Friday, October 31, 2008

MUSSOLINI FRESCO AT MADONNA DELLA DIFESA CHURCH MONTREAL

The Church of the Madonna della Difesa is a church in Montreal Canada. built in 1919 by
Italian immigrants to Montreal, specifically those from Molise, to commemorate the apparition
of the Madonna La Difesa, in Campobasso, Molise. It was designed by Roch Montbriant and
Quebec artist Guido Nincheri.

It is famous for its frescos by Guido Nincheri.

Guido Nincheri (1885 –1 March 1973) was a Canadian artist working mainly in stained glass
and fresco. Born in Prato, Italy, he studied art in Florence and immigrated to Montreal in 1915
after a short stay in Boston where he decorated the Opera House.
A particularly well-known fresco depicts Benito Mussolini; painted before World War II, it
commemorates his signing of the Lateran Accords.*


A statue in front of the church
commemorates “victims of all wars.”

* The Last Centurion Volume I – pages 39-41 Paragraph 3 - The New Rome and The Holy See




Saturday, October 25, 2008

PIUS XII SPEAKS ABOUT BENITO MUSSOLINI

Pius XII speaks about Benito Mussolini:

"The greatest man I have ever met and without a doubt among the most kindhearted: for this I have a lot of evidence to prove it."

As affirmed by Pope Pius XII, . 1952

Friday, October 17, 2008

ITALIAN PROGENITORS

THE WORLD OF AMERICAN AND CANADIAN CITIZENS BORN OF ITALIAN PROGENITORS

Recent Population Censuses in both countries provides the astonishing information that approximately 15 million American citizens and 1.3 million Canadian citizens mark their Heritage as Italian. Most take great pride and personal pleasure of having an Italian family name, attending Italian banquets, and the present popularity of Italian culture. They live in a country both rich and abundant in goods and services in what is generally referred to as "The Good Life." As a result the former wartime period of Italian political, social, and economic history has had little affect, in any meaningful way, on their personal life here in North America.

Now that they have seen and learned how quickly and easily wars are made by their own governments, they may be better prepared to understand how their parent's former country became involved in the military conflict of World War II, which claimed over sixty million innocent lives from 1939 to 1945.

The history of the horrendous period of Italy's war years and immediate post-war years plays no part in their popular knowledge of Italian historical information. They, along with most Americans and Canadians only know and accept the war-time history that they has been told by their governments via a vast network of media outlets over the past sixty years.

THE BIG LIE

We have been told ever since 1945, by every media means known and available to the authors of a multitude of malicious lies, that Italy and its people were forced to live their lives for twenty-one years under a political regime of a very evil, corrupt and cruel dictatorship, and that finally in 1943 Italy was invaded by the Allied Armies of America, Canada, Britain, Australia, and freed and liberated from this period of political terror and crime, and that the Italian Prime Minister of Italy, from 1922 to 1943, was assassinated by “partisans” and his body and others were hung and desecrated in a public square in Milan -- A ruthless and shameful display of civic brutality now seen and known to the entire world, by sixty years of publication in films and photos.

The Allied military presence in Italy began with the invasion of Sicily on July 10, 1943. Fifteen days later Benito Mussolini was no longer the Prime Minister of Italy. His traitorous successors, as arranged by agreement with the Allied Forces, all left Italy for other lands and left the nation and its people to live a life of absolute social, political, economic and military confusion and suffering. The Allied Forces marched and bombed their way northward through the entire peninsula and then eventually took over the government and control of the nation in Rome on June 4, 1944. They bombed most of the major cities and industrial sites from Naples to Milan as they wished, destroying much of Italy’s historically important sites and regions including parts of Rome. Their excessive and now seen as unnecessary bombing raids was a military/political program of callous revenge, terrorist bombings on a country and a people who had no army, no government and no will to continue the war. The criminality of the total destruction bombing of the Benedictine Monte Casino Monastery stands out as a classic example of the gratuitous Allied bombing strategy.

