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Taranto, beyond italian steel
Story
Includes 14 images
Credit: Pierfrancesco Lafratta via Visura
Asset ID: VA45202
Caption: Available
Copyright: © Pierfrancesco Lafratta, 2024
Collection:
Location: taranto
Topics: Abstract Action Activism Business Community Confrontation Documentary Emotion Epidemics Essays Fine Art Globalization Human Rights Isolation Lifestyle Loss Minority Motherhood Pandemics Parenting & Family Photography Photojournalism Politics Portraiture Poverty Relationships Reporting Spirituality Still life Theater Workers Rights

Pierfrancesco Lafratta

Based in taranto

Based in Taranto, southern Italy, as freelance and independent photographer. I'm interested in exploring the human behavior, relationship between groups and individuals, focused on social, humanitarian and geopolitical issues. Available...
Also by Pierfrancesco Lafratta —
– Father Nicola Preziuso (71).
Father Nicola Preziuso is a pastor in the Tamburi district and has also been spiritually following for 40 years the workers of the former Ilva company, inside the factory. “I am not a chaplain, anyway. It is a service that I give for free together with my congregation: that of the Josephites of Murialdo, whose mission is precisely about the vocation to work”. About how the district lived the contagion, he says: “I had to fight to overcome clericalism because many said that it was God who sent the Coronavirus. I constantly remembered that the Lord gave us two lungs: one is faith; the other is the reason. People must use both”. For two months, in the house next to the parsonage, the Josephites hosted in self-isolation three nurses who worked in the COVID hub of Taranto and were afraid of going back home and infect their families.
– Adriano Di Giorgio (46)
In 2005 he took over the Orfeo Theatre, the oldest in the city; it opened in 1915 and never closed, not even during the two world wars. He has just finished investing 850 thousand euros, partly subsidized by the Region, to refurbish the stalls area and the galleries. Altogether 750 seats. Since the closure on March, three permanent employees and hundreds of people who revolve around the sector have remained at home: from the external service to grips, electricians, porters, seamstresses, hostesses, companies that do the cleaning, security.
– Erika Grillo (31); Walter Pulpito (46).
Erika is a contemporary theatre actress. She had to suspend the theatre workshops where she taught students from 6 to 80 years old, say goodbye to the replicas of a show and also to the operational phase of some calls for application that she won. The 600 euros she received in March, allowance for show business workers, have arrived. The moment is challenging especially for the human interaction that in theatre has a central role and which, in her opinion, cannot be ignored. Since 1998, Walter has worked for 17 years with an Ilva contractor company. Taking advantage of the cultural turmoil that started in 2013, with the Primo Maggio Maggio Taranto and the cinematographic and theatrical productions that became aware of the city potential, he chose to live on art. Now he works as a musician – playing bass and double bass, loved since childhood – and in cinema and theatre – being the property master or
– Francesco Buzzerio (34); Luca D’andria (29); Aldo Borracino (40). Mimmo Gemmano (47).
In 2019 they inaugurated a concert hall in an old shed, a deposit for rubble and abandonment. Today in those three hundred square meters, in the Porta Napoli area of the old city of Taranto, there is Mercato Nuovo. Or maybe there was: the Covid19 emergency is straining the ambitions and desires of Mimmo, Aldo, Francesco and Luca. The economic induction generated by the concerts also involved other activities and professionals in the city: restaurants, pizzerias and the B&Bs where the artists and their entourage would stay.
– Ilaria Manigrasso (31).
Ilaria is an aerial dance artist who works in a circus and is stuck in Taranto since March. She works in a circus. She does not have a fixed contract, and her work is week paid. She earns the rest by teaching her discipline in private, which at the moment she had to stop. To train, she mounted her tripod in the garden of her parent’s seaside villa, at the moment uninhabited, where she found temporary hospitality. She still doesn’t know if and when she will be able to start working again.
– Fabio Chiochia (32).
Fabio has been a barber since he was 12 years old. At 24 he opened a small salon of his own, in which two receptionists and a colleague coiffeur work. Among them, there is also his partner, currently on maternity leave. The INPS (National Institute for Social Security) pays her the contributions, but paradoxically Chiochia cannot pay her the salary he owes her. To bear the additional costs of reopening safely, he made a 30% charge on rates to customers, whose daily number is halved.
