Image:Calogero Vizzini.jpg Calogero Vizzini, Mafia boss of Villalba Calogero Don Calò Vizzini (July 24, 1877, Villalba – July 10, 1954, Villalba) was the Mafia boss of Villalba in the Province of Caltanissetta. Vizzini was considered to be one of the most influential Mafia bosses of Sicily after World War II until his death in 1954. July 24 is the 205th day (206th in leap years) of the year in the Gregorian Calendar, with 160 days remaining. ...
1877 was a common year starting on Monday (see link for calendar). ...
There are several places called Villalba (meaning white town in Spanish): Puerto Rico Villalba is a municipality in Puerto Rico. ...
July 10 is the 191st day (192nd in leap years) of the year in the Gregorian Calendar, with 174 days remaining. ...
1954 (MCMLIV) was a common year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
The Mafia, also referred to in Italian as Cosa Nostra (Our Thing or This Thing of Ours), is a secret society that evolved from Italian Organized Crime in mid-19th century Sicily. ...
The Province of Caltanissetta is a province in the southern part of Sicily, Italy. ...
In the media he was often depicted as the “boss of bosses” – although such a position does not exist in the loose structure of the Mafia, and later Mafia turncoats denied Vizzini ever was the boss of the Mafia in Sicily. Don Calogero Vizzini was the archetypes of the “man of honour” of a bygone age, that of a rural and semi-feudal Sicily that existed until the 1960s, where a mafioso was seen by some as a social intermediary and a man standing for order and peace. Don Calò once explained how he saw the mafia when he was interviewed by Indro Montanelli in the Corriere della Sera, October 30, 1949: “The fact is that in every society there has to be a category of people who straighten things out when situations get complicated. Usually they are functionaries of the state. Where the state is not present, or where it does not have sufficient force, this is done by private individuals.” Vizzini’s onetime criminal dossier included 39 murders, six attempted murders, 36 robberies, 37 thefts and 63 extortions. Indro Montanelli (1909-2001) was an Italian journalist and historian, known for his new approach to writing history in his books History of the Greeks, History of the Romans, etc. ...
Corriere della Sera (Evening Mail) is the most important Italian daily newspapers (first in sales [1]), printed in Milan. ...
Early Years Vizzini’s was born Villalba, a village in a poor region of Sicily, where people lived of subsistence agriculture. Calogero Vizzini’s father was a farmer, and his brothers Giovanni and Giuseppe were both priests. Giuseppe Vizzini became the bishop of Muro Lucano. There are several places called Villalba (meaning white town in Spanish): Puerto Rico Villalba is a municipality in Puerto Rico. ...
Sicilian redirects here. ...
Calogero Vizzini, however, was semi-literate and didn’t finish elementary school. He was protected by the bandit Francesco Paolo Varsallona, an alleged “man of honour”, who supplied manpower to noble landowners to repress farmers’ revolts. When Varsallona was arrested in 1903, the young Vizzini was already a gabellotto – a leaseholder of an estate subletting land. Butch Cassidy, a famous outlaw An outlaw, a person living the lifestyle of outlawry, is most familiar to contemporary readers as a stock character in Western movies. ...
He made his fortune on the black market during World War I, and expanded his activities to the sulphur mines. As a representative of a consortium of sulphur mine operators, Vizzini participated in high-level meetings in Rome and London concerning government subsidies and tariffs. In 1917, he was sentenced to 20 years in first instance for fraud, corruption and murder, but he was absolved thanks to friends which exonerated him. In 1931, during the [[Fascist|Fascism] dictatorship, when the prefect of Palermo, Cesare Mori, was granted special powers to prosecute the Mafia, he was banned for several years from Sicily. According to the police he was involved in several crimes and he had connections with other Sicilian Mafia bosses. He returned to Villalba in 1937, received and respected by the entire village. Cesare Mori was born in 1872 and was raised in an orphanage. ...
