On January 4, 1939, German Ambassador Hans Georg von Mackensen met
with Benito Mussolini to discuss the treatment of Jews in Italy and
left with the assurance that Italian anti-Jewish legislation, first
enacted in 1938, would soon be toughened up. Despite such
discussions carried out time and again between German and Italian
officials, Fascist Italy is considered to this day a "special case"
in the history of the Holocaust, in that Jews fared better under
Mussolini than under other Fascist regimes, thanks in part to the
Italian population's complacent behavior and in spite of the
government's anti-semitic policies. The story remains ambiguous,
however, due to the varying positions of local Italian authorities,
as shown in Italian-Jewish memoirs (Primo Levi's Survival in
Auschwitz [1959],) and scholarly studies (Nicola Caraciolo's
Uncertain Refuge, Urbana, 1995.) The issue becomes even more
complex when examining the status of Jews in Italian-occupied
territories. One such case, that of southern France and Tunisia
between 1940 and 1943, when Mussolini fell from power, is the
subject of Daniel Carpi's remarkable study.
Divided into three parts to cover different
administrations, Carpi's work considers Italian interactions with
German administrators and with Vichy authorities in southern France
and in Tunisia. As the author defines it early on, Italian
political maneuvering was the factor of two important variables.
The first was Italy's protection of its citizens, including Italian
Jews, in occupied territories (including those where German
authorities were present) for economic reasons. The second factor
was the peculiarity of Italy's war effort, based in part on an
autonomous foreign policy which called for the annexation of
certain territories. These included the French areas east of the
Rhone river as well as Tunisia. Hence, both factors would dominate
relations with French and German authorities in these occupied
territories, and would, for a while at least, serve to afford some
protection to Jews living there.
Whereas in the first two years of World War II,
misunderstandings and disagreements over the implementation of
racial laws in territories occupied by Italy and Germany could be
overlooked, by the summer of 1942, the German decision to deport
all Jews from occupied territories regardless of nationality caused
a quasi-open rift between Fascists and Nazis. It is true that
Italy yielded rather quickly to German pressure in the case of
Croatia and Greece, but when the same request came from both German
and Vichy authorities about Italian Jews in France, the matter was
quite different and complex, which is the reason for Carpi's focus.
German-Italian relations in the matter of
deportations remained ambiguous until the fall of Mussolini
(September 1943), in part because of the behavior of individuals
involved in the decision-making process. Matters were further
complicated by the fact that while Fascist policy against Italian
Jews on Italian soil had been legally applied since 1938 (when the
"Manifesto of the Italian race" was published), a different
attitude emerged regarding Italian Jews on foreign or occupied
territory. The intervention of Italian authorities in favor of
"their" Jews was a matter of primarily economic concern: when the
threat of aryanization (confiscation of Jewish property by the Nazi
authorities) loomed, the Italian government interpreted this as an
attack on its sovereignty. According to Carpi, Jews were viewed as
contributors to Italian economic life around the Mediterranean and
thus were potentially useful for ensuring Italian influence as a
whole. This pragmatic stance, rather than a humanitarian one,
seems to have dominated Italian officials' conduct on Jewish
deportations from foreign territories. Of course, another reason
for Italian officials' ambiguous behavior, to which Carpi only
alludes, may have been confusion over the interpretation of Italian
law. As legal analyst Olivier Camy recently noted, Italian racial
legislation concerning occupied territories was confusing and even
contradictory, whether it sought to incorporate the tough rules in
place in Ethiopia and Libya, or to take into account economic
necessity (see "La doctrine italienne," in Le droit de Vichy
[Paris, 1995], pp. 469-539.)
Generally then, the initial Italo-German dispute
over the Jews took place in occupied and Vichy France and resulted
in a rejection of German proposals either to repatriate Italian
Jews or deport them to the east. On the other hand, the Italian
foreign ministry did consent to socio-economic restrictions and to
the requirement that all Italian Jews wear the Star of David. But
by then, the Italian negotiating position had begun to weaken as
the Allies landed in North Africa, threatening Italian military
positions in the Mediterranean. The fall of Mussolini changed the
situation completely as German authorities took over control.
In the French areas occupied by Italy, Carpi argues
that the Italian authorities remained generally disinterested in
enforcing measures against Jews, at least until massive
deportations from Vichy France began in 1942. The Italian Consul
in Paris, Gustavo Orlandini, then intervened with the German
authorities to obtain the liberation of the Italian Jews who had
been taken into custody. Still at the time, the Italian government
had never officially indicated what policy it was following,
tending to act on a case-by-case basis. The dynamic changed again
when the Vichy zone was invaded in November 1942 and a further
Italian occupation area was established in southeastern France. The
Italians then informed both German and French authorities that they
would control all matters pertaining to "their" own area: even
though the French administration remained in place and functioned
according to Vichy directives, every major decision would first
have to be cleared with the Italian officials.
Soon after, a struggle between Vichy and Italian
representatives ensued about the transfer of non-French Jews out of
the Italian zone and into the German one. Through the intervention
of the Italian Consul in Nice, Alberto Calisse, and in Rome of the
Jewish banker, Angelo Donatti (who represented the interests of the
Italian Jewish community), all non-French Jews (not just Italian
ones) became exempted from any measures which Vichy sought to
apply. This Italian action, in Carpi's view, could only have
occurred if officials in both the Italian occupation zone and in
the Italian foreign ministry were disposed to disregard Vichy and
German laws concerning Jews on Italian-held territory. The
critical result was the buying of valuable time for Italian
authorities--and obviously for Jewish refugees--in dealing with
both Vichy and German counterparts until the Italian armistice on
September 8, 1943 when German troops and members of the Parti
populaire français began their round-ups.
A pattern of antagonism similar to the one between
Vichy, German, and Italian authorities also existed between French
and Italian authorities in Tunisia. This section of Carpi's study
is the most informative, casting new light on conditions in French
North Africa. There, a split of opinion led the French
Pétainistes to fear Italian domination while Jews hoped for it.
Following the landing of Axis troops in Tunisia in late 1942 (to
parry an Allied attack), the Italians took strong and successful
action to protect the approximately 5,500 Italian Jews in Tunisia
(the Germans, fearing a rift, agreed to their allies' demands),
although they did not protect Jews of other nationalities (contrary
to what occurred in southern France). This contradictory policy
poses the question, which Carpi does not consider, of how similar
or dissimilar such conduct was to the Italian treatment of Jews in
Libya, where racial legislation was strictly enforced, also
affecting some Italian Jews. This wider frame of reference would
shed further light on the peculiarities of Italian Jewish
legislation, for example, by showing in what way official behavior
may have reflected, or not, the apartheid-like laws of 1937 applied
in other Italian-dominated areas (such as Ethiopia).
Aside from a couple of misspellings of proper nouns,
the translation from Hebrew reads well and the scholarship fills a
gap in the historiography of Fascist behavior in the Holocaust.
This thorough investigation is at times exceedingly complex because
of the intricacies of tri-national political relations in a period
of world war. One wishes that Carpi had taken additional space to
explore further some of the motivations of the Italian officials in
going the extra step to save certain Jews and not others. As he
himself points out throughout this exhaustive study, protection of
the Jews by the Italians went beyond political and economic
considerations, yet the personalist aspect remains beyond the scope
of what Carpi set out to do in his otherwise excellent book.
Guillaume de Syon
Albright College
guillaumed@joe.alb.edu
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