– Giovanni Cianciaruso (48).
In 2017 he launched a start-up with the Apecar Calessino, the characteristic Italian three wheels’ vehicle. He drives tourists around the old city of Taranto. In 2019 he managed to promote more than one thousand tours. Now he is forced to keep his three little vehicles in his garage. Before Covid19 stopped every activity, his association had turned into a company, and Cianciaruso was about to hire the first three part-time drivers, people who are now home without work.
– Marco Tomasicchio (43); Cataldo Ranieri (50)
Cataldo – also know as Aldo – and Marco are two former employees of the iron and steel industry of Taranto and two of the founders of the “Comitato Cittadini e Lavoratori Liberi e Pensanti” (Free and Thinking Citizens and Workers Committee). When, among friends and colleagues, they supported the idea of the industrial reconversion of the territory and the closure of the factory and the pollution sources, they were often asked the question “where are we going to eat, then? At your house?” The two friends, now also partners, have therefore decided to “reconvert” their lives by taking advantage of the voluntary exodus incentive set up by Ilva and investing part of that money in the restaurant business. “A casa vostra” (at your place) is their response to those who believed in no other option than to prefer work (in the factory) over health.
– Ernesto Voccoli (34).
After years of renovation, in 2019 he inaugurated a B&B in the Old Town. A crossroads of stories that were beginning to yield fruit. If it were to reopen, until June 3 it could host only Apulians, and other tourists only after that date. He fears that they will not be enough to cover the costs of sanitation and adaptation to the rules implemented to contain the virus. “Better to remain closed until it’s all over”, he says.
– Marco (36) e Annalisa (36)
Marco, after many years travelling around Italy as a chef, has saved enough money to realize the dream of starting a business on his own and open a sandwich shop, inaugurated in July 2011 with his girlfriend, Annalisa. “Boe”, their small Simpson-inspired venue, soon became a landmark among the teenagers of San Giorgio Jonico, a town 13 km from Taranto. “We put our lives on standby”, Annalisa confesses, “we postponed trips and our wedding for years, to give precedence to our small business. And what protections do we have now?”. Guidelines to ensure social distancing halve the seating and Annalisa and Marco wonder if it is worth reopening.
– Tecla Caforio (36). Tecla used to work as a saleswoman for a multinational clothing company, had an excellent part-time contract and hoped for a permanent one. Because of Covid19, Since May 1, which ironically is the Labour Day, she no longer has the job. The company put all six hired workers into layoffs, not confirming all expiring contracts. Tecla began working in the shop shortly after giving birth, leaving her two sons at home, four months old and three years old. A sacrifice that has not been repaid.
– Federica Cardellicchio (33).
For ten years she has been a restorer in Italy and abroad and then she followed the passion she has cultivated since her childhood: the preparation of desserts in pastry shops. Federica recounts the difficulties, amplified by the pandemic, due to part-time contracts that in reality are something else: “you work even 14 hours a day, and they pay you with advance payments, never the full amount.” At the moment she is in layoffs without having received a euro; her contract is about to expire and will certainly not be renewed. “I’ll have to look for something else, but in my opinion, I won’t find anything before the end of the year. Who dares to hire anyone right now?”.
– Cataldo Solfrizzi
Cataldo has 17 brothers. Since childhood, he and them like have known only work at sea, a resource on which now Taranto has returned to focus. “In these months, with the fish market and restaurants closed, even having the authorization to go out two times a week with our boats, to whom would we sell 70-80 kg of fish a day? Then the layoff took over, which however has not yet arrived and we will not even be able to pay the bills. I had vouchers only for a month – small stuff. If we do not recover, I will have to go and ask for money on loan and hope they will give it to me”.
– San Cataldo
The patronal celebrations at the time of Covid19 changed, too. On May 10 Taranto remembered his saint, San Cataldo. The archbishop of the Ionian diocese, Msgr. Filippo Santoro, held short celebrations behind closed doors, with local authorities and a symbolic procession at sea. The images were aired in streaming, to allow the participation of the faithful.