach11.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, listens to Corps Member Advisor Paul Root, 26, during the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach10.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill (center), 21, listens to Corps Member Advisor Paul Root (left), 26, during the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. Next to her, on the right, is Michele Meredith, 21. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach08.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, attends the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach07.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, attends the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach03.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, attends the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach02.jpg
  • 1 July, 2008. Bronx, NY. Katherine Atwill, 21, attends the first week of the Teach for America Summer Institute at Middle School 118. The Summer Institute is a five week preparation where corps members, such as Katherine, develop the foundational knowledge, skills and mindsets needed to be beginning teachers. Originally from Santa Barbara, CA, Katherine graduated in May from Colombia University with a double major in East Asian Studies and Creative Writing. She decided to enroll in the Institute because she believes the Teach for America teachers produce great results with kids.<br />
©2008 Gianni Cipriano for the Wall Street Journal<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Teach01.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Hand made tunics made by artisan Anna Maria Vici Torrigiani, are here in her studio in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_28.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Stefano Carosi, owner of the Bar Carosi founded by his family in 1870, at work in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013. The Bar Carosi is in Freedom Square (Piazza della Libertà), in front of the Papal Palace.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_25.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: The entrance of the Papal Palace from Freedom Square (Piazza della Libertà) in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_24.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Two elderly women chat in a street of Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_22.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: A fountain in the garden of the Pontifical Villas in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013. The Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo comprise about 55 hectares (11 more than Vatican City) of which 30 make up a garden while 25 are used for farming.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_12.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: A statue of the Holy Mary is here at the exit of the elevator, used by the Pope, which connects the Papal Palace to the Pontifical Villas and its gardens, in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_11.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: A statue of St-Peter is here at the entrance of the Papal Palace in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_10.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: The doorman of the Papal Palace open the door on Freedom Square (Piazza della Libertà) in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_08.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: The view of a tree above Lake Albano is seen from the Papal Palace in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_07.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: A portrait of Pope Benedict XVI hangs on the wall (on the right) of the sacristy of the Pontifical Church "Saint Thomas of Villanuova" in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_04.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Lake Albano, about 15 kilometers south east of Rome, as seen from the Papal Palace in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_02.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Lake Albano, about 15 kilometers south east of Rome, as seen from the Papal Palace in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York TimesCastel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_01.jpg
  • CASTEL GANDOLFO, ITALY - 28 FEBRUARY 2013: Pope Benedict XVI arrives in Castel Gandolfo to spend the final hours of his papacy before retiring in the summer residence used by popes for centuries, on February 28, 2013...On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. Now that Benedict XVI leaves the papacy, he will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place ?for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,? as it is described on a Vatican Web site...###..CASTEL GANDOLFO, ITALIA - 28 FEBBRAIO 2013: Il Papa Benedetto XVI arriva a Castel Gandolfo per trascorrere le ultime ore del suo papato prima di ritirarsi nella residenza estiva usata dai papi da secoli, 28 febbraio 2013...L'11 febbraio 2013 Papa Benedetto XVI ha informato i cardinali riuniti per il concistoro che aveva deciso di lasciare il papato il 28 febbraio 2013. Il Papa si ritira per due mesi a Castel Gandolfo. la residenza estiva dei papi, prima di trasferirsi nel convento "Mater Ecclesiae" nella città del Vaticano.
    CIPG_20130228_ADAC_Pope-Rome__MG_141...jpg
  • CASTEL GANDOLFO, ITALY - 28 FEBRUARY 2013: Pope Benedict XVI arrives in Castel Gandolfo to spend the final hours of his papacy before retiring in the summer residence used by popes for centuries, on February 28, 2013...On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. Now that Benedict XVI leaves the papacy, he will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place ?for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,? as it is described on a Vatican Web site...###..CASTEL GANDOLFO, ITALIA - 28 FEBBRAIO 2013: Il Papa Benedetto XVI arriva a Castel Gandolfo per trascorrere le ultime ore del suo papato prima di ritirarsi nella residenza estiva usata dai papi da secoli, 28 febbraio 2013...L'11 febbraio 2013 Papa Benedetto XVI ha informato i cardinali riuniti per il concistoro che aveva deciso di lasciare il papato il 28 febbraio 2013. Il Papa si ritira per due mesi a Castel Gandolfo. la residenza estiva dei papi, prima di trasferirsi nel convento "Mater Ecclesiae" nella città del Vaticano.
