BEHIND, the Mafia stereotype in Montreal PDF Imprimer E-mail
Mardi, 18 Novembre 2008 17:52
In the beginning of November 2006 Canadian authorities arrested 100 people who were charged with offences ranging from drug trafficking, conspiracy and money laundering to gangsterism. Among those arrested were several that alleged to be high-ranking members of the Rizzuto clan. This arrest was just the tip of the iceberg. In October 2008, authorities revealed the Operation Colisee, a massive four-year police investigation, with a million hours of wiretap evidence that hit the presumed patriarch of Montreal’s mafia and five associates who pleaded guilty to gangsterism-related charges.


All the Canadian media was talking about Operation Colisee. Newspapers such as The Gazette, Le Journal de Montreal, Le Devoir and La Presse did remarkable research into Montreal’s mafia , bringing to life what appeared to be a missing chapter from a Mario Puzzo novel, with a Canadian Godfather in it. This topic, however, made me wonder about the real “good fellas”, the immigrants who came to Canada to work hard, legally, and away from these kinds of crime organizations. How could this mafia scandal have affected them?
To begin with, the Italian community in Montreal is the third largest ethnic group after French and English, and the fourth in Canada after English, French and Chinese. The first wave of immigration was between 1490 and 1947; the second covered the years 1948 to present. Many Italian immigrants found work in the constructions trades, and later built their own construction businesses. Canadians of Italian ancestry can now be found in almost any profession in Canada.

Following my initiative, I met Ana who was born in Italy, and works in the financial field. She declared that despite of the fact that she grew up in Park Extension, one of poorest neighborhoods in Montreal, she is not a bad person, has always worked hard and helped her parents, because family has always had an important meaning for them. “I was raised with respect, with moral values, and I knew what was right and wrong. My mother was a housewife and my father worked at the construction site and they never left the neighborhood. Now I live at La petite Italie. I am proud of being Italian, never felt discriminated and I even joked about the mafia issue, like everybody else”.

Jimmy, on the other hand, was born in Montreal but his parents came from Sicily. He thinks that Operation Colisee doesn’t affect him at all; it was just some members of the Italian community that committed a crime, and like in any other community, if some members do something wrong, that doesn’t mean that everybody else is implicated.

As a matter of fact, Jimmy believes that “there is always a price to pay”, because if you choose to be a drug trafficker then you will pay the consequences. “Mafia is a vicious circle for people who want to make fast cash, because they get greedy, they want more and more money, and finally they get trapped.”

Italians need to stand up.

Giuliano D'Andrea, Chairman of the CIBPA (Canadian Italian Business and Professional Association) believes that this kind of negative news along with the mafia stereotype created by Hollywood, has really damaged the Italian community in Canada. In fact, when people meet an Italian, they think he is connected with the mob or knows somebody connected with the mob, and all this violence and criminal activities are part of the culture.

According to D’Andrea, Italians react in two ways: they either disassociate themselves from being Italians, denying their heritage and claiming they are Canadian or a Quebecker, or they remain silent. They just hope that this will go away, but there is no commitment in terms of trying to fight this. The Italian community is very passive trying to demonstrate its good name, its good intentions by the work it does, and its contribution to Canadian society.

In fact, the Vice-president of CIBPA affirmed that the Italian community has a sense of pride called “L'italianite”. However, when confronting stereotypes, they don’t know how to react, because to overact seems to make the situation worse. Instead, they are very passive. “We are 250 thousand in the Montreal area, which is a huge number, but we don’t have a structure to be able to exhort this kind of problem. I see for example, how well the Armenian community is organized; they stand up to defend themselves. We have a very strong sense of respect in our community as well, but are always looking for the elders to guide the leadership, and in terms of individual rights nobody expresses ‘I am denouncing, I am writing letters, I am starting a campaign’…. but ironically in Italy we do.”

The Vice-president of CIBPA’s criticism of his community is that they should stand up, denounce, not take all this, and recently complained to the Canadian Advertising Council about a very important restaurant chain in Canada, called Vinnie Gambini. According to the complaint, the restaurant’s owners, who aren’t even Italian, exploit the mafia stereotype. They think it is cool, and the restaurant’s setting has a mobster appeal as if you were sitting on a film set from The Godfather or Al Capone.

“They don’t think it is wrong, and I got an answer to my letter where they claimed that in ten years they hadn’t gotten any complaints. Whether this is true or not, I believe they didn’t get complaints because this is the way the Italians react. I don’t think Asians would be acting the same way if someone started joking about Buddhism and its traditions—this is what really needs to change inside my community”.

Rumor has it.

