-
Not Synced
Piera, a resident in Poggio alla Croce
-
Not Synced
In these last few years a lot has changed
-
Not Synced
Things were different before, people were simpler
-
Not Synced
They often came into the centre.
-
Not Synced
Now they stay at home,
-
Not Synced
the village is less lived in.
-
Not Synced
Before we were all concentrated on my shop.
-
Not Synced
Most of the world,
-
Not Synced
most of life took place around it.
-
Not Synced
A place to meet, to understand each other,
-
Not Synced
maybe argue with different opinions
-
Not Synced
but still have a dialogue. That was life,
-
Not Synced
in my view that really was.
-
Not Synced
Andrea, who conceived the welcoming project
-
Not Synced
Poggio alla Croce could be defined
-
Not Synced
as “a small Switzerland”
-
Not Synced
Located in a beautiful spot
-
Not Synced
between Chianti and Valdarno
-
Not Synced
Residents are busy at work
-
Not Synced
and like to collaborate.
-
Not Synced
In summer a nice festival is organized
-
Not Synced
attracting people from both valleys
-
Not Synced
When problems arise, like with ice in winter,
-
Not Synced
informations flow over the internet.
-
Not Synced
Looked like and ideal place
-
Not Synced
Then in April 2017 the “bomb” went off:
-
Not Synced
thirty migrants to be hosted in the “palace”,
-
Not Synced
a former hotel middle of village
-
Not Synced
It sounded as if a spaceship full
-
Not Synced
of little black men was about to land
-
Not Synced
Piera
-
Not Synced
Black men are coming. Black men are coming.
-
Not Synced
We are all with our hairs raised,
-
Not Synced
very worried, me too to be honest because
-
Not Synced
you hear a lot of good
-
Not Synced
but also bad about these youngsters
-
Not Synced
Andrea
-
Not Synced
The strongest reaction, intense and wide,
-
Not Synced
was an immediate refusal,
-
Not Synced
a “belly” reaction that caused
-
Not Synced
an immediate decision
-
Not Synced
to collect signatures against,
-
Not Synced
in less than three days
-
Not Synced
230 signatures were collected
-
Not Synced
Even though the Poggio’s residents
-
Not Synced
are around 190.
-
Not Synced
Attilia, a teacher in the the school for migrants
-
Not Synced
A first meeting was held
-
Not Synced
one and half year ago in summer
-
Not Synced
before the migrants arrived,
-
Not Synced
so we did not know them
-
Not Synced
They had no face for us, they had no name
-
Not Synced
I don’t live in Poggio alla Croce,
-
Not Synced
I come from a nearby village
-
Not Synced
During the meeting there were
-
Not Synced
some very aggressive people,
-
Not Synced
I guess they were sincerely scared
-
Not Synced
Martin, parson of Poggio alla Croce
-
Not Synced
Their reaction was not due to being bad.
-
Not Synced
Behind there was also a reality
-
Not Synced
that must be told. It must be told that
-
Not Synced
none was pepared because none
-
Not Synced
had been alerted that these foreigner,
-
Not Synced
these migrants were coming
-
Not Synced
Paolo, a resident in Poggio alla Croce
-
Not Synced
Someone started collecting signatures,
-
Not Synced
and I agreed only because I wanted to know
-
Not Synced
where would these kids be hosted,
-
Not Synced
what did they come for then it became
-
Not Synced
clear that this was not the reason
-
Not Synced
they did not want to welcome them
-
Not Synced
So I said my signature was extorted
-
Not Synced
and was not in agreement any more
-
Not Synced
Luana, a resident in Poggio alla Croce
-
Not Synced
They told us
-
Not Synced
“in a year time we’ll remind you of this..
-
Not Synced
we are scared..
-
Not Synced
I have an 18months old little girl
-
Not Synced
who won’t be able to walk the streets anymore”
-
Not Synced
But I refused to sign in
-
Not Synced
and became the black sheep
-
Not Synced
Paolo
-
Not Synced
They are black, and that may be difficult to fathom
-
Not Synced
Integration is not easy, not easy.
-
Not Synced
Also on their side
-
Not Synced
Attilia
-
Not Synced
There was a bad feeling around,
-
Not Synced
a terrible atmosphere
-
Not Synced
My legs trembled, truly.
