Italy's first black minister

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Italy's first black minister defiant in face of racist slurs
By Catherine Hornby | Reuters
Fri, May 3, 2013

ROME (Reuters) - Italy's first black minister has responded to a barrage of sexist and racial insults by saying she is proud to be black, not colored, and that Italy is not really a racist country.

Cecile Kyenge, an eye doctor and Italian citizen originally from Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), was named integration minister by Prime Minister Enrico Letta last Saturday, one of seven women in the new government.

Since then, she has been the subject of taunts on far-right websites, which have branded her with names such as "Congolese monkey", "Zulu" and "the black anti-Italian".

She also faced race-tinged insults from Mario Borghezio, a European parliament member of the pro-devolution Northern League, which has been allied in the past with former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

In reference to Kyenge, Borghezio called Letta's coalition a "bonga bonga government" - a play on the "bunga, bunga" antics under Berlusconi - and said she herself appeared to be "a good housewife but not a minister".

Kyenge dismissed the comments, which the speaker of the lower house Laura Boldrini labeled "racist vulgarities". Kyenge plans to push for legislation, opposed by the League, that would allow children born in Italy to immigrant parents to get automatic citizenship instead of waiting until 18 to apply.

"I arrived in Italy alone at 18 years old, and I don't believe in giving up in front of obstacles," Kyenge, who left DRC so she could pursue her studies in medicine, said.

She also rejected the term "colored" used to describe her in many Italian press reports, saying: "I am not colored, I am black and I say it with pride".

Millions of emigrants left Italy in the 19th and 20th centuries but the country has had difficulties integrating citizens from other countries who come seeking work.

Kyenge, who is married to an Italian, said she did not view Italy as a particularly racist country, and believed that hostile attitudes stem mainly from ignorance.

"Italy has a tradition of welcoming and offering hospitality towards others. We need to recognize these traditions and apply them day to day," she said.

Boldrini herself told a newspaper on Friday that she had received daily death threats online and a stream of messages containing sexually violent images.

"When a woman takes up public office, sexist aggression sets off against her, and whether simple gossip or violent...it always uses the same vocabulary of humiliation and submission," Boldrini told La Repubblica newspaper.

"We shouldn't be afraid to say that this is an underground culture, shared in some way. In my view: an emergency in Italy," she said, pointing to regular cases of Italian women being murdered or abused by men, often by husbands or partners.

http://news.yahoo.com/italys-first-black-minister-defiant-face-racist-slurs-155340930.html
 
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Doctor Cécile Kyenge made history this week when she became the first black minister in Italy. We at Feminspire love when women make history, and as the first black minister she represents a positive step toward the eradication of racism. Premier Enrico Letta named Kyenge the to-be minister of integration in his government, which won a second vote of confidence Tuesday. In the parliamentary introductory speech, Letta referenced Kyenge’s appointment, stating it was a “new concept about the confines of barriers giving way to hope, of unsurpassable limits giving way to a bridge between diverse communities.” However, the celebration is short lived, as her achievement is marked by a disgusting and unacceptable show of racism from politicians of the anti-immigrant Northern League party, as well as members of neo-fascist Internet groups



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Born in Kambove in the Congo’s Haut-Katanga district, Kyenge moved to Italy in 1983. She then flourished as an intellectual, becoming a doctor and eventually Italy’s first black minister. Sadly, nothing scares patriarchy more than a powerful woman, and nothing scares xenophobics more than a powerful racial minority, and so the sight of a powerful black woman has sent some of Italy’s politicians into a baffling whirlwind of racist insults.

Much like a child bullying on a playground, fellow politician Mario Borghezio referred to the coalition as a “bonga bonga government,” because when you want to attack your opposition you should always do it with the no-fail tactic of spewing nonsensical words such as “bonga” (??) in some sort of bizarre reference to the race of a single member of the party. Borghezio also stated that Kyenge would try to “impose tribal traditions” from her birthplace on Italy. It doesn’t end there. Kyenge has also received a volley of racist insults from neo-fascist websites, among them referring to her as a “Congolese monkey”.





See, Schoolyard Racism Taints the Rise to Power of the First WOC Minister in Italy


 

First Black Italian Minister Compared to an Orangutan



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As Italy's first black minister, Cecile Kyenge has had to put up with an avalanche of racist remarks from her fellow ministers since assuming the position in April. The latest came from Sen. Roberto Calderoli, a member of the anti-immigration Northern League Party. During a speech to supporters, he compared Kyenge to an orangutan.

"I love animals… but when I see pictures of Kyenge I cannot but think of - even if I'm not saying she is one - the features of an orangutan."

He went on to say that Ms Kyenge was attracting illegal immigrants to Italy, and that she should be a minister in her "own country".

This is fairly typical of the kind of abuse that has been directed at the minister by Northern League activists.

One accused her of wanting to impose "tribal traditions" on Italy.

And another actually went so far as to call for Ms Kyenge to be raped so that she would understand what someone who might be raped by an immigrant might go through.



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