Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
AFP
AFP
World
Gildas LE ROUX

Cousin of Sicilian mob boss fights 'Mafia mentality'

The fight against the Sicilian Mafia involves educating young people, says Giuseppe Cimarosa. ©AFP

Castelvetrano (Italy) (AFP) - As the son of a mafioso turned state witness and a cousin of captured Cosa Nostra boss Matteo Messina Denaro, Giuseppe Cimarosa has seen the Sicilian Mafia and its intimidation tactics up close.

But while many in Messina Denaro's hometown of Castelvetrano stayed silent following his arrest last week after 30 years on the run, Cimarosa organised a demonstration against the Mafia in front of the mobster's ancestral home.

"Now the real battle is cultural.Now you have to change people's mentality," the 40-year-old riding instructor told AFP at his stables in the town in western Sicily, where the mob boss was born and reigned with terror.

"Now the enemy is no longer the Mafia but the Mafia-like behaviour or simply a way of thinking that unfortunately is still rampant.

"We must start with teaching in schools, and then the state has to support those who, like me, rebel."

Cimarosa was disappointed that the turnout at last week's small protest was not higher, but he himself breathed a sigh of relief at Messina Denaro's arrest.

"The Mafia is not as unbeatable as it thought it was," he said, adding that he felt "a little safer".

Wall of omerta

The Cosa Nostra, immortalised in the Godfather movies, had already changed from the ruthless organisation that three decades ago murdered judges and set off deadly car bombs in Italy's major cities.

Those acts of violence trigged a years-long crackdown by the state, and experts say the Mafia has now been eclipsed by other groups in Italy, notably the 'Ndrangheta in the southern region of Calabria.

But it was strong enough to keep Messina Denaro protected for 30 years on the run.

The culture of 'omerta' -- the protective silence that surrounds the Mafia -- was evident to journalists covering the aftermath of his arrest, which occurred as he visited a health clinic in Palermo.

"The mafia bases all its strength on fear, and so people are scared of exposing themselves. 

"They don't want to be mixed up in it, they don't want to risk anything and prefer to turn away -- without realising that this is something that affects everybody," Cimarosa said.

His father Lorenzo had married into the Messina Denaro family, marrying the mob boss's cousin -- Cimarosa's mother -- and "helping" them, including "supporting them financially", Cimarosa said.

But after being arrested, Lorenzo agreed to work with the authorities, and "broke a wall of omerta that until then was very strong".

Threats

For Cimarosa, his mother and brother, the betrayal -- as his father's collaboration was seen -- created a "stigma for me, for my family, that has been difficult to shake off".

They declined government protection, with Cimarosa insisting he would not give up his identity "because of a criminal who I neither know or have ever met".

"We never received explicit threats.But some things happened that made me think they could be messages," he said.

"Years ago, I found one of my horses dead...and then shortly after my father's death his tomb was destroyed twice."

He admits to thinking "practically every day" about leaving Sicily.

"However, I stayed because I believe that this is my mission.Because it would have been too easy to say what I said far away," he said.

"My words have more value if I say them from Castelvetrano."

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.