-
Not Synced
I recognized kids that I knew
-
Not Synced
when they were little children.
-
Not Synced
And now as grown ups they were scared
-
Not Synced
and said they did not want the migrants
-
Not Synced
because their life would change,
-
Not Synced
it would not be possible
-
Not Synced
anymore to go quietly around in Poggio.
-
Not Synced
No more walkabouts but they shouted
-
Not Synced
all this in a really aggressive way..
-
Not Synced
and I started to tremble and was unable
-
Not Synced
to tell what I meant,
-
Not Synced
that I felt very sorry to see children
-
Not Synced
who had grown up together
-
Not Synced
accustomed to sharing…and I remember
-
Not Synced
there were also coloured children
-
Not Synced
in our classes and they all played together
-
Not Synced
And now I was frightened
-
Not Synced
by what they had become
-
Not Synced
Was more scared of them than
-
Not Synced
of the coming migrants because
-
Not Synced
I could sense a rage and violence
-
Not Synced
that really frightened me
-
Not Synced
Andrea
-
Not Synced
When the spaceship
-
Not Synced
with its little black men finally landed
-
Not Synced
we managed to organize
-
Not Synced
a first meeting in a room under
-
Not Synced
the church that our parson Martin
-
Not Synced
put at our disposal
-
Not Synced
for the whole project.
-
Not Synced
Sitting on chairs in a circle
-
Not Synced
all mixed up some of us,
-
Not Synced
some of them, we played a bit.
-
Not Synced
We sticked a piece of paper on the wall
-
Not Synced
and each and one of us started to write
-
Not Synced
“Andrea Formiconi, italian, speaks italian”
-
Not Synced
Then casually pointed the felt-pen towards
-
Not Synced
one or the other and they wrote in turn
-
Not Synced
Each and one of us wrote his name,
-
Not Synced
which country he came from,
-
Not Synced
which language he spoke,,,
-
Not Synced
A simple exercise that opened
-
Not Synced
a whole world, a universe
-
Not Synced
because it turned out that with
-
Not Synced
fourteen-fifteen of them there were
-
Not Synced
twelve-thrteen languages spoken
-
Not Synced
That some of them were illiterate,
-
Not Synced
you could tell by the unlikely way they
-
Not Synced
brandished the feltpen in their hands,
-
Not Synced
In fact they did not write but
-
Not Synced
drew their name. At the same time
-
Not Synced
some of them attended school
-
Not Synced
and to one exreme there was one kid
-
Not Synced
that had escaped while in his fourth year
-
Not Synced
of Mathematics at university.
-
Not Synced
This helps understand the enormous
-
Not Synced
fan of different human stories and situations
-
Not Synced
hiding behind this stereotype that we call
-
Not Synced
with just one name: the migrant..
-
Not Synced
which prompts the image of one
-
Not Synced
little black man, the same, and his
-
Not Synced
standard story.
-
Not Synced
Absolutely not like that !
-
Not Synced
Malo’, a teacher in the school for mugrants
-
Not Synced
Three of us that embarked in this adventure
-
Not Synced
of the “little school of Poggio alla Croce”
-
Not Synced
without really knowing what to expect.
-
Not Synced
We felt the urge to do something
-
Not Synced
to help these youngsters,
-
Not Synced
and we thought that teaching them
-
Not Synced
italian language was the thing to do
-
Not Synced
also to improve their trust in themselves.
-
Not Synced
As we are scared of them blacks,
-
Not Synced
they are scared of us whites
-
Not Synced
They are afraid of us.
-
Not Synced
The funny thing is that a lot of people
-
Not Synced
were involved who had nothing .
-
Not Synced
to do with teaching.
-
Not Synced
People like Marcie who is canadian
-
Not Synced
with very little italian but
-
Not Synced
she taught italian.. and Willy
-
Not Synced
who is still with us who reads
-
Not Synced
and does dictation
-
Not Synced
and anything else with them
-
Not Synced
I teach in primary schools
-
Not Synced
on Tuesday when finished
-
Not Synced
With my class, often very tired like last
-
Not Synced
year when I taught in first
-
Not Synced
I sit in the car and say to myself
-
Not Synced
“why do you do it ?