LEARNING THE TRUTH ABOUT ITALY'S IMPORTANT ROLE IN THE WORLD FROM
JULY 29,1883 TO APRIL 28,1945


First one must earnestly hunger for the truth which can become a long and challenging journey. Then one must become a reader of important history books, articles, and documents. A reliance on media outlets for a personal evaluation of what really happened during these years is very dangerous and very often misleading! In Italy today the victorious Allied Governments retain their hegemonic presence with military bases and more importantly in vital National Articles in the Italian Constitution which were drafted in essence by legal and military agents of the victorious Allied Nations.

IF THESE CHAOTIC DAYS OF CIVIL STRIFE AND CONFUSION ALONG WITH THE COMPLETE COLLAPSE OF ALL GOVERNMENTAL ORDER AND ASSISTANCE ALONG WITH A LEGACY OF FOOD SHORTAGES AND STARVATION ARE THE DAYS THAT YOUR GRANDPARENTS, OR YOUR FATHER OR MOTHER, OR GREAT UNCLE OR AUNT RECALL AND PLACE ALL THE BLAME ON THE SHOULDERS OF BENITO MUSSOLINI, THEY ARE MAKING A MISTAKE. ALTHOUGH HE PAID THE ULTIMATE PRICE OF A PATRIOTIC MARTYRDOM, HE WAS INNOCENT OF THESE LAST DAYS OF NATIONAL SOCIAL, ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL CHAOS, DOUBLE DEALINGS, TREACHERY, VINDICTIVENESS AND DIVERSE POLITICAL AND MILITARY COMMANDS WHICH WERE THE ORDER OF THE DAY.

This Allied landing in Italy was not a day of liberation, as is celebrated in Italy each year, but rather an Invasion of Occupation. They, the Americans are still there; in the Italian Constitution, in three military bases and especially in NATO of which Italy is a member. It is unknown if this was a political choice or an obligation of all post war governments of Italy.

LEARNING THE TRUTH ABOUT THE LIFE AND HISTORY OF MUSSOLINI

Investigating newly published literature regarding the fascinating and altruistic history of the life and times of Benito Mussolini, the most disparaged political genius of twentieth century European history, will become a very rewarding enterprise for anyone of Italian heritage. One day the mysterious disappearance of the contents of the of the satchel of top secret personal documents he carried with him during those fateful last days in Lake Como in 1945 will eventually be revealed for the entire world to read. Then the truth of the vast devastating wartime period of Italian history and the nations and men responsible for this worldwide war will be finally brought to light.


N. B. Recommended Reading List: The Last Centurion, Volumes I and II, Rudolph S. Daldin: Mussolini www.Benito-Mussolini.com

Mussolini:A New Life, Nicholas Farrell.

If you read Italian please visit: http://www.filippogiannini.it. Signor F. Giannini is an author of very important Books and ongoing Articles on life of Benito Mussolini.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

PIUS XII THE LAST GREAT ROMAN





THE LAST GREAT ROMAN

In 1941 and 1942, under pressure from U.S.President Roosevelt and others in the Western
Allied camp wanting to soothe any religious objections to the Western Alliance’s military
relations with the Soviet Russia, Pope Pius XII was led to believe that acceptance of the Western
Alliance’s association with the Soviet Union was the lesser of two evils facing Europe and the
Western Christian world at that time. The Pope knew enough about the philosophical creeds of
Marxism and National Socialism to make up his own mind, which he did. He looked to the future
of Germany and saw two distinct social realities on the horizon: Soviet Communism and National
Socialism under the leadership of Adolf Hitler and knew that only one would survive would take
over the immediate political future of Germany.

In the six years that Nuncio Eugenio Pacelli spent in Munich, from 1919 to 1925 he gathered
information about this new personage on the scene, Karl Heinrich Marx, German philosopher,
economist, and social theorist. He soon learned that much of the gathered information was
beginning to frighten him as a man and as a Papal Nuncio. By the time he, Pacelli, was posted to
Berlin in 1925 he knew the life and thoughts of Karl Marx in fine detail. Pacelli visited the town
where Marx was born and raised, Tier, and visited the University of Bonn where Marx was a
student for a year. He had personal interviews with living relatives of Marx and of Jerry von
Westphalen, Karl Marx’s wife.

During his stay in Berlin, Cardinal Pacelli read the records of Karl Marx’s studies at the
University of Berlin. He also visited the boarding house where Marx lived while in Berlin and
went to Stralau where Marx met regularly with members of the Young Hegelians. Pacelli
inspected police records which displayed records of anarchistic activity by the members of the
Doktor-Klub of which Marx was a member.