    CIPG_20130228_ADAC_Pope-Rome__MG_136...jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO, ITALY - JULY 31, 2011: Lazia Tiffany, 32, participates at the Miss Drag Queen Italy the contest, the only contest and festival for Drag Queens in Italy, in Torre del Lago. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy. A drag queen is usually a man who dresses, and usually acts, like a caricature woman often for the purpose of entertaining. Generally, drag queens dress in a female gender role, often exaggerating certain characteristics (such as make-up and eyelashes) for comic, dramatic or satirical effect.
    Perfect_28.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: A detail of one of the hen housesof the  one of the Papal Farm in the Pontifical Villas in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013. The Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo comprise about 55 hectares (11 more than Vatican City) of which 30 make up a garden while 25 are used for farming.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_20.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Chickens are here in the Papal Farm of the Pontifical Villas in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013. The Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo comprise about 55 hectares (11 more than Vatican City) of which 30 make up a garden while 25 are used for farming.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_18.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: The heliport of the Pontifical Villas here a helicopter will fly Pope Benedict XVI from the Vatican on February 28th, when he will retire, in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013. The Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo comprise about 55 hectares (11 more than Vatican City) of which 30 make up a garden while 25 are used for farming.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_17.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: A statue of the Holy Mary in the gardens of the Pontifical Villas, in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013. The Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo comprise about 55 hectares (11 more than Vatican City) of which 30 make up a garden while 25 are used for farming.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_16.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: A view of the gardens of the Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013. The Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo comprise about 55 hectares (11 more than Vatican City) of which 30 make up a garden while 25 are used for farming.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_15.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: A view of the gardens of the Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013. The Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo comprise about 55 hectares (11 more than Vatican City) of which 30 make up a garden while 25 are used for farming.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_14.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: A view of the gardens of the Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013. The Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo comprise about 55 hectares (11 more than Vatican City) of which 30 make up a garden while 25 are used for farming.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_13.jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO, ITALY - JULY 31, 2011: Magdalene Strass, 31, participates at the Miss Drag Queen Italy the contest, the only contest and festival for Drag Queens in Italy, in Torre del Lago. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy. A drag queen is usually a man who dresses, and usually acts, like a caricature woman often for the purpose of entertaining. Generally, drag queens dress in a female gender role, often exaggerating certain characteristics (such as make-up and eyelashes) for comic, dramatic or satirical effect.
    Perfect_29.jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO, ITALY - JULY 31, 2011: Raven, 29, participates at the Miss Drag Queen Italy the contest, the only contest and festival for Drag Queens in Italy, in Torre del Lago. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy. A drag queen is usually a man who dresses, and usually acts, like a caricature woman often for the purpose of entertaining. Generally, drag queens dress in a female gender role, often exaggerating certain characteristics (such as make-up and eyelashes) for comic, dramatic or satirical effect.
    Perfect_27.jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO (LU), ITALY - 27 AUGUST, 2011: Rachele, 22, participates at Miss Trparticipates at Miss Trans, a beauty pageant for transsexuals in Torre del Lago, Italy. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy.
    Perfect_11.jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO (LU), ITALY - 27 AUGUST, 2011: Noemi, 30, participates at Miss Trans, a beauty pageant for transsexuals in Torre del Lago, Italy. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy.
    Perfect_10.jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO (LU), ITALY - 27 AUGUST, 2011: Angela, 26, participates at Miss Trans, a beauty pageant for transsexuals in Torre del Lago, Italy. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy.
