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Italian Lawmakers Approve 10 Million Euros For Long-Delayed Holocaust Museum In Rome

The measure includes 10 million euros (USD 10.5 million) in funding over three years for construction of the exhibits, and 50,000 euros in annual operational funding to establish the museum, a project that was first envisioned nearly 20 years ago.?

A moment in the Holocaust
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Italian lawmakers voted unanimously Wednesday to back a long-delayed project to build a Holocaust Museum in Rome, underlining the urgency of the undertaking following the killing of Israeli civilians by Hamas fighters in what have been deemed the deadliest attacks on Jews since the Holocaust.

The measure includes 10 million euros (USD 10.5 million) in funding over three years for construction of the exhibits, and 50,000 euros in annual operational funding to establish the museum, a project that was first envisioned nearly 20 years ago.?

Recalling the execution of an Israeli Holocaust survivor during the October 7 attacks in Israel, lawmaker Paolo Formentini from the right-wing League party told the chamber, "We thought that events of this kind were only a tragic memory. Instead, it is an ancient problem that is reappearing like a nightmare.”

The Holocaust Museum project was revived last spring by Premier Giorgia Meloni's far-right-led government. It languished for years due to bureaucratic hurdles but also what many see as a reluctance to examine the role of Italy's fascist regime as a perpetrator of the Holocaust.

The president of the 16-year-old foundation charged with overseeing the project, Mario Venezia, said Italy's role in the Holocaust, including the fascist regime's racial laws excluding Jews from public life, must be central to the new museum. The racial laws of 1938 are viewed as critical to laying the groundwork for the Nazi Holocaust in which 6 million Jews were murdered.

Of Italy's 44,500 Jews, 7,680 were killed in the Holocaust, according to the Yad Vashem Museum in Jerusalem. Many were rounded up by the German SS using information provided by Italy's fascist regime and, according to historians, even ordinary Italians.

“Denial has always been part of the history of World War II, taking various insidious forms, from complicit silence to the denial of facts,'' said Nicola Zingaretti, a Democratic Party lawmaker whose Jewish mother escaped the Oct. 16, 1943 roundup of Roman Jews; his maternal great-grandmother did not and perished in a Nazi death camp.?

“The Rome museum will therefore be important as an authoritative and vigilant of protector of memory,'' Zingaretti told the chamber before the vote.?

The city of Rome has identified part of Villa Torlonia, which was the residence of Italy's fascist dictator Benito Mussolini from 1925-43, as the site for the museum, but details were still being finalized, Venezia said.