Pacelli noticed that Karl Marx early in his youth had written a composition titled The Union of
the Faithful with Christ, in which Marx exalted the social and spiritual Christian brotherly love
amongst men and societies. This theme of the value and benefits of Christianity continued in other early writings. Then suddenly this all changed and Marx wrote poetry and hymns charged with
anti-Christian themes which now praised the destructive power expressed in the Faustian phrase
“Everything in existence is worth being destroyed.”

Benito Mussolini also saw the menace of the Soviet Communist threat to Italy and to Europe early
in his political career. He saw that this threat was not only limited to the Soviet Union, but rather was a threat of world wide sovietization and the very real possibility of a Western European
Soviet, not only in the form of an armed military takeover but also a slow peaceful infiltration of
the Western World with the philosophical and political programs of Marxism -- a friendly open
form of Marxism posing as fellow comrades with the Christian countries of Europe -- a
diplomatic Marxism.

Pius XII on Mussolini:" The greatest man I have ever met aand without a doubt among the most kind hearted: For this matter I have a lot of evidence to prove it." 1952

Bea knows what is bothering the Pope. In 1941-1942, under pressure from U.S.President
Roosevelt among others, Pacelli had collaborated in soothing religious objections to the Western
Alliance with Soviet Russia against Hitler. He had yielded to the argument that Hitler was the
greater of two evils. But what if he had chosen neither? Now Pacelli is afraid that he had thereby
helped Marxism in taking over Europe and the whole world. Bea consoles him. Who could have
known that the Anglo-Saxons would let the Russians go that far? 4




4 Cardinal Agustin Bea, S.J. to Pope Pius XII - page 266
The Decline and Fall of the Roman Church Copyright 1981 MalachI Martin
Academic Press Canada Ltd, Toronto

“We are not in conflict with weak and fragile human beings, but against . . . the cosmic dominators
of this murky world, against the spirits of evil roaming through space.” 5

5 Pope Paul VI Illustrissimi - Letters from Pope John Paul I, Copyright 1976 EDIZIONI MESSAGGERO, Padua- Page 136

The Last Centurion Volume II A Political Road To Martyrdom – pages 173 -174
www.Benito-Mussolini.com

Saturday, October 11, 2008

IL DUCE - MUSSOLINI LIVES AGAIN

IL DUCE - MUSSOLINI LIVES AGAIN

Their bullets killed his body in 1945 but their ensuing sixty years of Mass Media Lies and Historical Distortions have proven to be nonlethal. These self appointed Media Masters have not and cannot write an ending to the global magic of the innate innocence and genius found inherent in the exemplary political life story of the Italian man they call IL Duce.
He lives once again in the scholarly heartfelt words of Swiss journalist Paul Gentizon written only a few days after the tragic death of Benito Mussolini on April 28, 1945.

LE MOI SUISSE
LITTERAIRE ET POLITIQUE
Revue de Culture Nationale et Europeenne
7me annee
No. 74 – Mai 1945
LA MORT DU DUCE
BY PAUL GENTIZON

