Stidda

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La Stidda (Sicilian for "star") is a name for criminal organizations centered in Gela, Sicily, in Italy. Members are known as stiddari or stiddaroli. It is most active in the rural parts of southern Sicily and is partially a rival to Cosa Nostra. Apparently some members tattooed a star on their bodies.[1]

Little is known of the origins of the organization, though it is believed to have come about in a similar fashion to the Mafia, in the same rural environment of Sicily. Unlike the mafia however, the Stidda kept a mostly rural and low-profile until the 1980's, where it became somewhat more expansionist and started moving into the cities, bringing the two Sicilian groups into competition with one another.[citation needed]

The Stidda came into public view when Cosa Nostra pentito Francesco Marino Mannoia spoke about it in 1989. Later another Mafia member Leonardo Messina[2] told his own view. According to their testimonies, Stidda is an organisation that was founded by former members of the Cosa Nostra during the Second Mafia War of the early 1980s. They had been expelled due to disobedience or, in a couple of cases, marrying a relative of a police officer. Many of the original stiddari were followers of the murdered Mafia-boss Giuseppe Di Cristina.[1]

The Stidda was particularly strong in southern Sicily around the towns of Agrigento, Caltanissetta and Gela.[1] The original leaders of the Stidda were Giuseppe Croce Benvenuto and Salvatore Calafato. A dynamite bomb later killed Stidda boss Calogero Lauria. They were involved a more direct war with the Mafia in the early 1990's. The vicious war led to over 300 deaths.[3]

Stidda is not a tight organization and many gangs ("clans") operate relatively independently. They ally with each other or even the local chapter of Cosa Nostra. They have similar rituals and rules. There is also a membership tattoo. Older members use a needle and black and blue ink to carve a five-pointed star on the initiate's right hand between the thumb and index finger. This tattoo is known as stiddari.

Stidda gangs exist in Agrigento province and in Milano, Genova and Torino.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c Stille, Excellent Cadavers, p. 365.
  2. ^ (Italian) Testimony of Leonardo Messina before the Antimafia Commission.
  3. ^ Dickie, Cosa Nostra, p.