-
Not Synced
you should go home to rest or make dinner”
-
Not Synced
then I close my eyes and think
-
Not Synced
“if it is the right thing to do I'll find
-
Not Synced
the missing energies” and there I go
-
Not Synced
and afterwards I am happy because you get
-
Not Synced
there and see those smiles with white teeth
-
Not Synced
and those white teeth of black people
-
Not Synced
those happy eyes...
-
Not Synced
I see Ajan, I see Dedo, the Kurds...
-
Not Synced
waiting for you
-
Not Synced
who thank you for being there,
-
Not Synced
who are looking forward
-
Not Synced
for you to teach them something.
-
Not Synced
(Car noise...)
-
Not Synced
I arrived here a bit by chance,
-
Not Synced
I got to know this experience
-
Not Synced
thanks to Andreas, his stories
-
Not Synced
in university classrooms and I decided to
-
Not Synced
to come and have a look.
-
Not Synced
The question I get asked most often
-
Not Synced
is why I'm doing this, especially because
-
Not Synced
what strikes me about me is the fact
-
Not Synced
that I come from almost 90 kilometres
-
Not Synced
almost two hours by car anyway
-
Not Synced
just to get here.
-
Not Synced
It's not easy to explain,
-
Not Synced
because the reason
-
Not Synced
lies in so many little things:
-
Not Synced
gestures, looks, emotions,
-
Not Synced
the feelings you have when
-
Not Synced
you get in touch with these people
-
Not Synced
which in the end are lives
-
Not Synced
are experiences, are worlds
-
Not Synced
with which you come into contact
-
Not Synced
and of which you often know nothing.
-
Not Synced
(Traffic noise...)
-
Not Synced
(Country noises, chirping...)
-
Not Synced
(Squeaking bicycle...)
-
Not Synced
(Background music...)
-
Not Synced
I go to school in Figline Valdarno
-
Not Synced
every day, On Mondays and Tuesdays
-
Not Synced
I go by car but the other days I ride my bike.
-
Not Synced
I ride my bike. It's not difficult to go,
-
Not Synced
but it is difficult to return
-
Not Synced
because it takes an hour and
-
Not Synced
thirty minutes, It's tiring.
-
Not Synced
When I was in Africa I didn't go to
-
Not Synced
school and fortunately I found myself in
-
Not Synced
Europe and met the people who
-
Not Synced
are helping me
-
Not Synced
and enrolled me in school.
-
Not Synced
My goal is to learn the Italian language
-
Not Synced
I would like to stay in Italy,
-
Not Synced
I would like to work to help
-
Not Synced
my family in Africa. Therefore
-
Not Synced
I have to concentrate on studying,
-
Not Synced
it's my goal.
-
Not Synced
My name is Madou Koulibaly, I come
-
Not Synced
from Guinea and I'm 20 years old.
-
Not Synced
I arrived in Italy a year and
-
Not Synced
two months ago, it was a very
-
Not Synced
difficult trip, I can't forget it,
-
Not Synced
It was very dangerous.
-
Not Synced
I sacrificed my life
-
Not Synced
to seek my fortune in Europe
-
Not Synced
and thank God I entered Italy
-
Not Synced
on 13 June 2018
-
Not Synced
and I was transferred
-
Not Synced
to Poggio alla Croce.
-
Not Synced
I met some very good people who
-
Not Synced
treated me like one of their own,
-
Not Synced
they are like my parents here,
-
Not Synced
not only me but all the Africans
-
Not Synced
who live in Poggio alla Croce.
-
Not Synced
I would like to continue studying,
-
Not Synced
if there is a possibility,
-
Not Synced
I'd like to study and learn
-
Not Synced
a job, for example a welder.
-
Not Synced
(Noise spring water, chirping...)
-
Not Synced
Italy saved me in the sea,
-
Not Synced
in Italy I went to school
-
Not Synced
and I would like to continue studying,
-
Not Synced
I don't know what will happen afterwards.
-
Not Synced
Poggio alla Croce is my village.
-
Not Synced
The path is chaotic,
-
Not Synced
one cannot expect to follow
-
Not Synced
a preordained thread:
-
Not Synced
it would kill this kind of school.
