Sandro Pertini

Senator for life
Alessandro Pertini
OMCA
7th President of Italy
In office
9 July 1978  29 June 1985
Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti
Francesco Cossiga
Arnaldo Forlani
Giovanni Spadolini
Amintore Fanfani
Bettino Craxi
Preceded by Giovanni Leone
Succeeded by Francesco Cossiga
President of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
5 July 1968  4 June 1976
Preceded by Brunetto Bucciarelli-Ducci
Succeeded by Pietro Ingrao
Secretary of the Italian Socialist Party
In office
2 August 1945  18 December 1945
Preceded by Pietro Nenni
Succeeded by Rodolfo Morandi
Personal details
Born (1896-09-25)25 September 1896
Stella, Liguria, Kingdom of Italy
Died 24 February 1990(1990-02-24) (aged 93)
Rome, Lazio, Italy
Nationality Italian
Political party PSU (1922–1930)
PdA (1930–1945)
PSI (1945–1990)
Spouse(s) Carla Voltolina
Alma mater University of Genoa
Signature
Website Sandro Pertini Foundation

Alessandro "Sandro" Pertini, OMCA (Italian: [alesˈsandro (ˈsandro) perˈtiːni]; 25 September 1896 – 24 February 1990) was an Italian journalist and socialist politician, who served as the seventh President of the Italian Republic, from 1978 to 1985.

Early life

Born in Stella (Province of Savona) as the son of a wealthy landowner, Alberto, he studied at a Salesian college in Varazze, and completed his schooling at the "Chiabrera" lyceum (high school) in Savona.

His philosophy teacher was Adelchi Baratono, a reformist socialist who contributed to his approach to socialism and probably introduced him to the inner circles of the Ligurian labour movements. Pertini obtained a Law degree from the University of Genoa.

Aged 19 when Italy entered World War I on the side of the Triple Entente, Pertini opposed the war, but nonetheless enlisted in the army where he served as a lieutenant and was decorated for bravery. After the armistice in 1918, he joined the Unitary Socialist Party, PSU, then he settled in Florence where he also graduated in political science with a thesis entitled La Cooperazione ("Cooperation"; 1924). While in the city, Pertini also came into contact with people such as Gaetano Salvemini, the brothers Carlo and Nello Rosselli, and Ernesto Rossi. Pertini was physically beaten by Fascist squads on several occasions, but never lost faith in his ideals.

Resistance to Fascism

After the assassination of PSU leader Giacomo Matteotti by Fascists in the 1924, Pertini became even more committed to the struggle against the totalitarian regime. In 1926, he was sentenced to internment, but managed to go into hiding. Later, together with Carlo Rosselli and Ferruccio Parri, he organized and accompanied the escape to France of Filippo Turati, who was the most prominent figure of the PSU. Pertini remained in the country until 1926 working as a mason. On his return to Italy, he was arrested in Pisa and sentenced to ten years' imprisonment.

In 1935 he was interned on Santo Stefano Island, Ventotene (LT), Pontine Islands, an island in the Tyrrhenian Sea, where he remained through Italy's entry into World War II and until 1943. There he saved the famous diaries of Antonio Gramsci. Although he had begun suffering from severe illness, Pertini never demanded pardon. He was released a month after Benito Mussolini's arrest, and joined the Italian resistance movement against the Nazi German occupiers and Mussolini's new regime – the Italian Social Republic. Arrested by the Germans, he was sentenced to death but freed by a partisan raid. Pertini then travelled north to organize partisan war as an executive member of PSU (alongside Rodolfo Morandi and Lelio Basso).

Prominence

President Sandro Pertini in his office at Quirinale palace.

After the war ended in Italy on 25 April 1945 and the monarchy was abolished through the Italian constitutional referendum, 1946, Pertini was elected to the Constituent Assembly (La Costituente), the body that prepared the new republican Italian Constitution. In the postwar era he was a prominent member of the directive board of the Italian Socialist Party (the PSI, which the PSU had rejoined).

In spite of his intransigent attitude toward the Italian Communist Party, Pertini was suspicious of many policies enforced by the PSI. He criticized all forms of colonialism, as well as corruption in the Italian state and within the socialist party, where he kept an independent political position.