Italy lived through one of its darkest days of its millenary history. After a brilliant career, at the end of an unfortunate war, the leader who since 1920 had appeared as the living symbol of the deepest aspirations of the Italian people, Mussolini, was the victim of a horrible ending.
Nevertheless, his entire life was only a moving and tragic attempt to awaken Roman victories, to convert Italy again into a great power. Often, when he addressed young Italians in order to stir them, Mussolini loved to ask the question:“Isn’t it preferable to die in battle than to succumb to illness? ” As a matter of fact he did not aspire to die between two bed sheets. He would have liked to die in the trenches or, even better, in a cloud of a glorious sky.
But the daughters of Hades, the Parches, masters of the destiny of mankind, they refused to grant him the treatment equivalent to his exceptional life: a death worthy of him.
After wanting so often to force destiny in order to earn the privilege of dying a hero, he fell as a martyr.
He died in order to defend his ideals and his political faith. He died for Italy. He was never a weakling in the framework of his civil, military and patriotic actions. He never despaired. Even to the end he was heroic and loyal. In July 1943, even though he was struck harshly by injustice and by the weakness of men, he never let himself go. From the day following liberation, in spite of the painful and chaotic situation, he went back to work. He recaptured his superhuman strength for the salvation and resurrection of Italy. Within a few weeks he rebuilt a government, an administration, renewed the structure of the party, set up the base of a new army, reformed the state. But it was not to be up to him that the land of his forefathers would be saved. He gave all his strength, his entire heart to his country. He gave it his life. He fought up to end in order to let Italy keep the right to recuperate in the world its place of honor and glory acquired at various intervals, during many centuries, with the sacrifice and the blood of forefathers.
He personified, up to the last minute, the hope and fortunes of the Fatherland. His dramatic death reflects still the ideals of his life.
Many Europeans who had admired him have learned with sadness of his death. Many taken from deep pain wept. Today they can do him honor in their prayers and testify in his favor with the fidelity of remembrance. After several years of anarchy and chaos, he had managed to restore order and rhythm to the entire life of modern Italy.
He was besieged. Every day, there were tens of requests for audiences which had to be turned down. On the other hand, audiences were very brief. And at the end, the majority of those that met him, during their stay on the shores of the Tiber, did not have time to either understand or interpret him. They often captured an erroneous image of him. Thus a legend was born: that of the stout dictator, with broad shoulders, hard face, dominating and decisive. I do not know which reporter dubbed him also with:”the classic head of a tyrant.” He certainly bore the sign of his strength and greatness. And it was for this reason that he would often exercise over those who approached him a true phenomena of suggestion.
The statesman, the leader often prevented one from seeing the true Mussolini. Because, deep down, he was inspired by a true humanitarian spirit.
All those who could be near him in a constant manner could testify to the same.
Born in a small village, the son of a blacksmith, he remained simple and sensitive throughout his life. He had not grown up in a city. He did not possess any bourgeoisie or refined training. Disdainful of all riches, he always lived modestly.
Driven almost directly to the position he held, he had kept intact not only his natural simplicity but also his rural and primitive freshness of impression. During his life he continued to have a genuine attraction for the humble, for peasants and for laborers. Every time he was among them, he would gladly speak with them.
We saw him in the Pontine marshlands speak face to face with an old farmer, on whose shoulder he would place his friendly hand.
Those who at any cost wish to make him out to be an intractable, rude and hard as granite man are completely wrong.
In 1932, during his first trip to Genoa, when the battle cruiser he was in entered the gulf and got near the city, the crews of the ships in port and thousands of people on shore, on rooftops and on hillsides greeted him with triumphal acclamations, with flags waving and ringing of all the church bells, those who were close to him that bright morning saw tears roll one by one down his cheeks….. Mussolini cried openly the old fashioned way, without any false modesty or attempt to hide his feelings. Also when “Horace” was given at the forum, the immortal verses of Corneille brought tears to his eyes more than once.
Power did not spoil him at all. He kept intact his emotional spontaneity throughout his life.