CIBPA works hard to defend the reputation of the Italian community, which has suffered since World War II. When the Canadians fought against the Mafia2Italians, thousands of Italian-Canadians were rounded up, interrogated and given identity papers to carry with them at all times. Even prominent Italian-Canadian businessmen and community leaders were sent to internment camps, such as Petawawa (near Ottawa). While there, they became wary of speaking Italian or advertising their heritage. Many Italians even changed their last names, hoping to disassociate themselves from their heritage. However, when these business men came back from jail and reintegrated into the Canadian society, they decided to create CIBPA. To back up a little, I learned that there was a bigger scandal before Colisee and it was called in French “Le Scandale des Commandites” or in English, “The Sponsorship Scandal”. At the center of all this was the Minister of Public Works at that time, Alfonso Gagliano.

He was referred to as a “Mafioso”, the Montreal Godfather, and there were a lot of negative stereotypical mafia comments made about him. The newspaper, Le Journal de Montreal, wrote ten pages about this mafia story. “This caused tremendous damage for our image and CIBPA took action. We were involved in writing letters, denouncing when we could, because this was more Hollywood stereotype. There was a huge investigation but no Italian was charged. It is not our job to investigate, but to say Stop! The fact that some people are involved doesn’t mean that you have to bring that to our community and make it look like it is natural to be implicated in criminal activities”.

As a matter of fact, Giuliano announced that recently in the States, a national survey showed that 75% of the Americans think Italians are into organized crime, and he feels that it is no different in Quebec. But why is that? Another Italian, Paul Basile, editor of the Chicago newspaper, Fra Noi declared: “mainly because the entertainment industry has relentlessly portrayed Italian Americans as gangsters for the last 30 years. Italian mobsters have even invaded children’s shows, albeit in a more cuddly form. The ‘Animaniacs’ cartoon series features a group of mafioso pigeons known as the Goodfeathers; ‘Muppets Tonight’ boasts a muppet Mafia don and his gorilla bodyguard; and in ‘Babe: Pig in the City’ the gangster bulldog speaks like Don Corleone.”

Lino Saputo, founder of Canada's largest dairy-processing company, went through a defamation campaign as well. There were allegations linking him to the Italian Mafia and the newspapers like La Presse, le Globe, and Mail attacked him. Giuliano remembered that Saputo faced the accusations, based on false rumors, and nobody apologized. People keep thinking that because mafia is very powerful you can buy everything, and this is exemplified in shows like The Sopranos.

Funny but hurtful.

Colisee arrested criminals from other communities, including Canadians, but at the forefront of this incredible operation remains one group: Italians. I imagine that sensationalism and the yellow press could have added more to the story.

As for the future of CIBPA, Giuliano declares that they will continue defending the Italian community, talking to the general public and trying to control the advertising and its negative impact. “Our members need to understand, to be educated about the origin of this mafia stereotype, otherwise we won’t be able to fight against this. And if we don’t care who will? Besides, our Committee is trying to recruit more people, involving them in our activities and starting a debate, because it might be funny, but this is hurting our community. On the top of that, we want to convince people who think that this is not important, that they are wrong because they are missing something”.

 

*Claudia Jara Guest Editor.



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written by BriannaSWANSON21 , juin 18, 2010

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written by coach outlet , mai 31, 2010

"I can always tell a graduate Coach outlet class from an undergraduate class," observed the instructor in one of my graduate engineering courses at California State University in Los Angeles. "When I say, ’Good afternoon,’ the undergraduates respond, ’Good coach bags outlet afternoon." But the graduate students just write it down."
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written by Admin2 , août 30, 2009

Nice Job!
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written by Giuliano , août 30, 2009

Natalia
Thank you.
I did see the article and it was quite nice.

Cheers

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written by Anónimo , août 30, 2009

Cari Amici,
oggi mi e' giunto l'invito all'evento "lectura Dantis-Inferno" che si terra' lunedi 1 dicembre ore 7 pm al Teatro Varasanta
(Carrera 15 Bis n. 39-39).
Da non perdere.Auguri e alla prossima

GMC
messaggio 56

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written by Anónimo , août 30, 2009

Bonjour oubliez Vinnie Resto...
c’est ti vrai que Bottega c’est la meilleure pizza à Montréal!!

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written by Alain T. , août 30, 2009

The history of mafia in Quebec is very old, since 1900, I dont think is going to desappear so easy, just with Colisee?... the Mafia still have too many friends...maybe inside the Goverment too who knows???