He was elected president of the Italian Chamber of Deputies in 1968,[1] and in 1978, the 81-year-old Pertini was elected President of the Italian Republic, the highest office in the nation. Despite his advanced age, he displayed considerable energy and vigor, playing a major role in helping restore the public's faith in the government and institutions of Italy, as well as maintaining an active schedule of traveling and meeting foreign dignitaries. During the Brigate Rosse terrorism period of the Anni di piombo, Pertini openly denounced the violence. He also opposed organized crime in Italy, South African apartheid, Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet and other dictatorial regimes, as well as the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. In 1985, he stepped down from the presidency, becoming automatically senator for life. The only official role he accepted in his retirement was President of the "Filippo Turati" Foundation for Historical Studies of Florence inaugurated in 1985 and dedicated to recording and preserving the history of the socialist movement in Italy. In December 1988 Pertini was the first person to be awarded with the Otto Hahn Peace Medal in Gold by the United Nations Association of Germany (Deutsche Gesellschaft für die Vereinten Nationen, DGVN) in Berlin, "for outstanding services to peace and international understanding, especially for his political ethics and practical humanity." Pertini died in February 1990 at the age of 93 and was mourned across the nation.

1982 World Cup Final

Pertini attended the 1982 World Cup Final in Madrid for a match between Italy and West Germany just two days after the fourth anniversary of his inauguration. After Italy scored their third goal, he wagged his finger to either the German delegation or King Juan Carlos I, and probably said "they [the German team] will not catch us any more".[2] Paolo Rossi, Italy's and the tournament's top scorer, later said: "I remember that when he welcomed us at the Presidential Palace after our win, he rose and said: 'This is my best day as President.'" [3]

Relationship with Pope John Paul II

President Sandro Pertini and Pope John Paul II on a secret skiing trip on Mt. Adamello, on June 16, 1984.

Sandro Pertini had a close friendship with Pope John Paul II, with whom he met often both for official and private occasions, and had frequent phone conversations. In "Accanto a Giovanni Paolo II", he is known to have referred to his mother looking over him in heaven, moved that her atheist son was friends with the Pope.

On May 13, 1981, he went to the Gemelli Hospital as soon as he heard that the Pope had been shot, and stayed until late in the night when he was told that the Pope was not in danger anymore. He recalled the event later that year in the annual New Year's Eve Presidential Address to the Italian People.[4]

Honours and awards

In 1986 he received the Freedom medal.

References

  1. With the ardor of those who drove merchants from the temple, Speaker Pertini ordered to drive away the "whips" from the aisle, accelerating the outcome of the presidential election in 1971 : Buonomo, Giampiero (2015). "Il rugby e l’immortalità del nome". L’ago e il filo.   via Questia (subscription required)
  2. Video on Pertini exulting at the Italian team's victory on YouTube
  3. Article on emagazine.credit-suisse.com
  4. "Presidential Address of New Year's Eve 1981". The official website of the Presidency of the Italian Republic.
  5. (in Italian) "Lizzani: Pertini wrote to me that Audisio didn't shoot the Duce" (La Provincia)
  6. (in Italian) "Il Partigiano Pert" (lastoriasiamonoi.rai.it)
  7. (in Italian) "Pertini, the partisan president in the amazing comics of Andrea Pazienza" (slumberland.it)
  8. (in Italian) "Pertini" on andreapazienza.it
  9. (in Italian) "The 5 best songs dedicated to Sandro Pertini" (orrorea33giri.com)
  10. (in Italian) "Sandro Pertini, our president ever, historical figure and man" (quotidianpost.it)
Political offices
Preceded by
Brunetto Bucciarelli-Ducci
President of the Italian Chamber of Deputies
1968–1976
Succeeded by
Pietro Ingrao
Preceded by
Giovanni Leone
President of the Italian Republic
1978–1985
Succeeded by
Francesco Cossiga
Party political offices
Preceded by
Pietro Nenni
Secretary of the Italian Socialist Party
1945–1946
Succeeded by
Ivan Matteo Lombardo
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