It is impossible to enumerate his good deeds. These include also his old enemies. The old socialists who had fallen into bad times were helped many times. One can count by the thousands the writers and artists who, by ingenious manner, were assured a decent living. Moderation and dignity inspired the least of his deeds.
When he was freed at Gran Sasso by a team of paratroopers, their leader, Skorzeny, asked him what he should do with the men who held him captive and he calmly answered: “Let them go…!”
If clemency depended only on him no member of the Gran Consiglio would have been shot.
In spite of an absurd rumor, he always demonstrated exceptional tolerance when faced with intellectual opposition. His most implacable enemies must themselves recognize his policy of clemency and generosity. As head of the Social Republic and for various reasons Mussolini was fascinating. For years all important foreigners that came to Rome had no other interest but to meet the man who, in extreme conditions had to meet “resistance” head on and many times he forgave the partisans. History will recognize his great heart.
* * *
“One thing is certain: The balance of the Mussolini dictatorship is terribly deficient”: That is how one of our friends states it in a letter sent to us the day after Mussolini’s death. We do not believe that history can ratify this judgment. For now it is not the balance of Mussolini dictatorship that we are dealing with, but the balance of Badoglio’s coup d’etat.
After this war, Italy will not only lose Eastern Africa and Libya, but also the Dodecanese, Dalmatia, Fiume and probably Istria, Trieste and Gorizia on which the Yugoslavian and Pan-Slavic hand is already extending. But we all must recognize that had the coup d’etat of July 25, 1943 not taken place, national disaster and perhaps the catastrophe of the Axis could have been avoided. The Italian people would have avoided not only its actual ordeal but also the total break-up of its armed forces, the disintegration of the state and above all the fratricidal war. The actual Italian disaster is thus not the balance of Fascism. It’s that of Anti-Fascism.
But it could be said, if Fascist Italy had not gone to war, all that would not have happened. “It would have been advantageous for Mussolini not to make a move” an Israeli pen writes us. Evidently, Italy could have remained neutral in this war. It could have, as a small nation, remained out of the mix. By remaining non belligerent it could have enjoyed great financial and commercial advantages. But Mussolini concluded that the honor of a great nation could not coincide with only material profits. Italy had already proclaimed its vital right, and had placed before the conscience of the world its birth, food expansion natural resources, labor, and production problems. To confine itself in a neutrality based on profit would have meant nothing more than a definite renunciation of its centuries-old aspirations.
On the other hand we know what happened, in this war, to Turkish neutrality, Portuguese neutrality, Argentine neutrality. And each one of us understood, from some foreign radio broadcasts, the threats against Franco’s Spain, along with also the possibility of a declaration of war.
By keeping its neutrality with its position in the middle of the Mediterranean, Italy would have been lowered to the rank of a small South- American nation. So we can affirm with full peace of mind that whoever would have been in power in 1940 would not have prevented Italy from taking pat in a conflict where the fate of Europe was at stake and from which a new world equilibrium was to appear. The historic and geographic position of the peninsula demanded the struggle. She had to either renounce the position of a great nation and resign itself henceforth to becoming a country of tourists and honeymooners, or risk everything, audaciously, in order to achieve definite independence.
So war was supposed to free Italy from any embarrassment and give her a worthy place in the world. “Not to act’ would have meant to remain for centuries in definite political, economic, social and moral inferiority. Thus the mistake that Fascism made was to try and make Italy a free, great and prosperous nation. Mussolini dared… but what would have become of Italy if tiny Piemonte, in 1848, had not dared challenge the powerful Hapsburg Empire? No one reprimanded Cavour at that time for having “dared to act”. Of course one would need to be always sure of victory. But all belligerent powers, no matter who they are, and especially those who declare war, are “a priori” always sure of succeeding.
Fascist Italy defended the fate of the future generations of the peninsula up to the end. Today the war is finished. Nevertheless situations of limited greatness remain. They could take on an unforeseen development. What will it mean tomorrow for England and the United States to win together over Russia? The end of the war will not resolve the problems already in place. More terrible ones could appear.