    Perfect_09.jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO (LU), ITALY - 27 AUGUST, 2011: Erotika, 38, participates at Miss Trans, a beauty pageant for transsexuals in Torre del Lago, Italy. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy.
    Perfect_07.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: A road inside the Pontifical Villas in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013. The Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo comprise about 55 hectares (11 more than Vatican City) of which 30 make up a garden while 25 are used for farming.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_21.jpg
  • Castel Gandolfo, Italy - 21 February 2013: Chickens are here in the Papal Farm of the Pontifical Villas in Castel Gandolfo, Italy, on February 21 2013. The Pontifical Villas of Castel Gandolfo comprise about 55 hectares (11 more than Vatican City) of which 30 make up a garden while 25 are used for farming.<br />
<br />
On 11 February 2013, Pope Benedict XVI informed the cardinals gathered in Consistory that he had decided to resign the papacy, effective 28 February 2013. When he leaves the papacy at the end of the month, Benedict will retire to his summer home in Castel Gandolfo, in the hills outside Rome, before moving to the Mater Ecclesiae convent, a plain, four-story structure built 21 years ago to serve as an international place “for contemplative life within the walls of Vatican City,” as it is described on a Vatican Web site.<br />
<br />
Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times
    castelgandolfo_19.jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO, ITALY - JULY 31, 2011: Lady Deliria, stage name for Daniele Gragnato, 21, participates at the Miss Drag Queen Italy and wins the contest, the only festival for Drag Queens in Italy, in Torre del Lago. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy. A drag queen is usually a man who dresses, and usually acts, like a caricature woman often for the purpose of entertaining. Generally, drag queens dress in a female gender role, often exaggerating certain characteristics (such as make-up and eyelashes) for comic, dramatic or satirical effect.
    Perfect_30.jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO, ITALY - JULY 31, 2011: Kamilla Molinari, 32, participates at the Miss Drag Queen Italy the contest, the only contest and festival for Drag Queens in Italy, in Torre del Lago. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy. A drag queen is usually a man who dresses, and usually acts, like a caricature woman often for the purpose of entertaining. Generally, drag queens dress in a female gender role, often exaggerating certain characteristics (such as make-up and eyelashes) for comic, dramatic or satirical effect.
    Perfect_26.jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO, ITALY - JULY 31, 2011: She Wulva, 29, participates at the Miss Drag Queen Italy the contest, the only contest and festival for Drag Queens in Italy, in Torre del Lago. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy. A drag queen is usually a man who dresses, and usually acts, like a caricature woman often for the purpose of entertaining. Generally, drag queens dress in a female gender role, often exaggerating certain characteristics (such as make-up and eyelashes) for comic, dramatic or satirical effect.
    Perfect_25.jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO (LU), ITALY - 27 AUGUST, 2011: Giselle, 33, participates at Miss Trans, a beauty pageant for transsexuals in Torre del Lago, Italy. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy.
    Perfect_12.jpg
  • TORRE DEL LAGO (LU), ITALY - 27 AUGUST, 2011: Monik, 25, participates at Miss Trans, a beauty pageant for transsexuals in Torre del Lago, Italy. Torre del Lago is well known for being an important gay and gay-friendly summer resort of national and international appeal. It is considered the gay mecca of Italy.