Wartime efforts In July 1943, Calogero Vizzini allegedly helped the American army during the invasion of Sicily during World War II (Operation Husky). In the US, the Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI) had recruited mafia support to protect the New York waterfront from Axis Powers sabotage since the US had entered the war in December 1941. ONI collaborated with Lucky Luciano and his partner Meyer Lansky, a Jewish mobster, in what was called Operation Underworld. Husky was also the codename of Australian military support to Sierra Leone ending in February 2003. ...
The Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI) was established in the United States Navy in 1882 in the wake of the American Civil War. ...
Official language(s) None, English de facto Capital Albany Largest city New York City Area Ranked 27th - Total 54,520 sq. ...
The factual accuracy of this article is disputed. ...
Lucky Luciano Lucky Luciano (November 24, 1897 â January 26, 1962) was a legendary Italian mobster with a long criminal history. ...
Lanskys mugshot (see also the full image with profile) Meyer Lansky (born Majer SuchowliÅski, July 4, 1902 â January 15, 1983), was a gangster born in Grodno, then part of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth occupied by the Russian Empire but now in Belarus. ...
The resulting Mafia contacts were also used by the US Office of Strategic Services (OSS) – the wartime predecessor of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) – during the invasion of Sicily. Popular myth has it that a US Army airplane had flown over Villalba on the day of the invasion and dropped a yellow silk handkerchief marked with a black L (indicating Luciano). Vizzini subsequently organised a proper welcome for the Allied troops and helped them to defeat the Italian and German troops. Historians are inclined to dismiss this legend nowadays. The Office of Strategic Services (OSS) was a United States intelligence agency formed during World War II. It was the wartime (but not direct) precursor to the Central Intelligence Agency. ...
CIA redirects here. ...
Mayor of Villalba The American Military Government of Occupied Territories (AMGOT) looking for anti-fascist notables to replace fascist authorities made Don Calogero Vizzini mayor of Villalba, as well as a Honorary Colonel of the US Army. Because of his excellent connections, Vizzini also became the ‘king’ of the rampant post-war black market. AMGOT relied on mafiosi who were considered staunch anti-fascist because of the repression under Mussolini. Many other mafiosi, such as Giuseppe Genco Russo, were appointed as mayor of their own home town. Coordinating the AMGOT effort was the former lieutenant governor of New York, Colonel Charles Poletti, whom Luciano once described as "one of our good friends." Benito Mussolini created a fascist state through the use of propaganda, total control of the media and disassembly of the working democratic government. ...
Charles Poletti (July 2, 1903 â August 8, 2002) was the governor of New York between 1942 and 1943. ...
The Italian author Luigi Barzini, Jr. described his stature and daily life in Villalba in his book The Italians: From the shadows along the walls and narrow side streets, people would come out and line up to see him – peasants, old women in black, young mafiosi. His magnanimous and protective manner, the respectful greetings of passers-by, the humbleness of those approaching him, the smiles of gratitude when he addressed them, all recalled an ancient scene: a prince holding court in the open air. Luigi Barzini, Sr. ...
Political affiliations Vizzini, a staunch anti-communist who opposed the fight for land of Sicilian peasants, organised his own peasant cooperatives in his area during both post-war periods, through which he deflected the appeal of the left-wing parties, maintained his hold over the peasants, and guaranteed his own continued access to the land. On September 16, 1944, the Communist leader Girolamo Li Causi went to speak to the landless labourers at an election rally in Villalba, challenging Don Calò in his own personal fiefdom. Li Causi denounced the unjust exploitation of the Mafia. The rally ended in a shoot out which left 18 people wounded including Li Causi himself. In the following years left-wing leaders in Sicily were killed or otherwise targets of attacks, culminating in the killing of eleven people and wounding over thirty at a May 1 labour parade in Portella di Ginestra. The attack was attributed to the bandit and separatist leader Salvatore Giuliano. However, the Mafia was suspected to instigate many of the attacks. Salvatore Giuliano (November 16, 1922 â July 5/6, 1950) was a Sicilian hero, killed by the alliance of politics and mafia, that governs Italy since its Unification. ...