-
Not Synced
So you have to follow the wind.
-
Not Synced
An example would be when
-
Not Synced
Samba had written the curriculum
-
Not Synced
on the computer,
-
Not Synced
then of course you try to help:
-
Not Synced
"Samba, what does this mean?
-
Not Synced
What's this...?"
-
Not Synced
Then we read:
-
Not Synced
"driving experience", so I ask:
-
Not Synced
"Samba, what did you drive?"
-
Not Synced
He light up immediately and says
-
Not Synced
"Cow!"
-
Not Synced
and a whole other discussion
-
Not Synced
started from there
-
Not Synced
about how things change over time,
-
Not Synced
how they change in Africa,
-
Not Synced
how they change here.
-
Not Synced
This is an example of digression.
-
Not Synced
It's a people-centred school,
-
Not Synced
essentially.
-
Not Synced
(Soft music, dialogue in the background..)
-
Not Synced
We all have attics full of old computers
-
Not Synced
and we don't know what to do with them.
-
Not Synced
It's a problem because we have to take them
-
Not Synced
to the eco-center and so we've been
-
Not Synced
spreading this information:
-
Not Synced
"Do you have an old computer?
-
Not Synced
You don't know what to do with it,
-
Not Synced
is that a problem for you?
-
Not Synced
Instead of giving it to the
-
Not Synced
recycling centre, give it to us,
-
Not Synced
we install a version the Linux
-
Not Synced
operating system, a lightweight version
-
Not Synced
that fits into old computers
-
Not Synced
and easily "resurrects" them.
-
Not Synced
The Ubuntu operating system
-
Not Synced
is so called because it is a concept
-
Not Synced
from southern Africa and
-
Not Synced
Nelson Mandela in a beautiful
-
Not Synced
video that we used
-
Not Synced
for a work with the students,
-
Not Synced
describes it with a little story:
-
Not Synced
"Once upon a time, when a wayfarer
-
Not Synced
arrived in a village and he was
-
Not Synced
tired, thirsty and hungry, no one would
-
Not Synced
ever ask him any question,
-
Not Synced
they simply brought him something to drink
-
Not Synced
and food. This is Ubuntu, that is
-
Not Synced
thinking about the other in the knowledge
-
Not Synced
that this creates a community
-
Not Synced
that lives well if we all do that."
-
Not Synced
Ubuntu is a great African philosophy,
-
Not Synced
a great African thought...
-
Not Synced
it's about getting to the help
-
Not Synced
it starts with the fact that we're all
-
Not Synced
brothers, if I help one person
-
Not Synced
that person can help
-
Not Synced
another person close to me,
-
Not Synced
therefore a general connection
-
Not Synced
of society in that we all consider
-
Not Synced
ourselves brothers and sisters.
-
Not Synced
What happened in Poggio alla Croce
-
Not Synced
is Ubuntu, it's definitely
-
Not Synced
authentic Ubuntu.
-
Not Synced
(Chorus of African children...)
-
Not Synced
I think that following a principle
-
Not Synced
where helping someone will help me
-
Not Synced
in turn is good for both, better than
-
Not Synced
fighting with each other,
-
Not Synced
even though in fight wins may be
-
Not Synced
happier than the loser.
-
Not Synced
This principle guides my whole life
-
Not Synced
since I started reasoning I have always
-
Not Synced
used the time I had available in social activities.
-
Not Synced
But not for “goodism”, not because
-
Not Synced
I am good and consequently must do good,
-
Not Synced
help others, help beggars, no.
-
Not Synced
Maybe I am led by selfishness,
-
Not Synced
I think I earn something this way
-
Not Synced
and so live a better life, be serene.
-
Not Synced
You get a lot of rip-offs, but not like
-
Not Synced
those you get When fighting and losing.
-
Not Synced
More like opportunities that leave
-
Not Synced
a bitter taste in our mouth but do not create
-
Not Synced
big problems. There were racist
-
Not Synced
symptoms around and that is way
-
Not Synced
I decided to get involved but basically
-
Not Synced
it was my way of doing things: I am a migrant
-
Not Synced
myself in Poggio alla Croce, moving from town
-
Not Synced
to the country.
