Leo Valiani

Leo Valiani (Leo Weiczen; 9 February 1909 18 September 1999) was an Italian historian, politician and journalist.

Early life

Valiani was born in Fiume (now Rijeka), on the Adriatic, which is today in independent Croatia but was then a leading seaport for the largely landlocked Austro-Hungarian Empire. In later childhood, he lived first in Trieste, and later Italy.[1]

Career and activities

In 1930, he was sentenced to five years in prison for anti-Fascist activities in the 1920s. Valiani left for exile in France once he was released, before leaving for Spain – where he fought during the Civil War at the side of the Republicans.[2] In 1939, after the defeat by Franco, he first fled to France where he was detained as Communist in Camp Vernet together with Arthur Koestler (who wrote about it in his book Scum of the Earth (book)), before he fled for Mexico. Originally a communist, he started to question Stalin's policies, and his treatment of Trotsky's followers during the Spanish Civil War. He broke with the party in 1939 after the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact.

In 1943, the British Special Operations Executive (SOE) sent Valiani secretly behind enemy lines in Italy across the unstable front between the Allied and Axis forces to Rome. He moved northward to work with resistance leader, Ferruccio Parri, and with Milan's anti-fascist Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale. Valiani represented resistance leaders at meetings in Switzerland with American intelligence officers of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), including Allen W. Dulles.[1]

He joined the social-democrat Action Party (Partito d'Azione) of Parri. As a leader of the resistance in the north, Valiani helped organise the final partisan uprising in April 1945, and put his signature to the document ordering the execution of the captured Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini.[2]

He was elected to the Italian Constituent Assembly in 1946 for the Action Party. When that party faded away – the ideals of a capitalist system with a social democratic face trampled under the conflicting interests of the larger Communist and Christian Democrat parties – he took refuge in historical studies.[2] He adhered to the Italian Radical Party in 1956-1962 and, in the 1980s, to the Italian Republican Party.

Valiani considered journalism as his true career, and he wrote for the news weekly L'Espresso for 35 years, and collaborated with Il Mondo and the Corriere della Sera. President Sandro Pertini named him senator for life in 1980.

Death

A white marble gravestone on the wall of a chapel, with only the name and dates of birth and death inscribed, a small photograph of the deceased and a bunch of red carnations
Valiani's grave at the Cimitero Monumentale in Milan, Italy, in 2015

He died in Milan in 1999, aged 90, and is buried at the city's Cimitero Monumentale, in the main chapel of the cemetery.

References

  1. 1 2 Leo Valiani, Writer, 90, Wartime Foe of Mussolini, The New York Times, 20 September 1999
  2. 1 2 3 Obituary: Leo Valiani, The Independent, 27 September 1999

External links

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