Vizzini initially supported the separatist movement in Sicily and its main protagonist Salvatore Giuliano. He soon changed sides, however, adhering to the Christian Democrat party (DC – Democrazia Cristiana) when it became clear that an independent Sicily was not feasible. He allegedly helped to capture and kill Giuliano in 1950. Christian Democracy is a political ideology, born at the end of the 19th century, largely as a result of the papal encyclical Rerum Novarum of Pope Leo XIII, in which the Vatican recognizes workers misery and agrees that something should be done about it, in reaction to the rise of...
Christian Democracy, (Democrazia Cristiana), the christian democratic party of Italy, commonly called the democristiani or DC, dominated government for nearly half a century until its demise amid a welter of corruption allegations in 1992-94. ...
Vizzini’s support for the DC was not a secret. During the crucial 1948 elections that would decide on Italy’s post-war future, Vizzini and Genco Russo sat at the same table with leading DC-politicians attending a electoral lunch.
Links with US gangsters In 1949 Vizzini and italo-american gangster boss Lucky Luciano set up a candy factory in Palermo exporting all over Europe and to the US, which police suspected was a cover for heroin trafficking. In 1950, Lucky Luciano was photographed in front of the Hotel Sole in the centre of old Palermo – often the residence of Don Caló Vizzini – talking with Don Caló’s bodyguards. The photographer was beaten up, but he never denounced the fact after receiving an expensive new camera and cash. Nickname: Palermu Motto: Official website: http://www. ...
His tentacles reached the United States where he knew the future family boss Angelo Annaloro of Philadelphia, known as Angelo Bruno, who was born in Villalba. Philadelphia is a village located in Jefferson County, New York. ...
Angelo Bruno (1911 - March 12, 1980) was a member of the US Mafia who ran the Mafias faction in Philadelphia. ...
Death Don Calò Vizzini died on July 10th 1954; thousands of people took part in his funeral, including Mussomeli boss Giuseppe Genco Russo and the powerful boss Don Francesco Paolo Bontade from the Acqua Santa area of Palermo (the father of Mafia boss Stefano Bontade) – who was one of the pallbearers. Even the New York Times reported the news of the death of this local Mafia chief (Sicilian Mafia 'King' Dies, July 13, 1954). Stefano Bontade (April 23, 1939 - April 23, 1981) was a powerful member of the Sicilan Mafia. ...
The New York Times is an internationally known daily newspaper published in New York City and distributed in the United States and many other nations worldwide. ...
Villalba’s public offices and the Christian Democratic headquarters closed for a week in mourning. An elegy for Vizzini was pinned to the church door which said: “Humble with the humble. Great wit the great. He showed with words and deeds that his Mafia was not criminal. It stood for respect for the law, defence of all rights, greatness of character: it was love.” With the death of Vizzini the old-fashioned traditional rural Mafia slowly passed away as well to be replace with a more modern, often urban version of gangsterism. “When I die, the Mafia dies,” he told journalist Indro Montanelli.
References - Mafioso. A history of the Mafia from its origins to the present day (1976) Gaia Servadio, Secker & Warburg ISBN 436447002
- The Politics of Heroin. CIA complicity in the global drug trade (1972) Alfred W. McCoy, Lawrence Hill Books
- Octopus. How the long reach of the Sicilian Mafia controls the global narcotics trade (1990) Claire Sterling, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0671734024
- Mafia Brotherhoods: Organized Crime, Italian Style (2003) Letizia Paoli, Oxford University Press ISBN 0195157249
- Cosa Nostra. A history of the Sicilian Mafia (2004) John Dickie, Coronet, ISBN 0340824352
The International Standard Book Number, or ISBN (sometimes pronounced is-ben), is a unique identifier for books, intended to be used commercially. ...
The International Standard Book Number, or ISBN (sometimes pronounced is-ben), is a unique identifier for books, intended to be used commercially. ...
The International Standard Book Number, or ISBN (sometimes pronounced is-ben), is a unique identifier for books, intended to be used commercially. ...
The International Standard Book Number, or ISBN (sometimes pronounced is-ben), is a unique identifier for books, intended to be used commercially. ...
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