    Perfect_08.jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: An aerial view of Capri's trademark Faraglione rock formations is seen here in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_M2P-00...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Housekeeing manager Cristiana Ranaldi (51, foreground) and gardener Ciro Vicedomini (46, background) are seen here at work at the TIberio Palace hotel in Capri before the reopening of the hotel in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021. They were both recently vaccinated.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-07...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: An aerial view of Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_M2P-00...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: An aerial view of Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_M2P-00...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: An aerial view of Capri's trademark Faraglione rock formations is seen here in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_M2P-00...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: A ferry technician is seen here at work as the ferry depart from Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-18...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Ferry ticket offices are seen here at the harbor in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-18...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-18...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-17...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-16...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Mia D'Alessio (49), owner of Aurora - Capri's oldest restaurant, poses for a portrait in front of a vanity wall of fame that includes pictures of her posing with Mariah Carey, Beyonce and Matt Damon among others, in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-16...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Giuseppe Maggipinto, 53, and the president of the island’s oldest cooperative of motorboat owners, navigates through the island's trademark Faraglione rock formations, in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021. He lamented the “hysterical polemics about us getting vaccinated,” arguing that without a hospital, “if there was a cluster here, we had nothing to save our lives.”<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-15...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Giuseppe Maggipinto, 53, and the president of the island’s oldest cooperative of motorboat owners, navigates through the island's trademark Faraglione rock formations, in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021. He lamented the “hysterical polemics about us getting vaccinated,” arguing that without a hospital, “if there was a cluster here, we had nothing to save our lives.”<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-15...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Capri's trademark Faraglione rock formation is seen here in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-15...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-14...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-13...jpg
  • ANACAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: (L-R) Local greengrocers Dario Portale (32) and Roberta Vanacore (33), pose for a portrait in front of their shop in Anacapri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.  The day after getting their shot, they left for Milan, in the country’s hard hit region of Lombardy, to introduce their 10-month-old son to his mother. She is 62, works in a post office, and is still not vaccinated.<br />
“She’s still waiting,” Mr. Portale said.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-11...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: A soon to be bride has her photo taken by a friend in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-09...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Cristiana Ranaldi (51), the housekeeping manager at the TIberio Palace hotel in Capri, puts fresh sheets on a bed before the reopening of the hotel in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-06...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: A view from the terrace of the Suite Bellevue at Tibero Palace hotel in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-05...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Mario Petraroli, a 37 years old director of marketing at the Tiberio Palace hotel in Capri, sits in the ferry bringing him from Naples to Capri, in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021. He was recently vaccinated.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-00...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_M2P-00...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Children play by a beach in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-18...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: A bartender waits for customers in the main piazza in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-17...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-17...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-17...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: An aerial vew of Capri's trademark Faraglione rock formations is seen here in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-17...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Residents look at Capri's trademark Faraglione rock formations in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-17...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Mia D'Alessio (49), owner of Aurora - Capri's oldest restaurant, poses for a portrait in front of a vanity wall of fame that includes pictures of her posing with Mariah Carey, Beyonce and Matt Damon among others, in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-16...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-16...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Giuseppe Maggipinto, 53, and the president of the island’s oldest cooperative of motorboat owners, navigates around the island of Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021. He lamented the “hysterical polemics about us getting vaccinated,” arguing that without a hospital, “if there was a cluster here, we had nothing to save our lives.”<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-16...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-13...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-12...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-12...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-12...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-12...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-11...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-11...jpg
  • CAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: in Capri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-11...jpg
  • ANACAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: The interior of the resturant "Da Gelsomina" is seen here in Anacapri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-11...jpg
  • ANACAPRI, ITALY - 10 MAY 2021: Customers have lunch here at the restaurant "Da Gelsomina" in Anacapri, Italy, on May 10th 2021.<br />
<br />
Feeling the heat from Greece and Spain, which had prioritized vaccination campaigns on their islands to lure tourists away from Italy,  Vincenzo De Luca - the president of the Campania region, which includes Capri -  diverged from the government’s vaccination strategy of prioritizing categories of more vulnerable Italians. Instead, he treated Capri and other holiday islands as special cases. He fast forwarded vaccinations on Capri by flooding the island with doses and inoculating first seniors, then the middle-aged, then 20-somethings and even some teenagers while the rest of the region was still struggling to inoculate all its 70- and 60-year-olds.
    CIPG_20210510_NYT_Capri-Covid_A73-11...jpg
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