The balance of Fascism?

After centuries of silence and decline, Italy spoke and acted again. After the march on Rome, along the road of its destiny, imposing milliary rocks signaled, for almost a quarter century, its struggle and its achievements. They have a name: roads, highways, railroads, irrigation canals, electric plants, schools, stadiums, sports, airports, social hygiene, hospitals, sanatoriums, redevelopments, industries, commerce, economic expansion, struggle against malaria, wheat battle. Littoria, Sabaudia, Pontinia, Guidonia, Work Permit, collaboration of classes, corporations, Working Men's Clubs, Maternity and infants programs, School Cards, Encyclopedias, Academy, Mussolini Codes, Lateran Pact, Conciliation, pacification of Libya, merchant marine, navy, air power, conquest of Abyssinia .
All that Fascism accomplished is recorded in history. And nothing will be able to erase this astonishing evidence of an indomitable will of creativity and reconstruction.
In the field of foreign affairs, in 1932, At Geneva, we witness the Mussolini project aiming at the abolition of heavy artillery, tanks, war ships, submarines and war planes.
In 1933, a new proposal for peace: the pact among the four, whose acceptance would have saved Europe. A few months later another suggestion for the immediate stoppage of arms buildup. In 1934, the proposal of a new system of pacification of our continent.
The same year, at the inauguration of Littoria, at the heart of the Pontine swamps freed from their mosses and their malaria, the famous declaration: “We have acquired a new province. We had to fight, but this war, the peaceful war, is the war that we prefer.”
In 1935 there are the Franco-Italian accords of Rome. In 1938 there is the Gentleman's agreement with England. In 1939, at the eve of the present war, with the Duce's suggestion: Monaco is the last attempt to avoid conflict. This naked truth is the answers to all the deformations of slogans.
Certainly Mussolini - we indicated the reasons - entered the war voluntarily. But he did not want it. In a document that we will release soon he states with precise words: “In the spring of 1939 - he writes in the third person - the Italian construction boom was full of enthusiasm and Mussolini felt from the beginning that one should not challenge destiny too much. He realized that a long period of peace was absolutely necessary for Europe in general and for Italy in particular and that war, once begun, would have interrupted everything, compromised everything and perhaps ruined everything. With his opposition to war there were also political and moral reasons, like the feeling that the fate of Europe, as a civilization building continent, was in jeopardy.... No, Mussolini did not want war - He could not have wanted war; he saw it drawing closes with terrible anguish. He felt that this was a question mark for the entire future of the Fatherland.” 1)
1) The balance of Fascism?
Here are the statements that M.W.Churchill made to the Italian media on January 1927, during his trip to Rome.
“Your movement has rendered a service to the entire world. It seems that what distinguishes all revolutions is a constant progression towards the left, a kind of inevitable slide towards the abyss. Italy has demonstrated that there is a method of fighting the enemy forces that could fool the masses and that these, led properly, can appreciate the value of a civilized society and defend honor and stability.
And it is Italy that has given us the necessary antidote against the red poison.” (The Decay of Liberal Europe Apg. 178 M. Bertrand de Jouvenel).
The God of battles has already expressed his supreme sentence. At the end of this gigantic struggle, the rich populations, well provided with all the earth's wealth, defeated the underprivileged populations with high demographic potential. Germany and Italy are defeated. Both had asked, as a right to life, what they considered legitimate.
For the right of possession, for cultural and sacred egoism, the other powers refused to grant them. Who was right, who was wrong? We will leave the difficult decision to future generations.
For the peninsula, the Mussolini era ended. One day, history will pronounce the glorious harvest, weapons at hand, under the emblem of the fasces. Even though she had to fight in extremely difficult conditions, even though the naval superiority of England made great victories impossible, Mussolini’s Italy, before its setbacks, had unquestionable successes. Its armies left their mark from the torrid sands of Libya to the icy fields of Russia. Its horses drank from the water of the Guadalquivir, the Dnieper and also from the sources of the Nile. Its flag flew on the Atlantic up to near the English Channel. After an epic run along the African shores, its battalions arrived up to the gates of Alexandria and, for the first time since antiquity, the land of the Pharaohs again saw the insignia of Rome.
Therefore, in the entire world, the Italian and Fascist cause certainly did not lack incensers. But only a change in the wind was needed for the cowards and pusillanimous to bring their miserable incense to the opposite camp. And it was within Italy itself that the phenomena took on its most revolting aspect.
Even the same victory of the other war had been threatened, from 1919 to 1922, by a group of defeats, saboteurs and quitters. 1)
This time the rottenness took on a national characteristic.
Italy surrendered because of the loss of its sons rather than because of the fighting valor of its enemies; she defeated herself, because of its defeatism attitude.
Italians have a terrible defect. Besides possessing the highest of qualities: quick and acute intelligence, personal courage, a natural propensity pushes them towards skepticism, doubt, minimal effort.
