Genova 1960 (1960)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
The CGIL's political commitment reached its peak in the summer of 1960, when it single-handedly proclaimed a general strike against the Tambroni government, backed by the MSI neo-fascists,
Roma 1960 (1960)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
responsible for harsh repression and serious massacres during some popular demonstrations in Genoa, Rome, Reggio Emilia and Sicily.
Reggio Emilia 1960 (1960)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
"What was under discussion in Genoa? - Luciano Romagnoli will write -And, after that, in Licata, Rome and Reggio Emilia? What was under discussion in the country? It was the very foundation of the democratic state: antifascism, resistance and the Republican Constitution."
Sottoscrizione dei lavoratori metalmeccanici 1961 (1961)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
"Fascism for Italian workers today," Vittorio Foa will say, "is not only the remote and nostalgic echo of the 'squadracce' and the eagles and the barbaric trappings of the Mussolini era, but is, in the changed conditions, arbitrariness in place of justice
Manifestazione antifascista Modena 1961 (1961)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
subordinate discipline in place of equal rights and duties (...), corruption and disempowerment, lack of perspective, the contrast between gigantic profits and stagnant wages."
Attentato alla sede 1964 (1964)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
The CGIL resists. And it wins. And that bothers the fascists who return to attack its headquarters on January 8, 1964.
Attentato alla sede confederale 1964 (1964)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
"They wanted to hit the headquarters of a major workers' organization," Fernando Santi will tell the Chamber of Deputies the following January 28.
Attentato alla sede confederale 1964 (1963)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
"I lived through the painful experience of postwar 1919-20; I know what fascism meant to Italy and what it did in order to prevail with violence and blood, and we recognize fascism a mile away because its calling card."
Manifestazione 1964 (1964)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
"But it is not only necessary to repress; it is also necessary to prevent and to put these movements once and for all in a condition where they do not harm the cause of the workers we represent, nor the cause of democracy and public order to which we are all attached."
Il 1969 degli operai (1969)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
1969 is the year of the union's final establishment as a political entity.
VII Congresso Cgil 1969Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
At the VII Congress in Livorno, the CGIL chose incompatibility between union and party positions, strengthening its political autonomy.
Unitary demonstration of Fiat workers (1971-05-18) by Author unknownArchivio storico CGIL nazionale
The climax was reached with the "hot autumn" of the metalworkers, when the category succeeded in renewing the contract, achieving great gains in democracy, wages, hours, rights and power in the workplace.
Statuto dei lavoratori (1969)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
Much of these achievements would find their way into Law 300/1970, the Workers' Bill of Rights.
Strage di Piazza Fontana 1969 (1969)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
The neo-fascists do not like this and at 4:37 p.m. on Friday, December 12, 1969, a device explodes in the central hall of the National Bank of Agriculture in Milan: it is the Piazza Fontana massacre.
Funerali delle vittime di Piazza Fontana (1969)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
After the massacre, on the occasion of the victims' funerals, CGIL, CISL and UIL in Milan decided to call a general strike. A decision that profoundly affects that day, with the labor forces lined up to defend democracy and against subversion.
Da Piazza Fontana a Brescia (1974)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
It is unfortunately only the first of many, far too many massacres. Slaughters united by a single, terrible color: black.
Strage di Brescia 1974 (1974)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
On May 28, 1974 in Brescia, a bomb exploded in Piazza della Loggia during a union unity demonstration.
Strage di Brescia 1974 (1973)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
È una strage fascista; i morti sono otto, di cui cinque attivisti della Cgil.
Strage di Brescia 1974 (1974)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
The authorship of the massacre is claimed by 'Ordine Nero' and 'Anno zero-Ordine Nuovo'.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, southern Italy is torn through by various movements of social claims.
Reggio Calabria 1970 (1970)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
Far-right organizations are responding to this wave of protest on the one hand with a series of bomb attacks, and on the other hand by trying to accredit themselves to the cry of 'hangman's row' as representing the interests of the struggling population.
Reggio Calabria 1972 (1972)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
In response to these attacks, the Cgil, Cisl and Uil metalworkers' unions (along with the construction unions and the Federbraccianti CGIL) decided to organize a large rally of solidarity alongside the workers in Calabria.
Reggio Calabria 1972 (1972)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
The rally held for October 22, 1972 is strongly supported by Bruno Trentin, Pierre Carniti and Giorgio Benvenuto. Along with them are in town Luciano Lama and Rinaldo Scheda, at the head of the CGIL construction workers is Claudio Truffi, at the head of the Federbraccianti Feliciano Rossitto.
Reggio Calabria 1972 (1972)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
Neo-fascists will attempt to prevent the arrival of the protesters with a series of attacks on the night of October 21-22.
Reggio Calabria 1972 (1972)Archivio storico CGIL nazionale
"The train that took emigrants away - Pierre Carniti will say - they wouldn't allow it to come back (...) And today, as fifty years ago, this reaction confirms that fascism with the truncheon and the TNT is serving the employers and agrarians against the workers."
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