-
Not Synced
I choosed to and almost from start
-
Not Synced
it was natural to decide joining this association.
-
Not Synced
It is a way of living, it is normality,
-
Not Synced
no heroism, I think everybody
-
Not Synced
can understand this.
-
Not Synced
When I hear it, the word Ubuntu has an impact
-
Not Synced
because it means “humanity”.
-
Not Synced
In jewish religion we have an expression,
-
Not Synced
“tikkum olam”, that literally means
-
Not Synced
“fixing the world”.
-
Not Synced
And I noticed how relationships
-
Not Synced
developed here; it is really beautiful,
-
Not Synced
because people one by one are slowly
-
Not Synced
“fixing the world” and show humanity.
-
Not Synced
We must concentrate on this positive part
-
Not Synced
of the world because if we don’t,
-
Not Synced
if we do nothing, we are doomed to fail.
-
Not Synced
For me coming here to Poggio is a little thing
-
Not Synced
but it means a lot in my life.
-
Not Synced
This idea of Ubuntu, to re-generate computers,
-
Not Synced
objects tools that were doomed to be
-
Not Synced
thrown away, is what inspired also
-
Not Synced
this community to act and slowly
-
Not Synced
re-generate itself. This is what means
-
Not Synced
the motto “We need you”
-
Not Synced
Our local community was re-generated
-
Not Synced
by your arrival, thanks to your spaceship
-
Not Synced
with little black men, because it injected
-
Not Synced
into us a new need to co-hoperate, to leave
-
Not Synced
our homes and setties, forget about tv,
-
Not Synced
get out and try to solve together a problem
-
Not Synced
for the benefit of the whole community.
-
Not Synced
(words from a malian rap song, music in headphones)
-
Not Synced
I am Samba and I come from Mali,
-
Not Synced
I am an artist
-
Not Synced
But before when I sang with my friends
-
Not Synced
my family was against me making music,
-
Not Synced
but I love it.
-
Not Synced
In 2016 I went first to Algeria then to Libia
-
Not Synced
Then I arrived here two years ago.
-
Not Synced
I have a complicated life,
-
Not Synced
I would like to be an artist
-
Not Synced
a rapper like many italians (Ghali, Sfera Ebbasta..)
-
Not Synced
I would like to do what they do
-
Not Synced
I don’t really know what happened
-
Not Synced
but we have all changed
-
Not Synced
I found out they changed in relation to us,
-
Not Synced
in the begining they would just pass by,
-
Not Synced
just give us a little smile but when they
-
Not Synced
realised we really liked them…
-
Not Synced
I cannot speak for all, but for people like me.
-
Not Synced
When we see a new one we stop him
-
Not Synced
with a “ehi”, and if he is tall tell him
-
Not Synced
to bend down or we can’t reach him, and he
-
Not Synced
calls us and we say “grandmas and grandpas”
-
Not Synced
and he replies “grandpa,grandma”,,
-
Not Synced
We speak italian so we try to make
-
Not Synced
ourselves understood and when we see
-
Not Synced
they reaaly don’t understand we gesture
-
Not Synced
like this..to make them bend down
-
Not Synced
And so they learn and when they pass
-
Not Synced
they ask “nonna, need help ?”..
-
Not Synced
”no, not today, tomorrow”.
-
Not Synced
Some know some english and so I tell them
-
Not Synced
“tomorrow” and they understand.
-
Not Synced
I always said I have No room at home but if
-
Not Synced
I did I would happily take one in One, two,
-
Not Synced
depends on how many I could take in
-
Not Synced
If the house were mine, because in my view
-
Not Synced
they also need to be understood, to feel
-
Not Synced
the good not just through a smile. There are
-
Not Synced
essential things in the life of all, but they
-
Not Synced
leave their families flee from
-
Not Synced
very bad systems, suffer hunger.
-
Not Synced
Maybe we are unable to give them
-
Not Synced
these things We are just two or three that
-
Not Synced
are really fond of them straight from our
-
Not Synced
hearts not from our mouths
-
Not Synced
And they can feel it, as soon as they see
-
Not Synced
us they come for a kiss, for some food,
-
Not Synced
for biscuits, as with a little child that
-
Not Synced
needs to be taught to speak.