They are easily liberal with nice reassurances, but too often there is a lack of continuity between words, between thought and action. They become easily partisan. They are dominated by personal interests. They do not possess the cult of civic obedience. Furthermore, raised in the heart of catholic universalism, they remained for centuries devoid of a true military spirit and completely indifferent to the glory of their fatherland. The truth is that, either because of the mental sub-strata of its people, or because of its history, “…Italy was never able to become a nation like the others”. 2)
One could write a high interest history essay that would prove that the Italian defeatist of 1915 – Germanophilists then – were the Germanophobes of 1940-1945
The sentence is from Renan.
Nevertheless the Italian war would have kept its normal attitude up to the end if the about-face King and the Joint chiefs of Staff had not acted as fermentation of madness and decay.
Having lost its cohesion, distorted its conscience, the country, in great majority, gave in to laxity, to indifference, to misunderstanding. It lost control of its nerves.
It forgot that what was in play today was not only a political doctrine, or a luxury object, but the inheritance of the forefathers, the future of the race, the land for its children, the daily bread, dignity, honor, freedom, national independence. And it’s because of this that the future will probably direct a sharp accusation against those responsible. Future generations will repudiate them for deliberately bringing the country to the brink of disaster and for having prevented, perhaps for centuries, its free and worthy return to the field of great history.
But if there is a name that, in this entire drama, will remain pure and immaculate, it will be that of Mussolini.
In all circumstances and in the most atrocious hardships, IL Duce kept unassailable firmness. He did not commit any errors. He remained faithful to his honor up to his death: he did not capitulate.
And it’s because of this reason, without speaking about his faithful followers, the enemies themselves – if they maintained in their heart the notion of human nobility – cannot help but pay homage to his tomb as a sign of respect and admiration. Especially in Switzerland, his death must ring out painfully in the hearts of all those who remember how much this man loved our country, to the point that multiple times his voice was raised in our favor and at times of hardship he placed himself fraternally at our side.
During the time of success and glory, our authorities named him “doctor honoris causa” of the University of Lauzanne, and he was offered, in a solemn display, a copy of the bust of Marcus Aurelius recovered in Avenches. An official publication, the Historic and Biographic Dictionary of Switzerland, mentions him along with Romain Rolland, among the foreigners that honored our country. So we too can, at this painful hour, without any reservation, direct an emotional thought as we remember this man of great intelligence and action. He suffered terribly. He was betrayed by his own people. The same ones, who had exalted him and who marched under the shadow of his glory, sold him out for thirty pieces of silver. Among the millions of fellow countrymen to whom he had given the pride of being Italian, not one of them was there, at the supreme hour, to cover him piously with the shroud and close his eyes. It is the fate of great men to be crucified, stabbed, cast into deserted islands. He was among the greatest. From high above he dominated all who surrounded him.
He was greater than Italy and he tried to raise her above herself, to raise her at the level of the greatest empires. But neither the lungs nor the heart of his countrymen were strong enough. Italy’s weakness paralyzed the strength and the charge of its leader.
Had he won this war, he would have been crowned a universal genius and divine and his fatherland, in spite of its many wounds, would have found not only its full territorial integrity and its empire, but also the halo of glory which had surrounded her in antiquity.
Defeated, he is destined to submit to contempt and the radios of the world proclaimed him the antichrist, Lucifer, or Cesare da Carnevale. Just like Napoleon when he died.
But time places everything back in its place. History will not be able to vilify his memory and it will render him justice. His blood will not have been shed in vain. More than anything else it is that of martyrs that nourishes the life of the people. In life, Mussolini had already his legend; it will grow.
But, following the renaissance, Italy tasted so much vitality as during the great period under IL Duce.
In institutions, in the Mussolini codes there was like a thrill of a new world. Then, from the Alps to the Nile, from Spain to the Volga, the scorching blood of Italian soldiers inundated this land. In the air there shone a sun full of glory. Well, no matter what happens in the future, this past will not die. The excitement that he poured not only in Italian veins, but in the arteries of the world, will continue to boil. To the people in turmoil he pointed out one of the roads to salvation. Defeat makes one retreat along the same road taken before. Others, later, will take again this great main road, the Appian Way of history. Innumerable fruits will spring forth from his experience, from his faith, from his martyrdom. One day Mussolini will become an image and idea. He came to know triumph and adversity. He reached fame. He will continue to live in the mind. He will be asked for examples, lessons, a doctrine. The prestige of his name will remain intact. He will remain one of the greatest architects of the transformation of Europe and the world. He will appear in future centuries as one of the most efficient revolutionary forces of history.

Paul Gentizon
1885-1955

English Translation Copyright:
Rudolph S. Daldin 2008
Order of The Roman Eagle
Windsor, Ontario, Canada
Translator: Sig. Espedito Quaglia er.quaglia@sympatico.ca
http://www.benito-mussolini.com/