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written by Anónimo , août 30, 2009

El éxito y la repercusión de la novela Gomorra de Roberto Saviano sobre La Camorra napolitana,pone de manifiesto que en Italia, una de las nueve economías más importantes del mundo, sigue más vivo que nunca el fenómeno de las mafias que ahogan al Estado y a la sociedad, y que mantienen sus tentáculos en el continente americano....
MAS EN REVISTA CAMBIO COLOMBIA
LA MAFIA ITALIANA Y LOS MANCUSO!!
http://www.cambio.com.co/mundocambio/803/ARTICULO-WEB-NOTA_INTERIOR_CAMBIO-4674825.html

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written by Klye , août 30, 2009

Control drugs at Berri & Ste-Catherine E.,
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written by Martin , août 30, 2009

What the authorities should do is to control the drug abuse among the young people in Canada... the best way to stop the stereotypes of Mafia.
People here start with the famous weed, (it is just a cigarrette) then the pills (Ecstasy) and acid, they make cocktails of all sorts of drugs, (even overdosing) to make the rushes last longer...why the newspapers never talk about that???

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written by Anónimo , août 30, 2009

Para colombiano del comun.
Para usted cuales serian los puntos de convergencia para un encuentro de los colombianos en Montreal sin meterle partidismo.
El Polo propuso conversar sobre los concejos colombianos en el exterior es-que-hay otras propuestas?.Sabe una cosa en Montreal Q.C los colombianos no somos tan estereotipados-La gente se refiere al problema de la droga y el conflicto pero no por ello nos califican(a los de emigracion.En cambio entre nosotros si o somos paracos o guerrillos no hay termino medio?

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written by Colombiano del Comun opina: , août 30, 2009

Si por Italia llueve, en Colombia nunca escampa.
Si ustedes le cambian el prototipo descrito como italiano y lo enmarcan como "los colombianos" van a notar que el articulo Blog de Natalia tiene ,sin duda, muchas coincidencias con el estereotipo colombiano. Desde su llegada al aeropuerto: "Colombiano?? pase a esta fila, abra su maleta, que trae???etc.etc..". En Norteamerica en general se considera al colombiano como narcotraficante, y ahora ultimamente como un pais en donde se violan los derechos humanos y se tienen gobiernos de paramilitares y mafiosos. Y la comunidad colombiana no hace nada, no se inmuta, la comunidad cree que esa tarea de protestar le corresponde al gobierno, que por supuesto no lo hace porque su gobierno está en la mira y muchos de los diplomáticos son paramilitares y delincuentes nombrados por el amiguismo con el gobierno. De paso les digo a los del Polo: no se preocupen que no habrá TLC con Estados Unidos , por lo menos mientras pasen los dos periodos del gobierno de Obama y los tres que le faltarian al Ubérrimo.
La diferencia con los Italianos y los Asiaticos musulmanes, es que ellos se organizan, protestan y participan politicamente en sus nuevos paises de residencia. Es lo que tendriamos que hacer en Montreal, pero sin meterle política partidista, ni oportunismo, pa' eso me quedo en Colombia.
Bravo Natalia, sigues creando foros de discusión. Te felicito.

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written by Anónimo , août 30, 2009

..Tan lucrativo y tan extenso al final quienes ganan son los banqueros que no preguntan de donde viene el dinero.Cuando uno observa que las mafias tienen hasta uniforme y costumbres raras a los ojos de todo el mundo es porque son permitidas y de ello no escapa ningun pais que algun lado tienen su organizacion secreta que se impone por la fuerza y astucia desde luego con algo de ayuda del estado omnipotente.
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written by Anónimo , août 30, 2009

Hoy la mafias se cruzan en los caminos y en la oportunidad que da la necesidad de completar circulacion del dinero esto es inherente al sistema.Por ello las mafias suelen alcanzar cierto respeto mientras no amenazen el poder politico y no se "perraten";
sin las mafias el negocio de la prostitucion,de la droga y el contrabando de armas no serian tan lucrativos y tan extensos.

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written by Anónimo , août 30, 2009

Forza Italia! I love Italy
Fabrizio

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written by Sue , août 30, 2009

My Italians stereotypes are:

very sexy
can cook very very well
great lovers
and they are generou$$!

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written by Rodrigo , août 30, 2009

Pienso que hay demasiados estereotipos en el mundo, es lamentable.

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written by Marcela Barragan , août 30, 2009

Natalia:
No sé si nos hemos conocido o no, pero he leido tu articulo y me gusta mucho tu motivacion para hacer un blog!
Pienso que la comunidad latina necesita mas espacios para expresarse.
felicitaciones por tu iniciativa!
Cordial saludo,
Marcela Barragan

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written by Lorraine Genereux , août 30, 2009

Natalia:
I read your article on the Italian stereotypes...very good. I tried to post a comment not sure if I succeded but essantialy I agreed with the comments and noted that this was similar for most ethnic groups living here. For example all Arabs are seen as terrorists...we know it is not true because we got to know many of them but a lot of people are "scarred" from them....It would be interesting if you interviewed people from this community to see the parrallel with the Italian community.

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