-
Not Synced
Some we see more often and there is a contact
-
Not Synced
We spend time but is not wasted time,
-
Not Synced
it is good time. People who saw us doing
-
Not Synced
that in the beginning were critical
-
Not Synced
But now they say “it is true they make
-
Not Synced
themselves loved, but how did you do it ?”
-
Not Synced
How ?, well we talk to them!
-
Not Synced
And soon or later they understand…
-
Not Synced
Slowly things got more stable.
-
Not Synced
These kids are very nice
-
Not Synced
They hurt nobody, they salute everybody,
-
Not Synced
they pass they call you, we reply,
-
Not Synced
at least I do, others won’t.
-
Not Synced
The village is quiet now,
-
Not Synced
it showed the worst of itself because
-
Not Synced
misleading informations help produce
-
Not Synced
bad reactions. Then you learn, you see, you
-
Not Synced
live and living with them is also nice.
-
Not Synced
The way I see it, these kids were like jailed
-
Not Synced
without this group of people that taught
-
Not Synced
them italian and other things ..
-
Not Synced
what would they do ? Lock up thirty kids
-
Not Synced
in a CAS, what for ? For nothing I think,
-
Not Synced
If they are not made active
-
Not Synced
what can they do ?
-
Not Synced
They are all young kids in their twenties….
-
Not Synced
what can they do ?
-
Not Synced
If they do something, if it is possible
-
Not Synced
to make them do something, work, play..
-
Not Synced
then it is different. They can be useful
-
Not Synced
but you must train them, let them in,
-
Not Synced
something impossible to do in two-three months
-
Not Synced
Then you have to overcome distrust.
-
Not Synced
Seeing a black man by your side
-
Not Synced
has some effects. But in the end it means
-
Not Synced
nothing. If you learn to know him he is
-
Not Synced
like me after all Even if I don’t know you
-
Not Synced
we share the same opinion
-
Not Synced
This is logical I think
-
Not Synced
The first village I saw after entering Europe
-
Not Synced
was Poggio alla Croce
-
Not Synced
I will never forget because they gave
-
Not Synced
a new life, an unforgettable experience:
-
Not Synced
the people, the joy, they gave me a respect
-
Not Synced
for society, from day one when they
-
Not Synced
took me around to look for a job, to take
-
Not Synced
the driving licence, to school..
-
Not Synced
and I thought “look, these people ask
-
Not Synced
nothing of you, but give you a lot,
-
Not Synced
a new life..I must give something back”
-
Not Synced
and thought it would be good to go on
-
Not Synced
with them, helping them also phisically”
-
Not Synced
In my life I will never forget this village and
-
Not Synced
-
Not Synced
the people who know me as well,
-
Not Synced
My family,even if not in Italy,
-
Not Synced
they know Poggio alla Croce!
-
Not Synced
It is a big joy for them too,and in my view
-
Not Synced
if they ever meet an italian or european
-
Not Synced
person they will respect them because
-
Not Synced
they have given a good thing, a new life
-
Not Synced
to their son.
-
Not Synced
In future I would like to help with the school,
-
Not Synced
I don’t speak italian well but I could help
-
Not Synced
with the Pakistani who don’t speak english
-
Not Synced
and have not studied. I could be
-
Not Synced
an interpreter between them and an italian
-
Not Synced
explaining the rules and other things.
-
Not Synced
It would help them but also one way
-
Not Synced
to give someting back to society, to the village.
-
Not Synced
You are integrated in this society but now
-
Not Synced
you are teaching other peopleto integrate in society
-
Not Synced
so that they can do good new things.
-
Not Synced
I have a lot to learn still, but people
-
Not Synced
from Poggio gave me a nice life, something
-
Not Synced
difficult to explain in words, but I will
-
Not Synced
always try to give something back to this
-
Not Synced
unforgettable, beautiful village.
-
Not Synced
This initiative (the school) helped people
-
Not Synced
who did not know each other to get in touch,
-
Not Synced
collaborate, become friends..Not only the migrants
-
Not Synced
have a school for italian and mathematics
-
Not Synced
but we all from the village have learnt to mix,
-
Not Synced
live together and it is much better