THE ACT OF WRITING HAS ALLOWED ME TO EXIST. ARTICLES, reports, stories, editorials – it’s a line of work that has always been more than just a job for me. It has merged with my life. If anyone hoped that living under extreme circumstances would lead me to hide my words away, they were wrong. I have not hidden them and I have not lost them. Every day has been a struggle, it is true. A silent one-to-one combat. A kind of shadow boxing. Writing was the only thing that allowed me to survive. My words stopped me from losing myself. From giving up. From despair.
Over the past few years I have written from at least ten different apartments, none of which I inhabited for more than a few months. Most of them were small, some were minuscule, and all of them were infernally dark. I always wanted them to be lighter or more spacious, to have a terrace, or at least a balcony.
I wanted a balcony in the same way that I used to want to travel: to see distant horizons. A chance to be outside, to breathe, to look around. But no-one would rent me an apartment with a balcony. And I had no choice in the matter. I have not been allowed to go out apartment-hunting on my own. I was never allowed to decide where I lived. And then, as soon as people found out that I was living on a certain street or in a particular building, I had to move.
I am not the first person to go through this, of course. I would visit an apartment that the carabinieri had selected and negotiated the terms for me, but as soon as the owner recognized me, he would say something like: “I really admire your work, but I can’t get into trouble, I have so many problems as it is,” or else: “If I was on my own, it wouldn’t be a problem, but I have kids and a family, you see, and I have to think of their safety,” or (the third and final variant): “I’d give it to you right away, and for nothing too, but the other people in the building would crucify me. You know, people here are scared.”
And then there are the grave-robbers. They start off by siding with you – “Sure, I’ll rent it to you, no problem” – and then they ask you for four times the usual rate. “I’m happy to put myself on the line for you, really, but you know how it is, it’s so expensive here.” These were the usual reactions, from people who did not want to take sides (in this case, mine), but there were also others – people I did not even know – who offered me refuge: a room, friendship, warmth. I have not always been able to accept their offers because of security concerns, but I always got some writing done in places that were filled with warmth and kindness.
Many pages among these pieces were not written in homes at all, but in hotels. I have been to so many in the last few years that they all look the same – and I hate them all equally. Dark rooms. Windows that don’t open (sometimes no windows at all). No air. At night, you sweat. You turn on the air-conditioning so you can breathe, but then the sweat dries on your body and the next day it hurts to swallow. Abroad, when I travelled to one of those cities I had always dreamed of visiting, the only view I had was from my hotel room or the armoured car.
I am not allowed to go for a walk, even with bodyguards. Sometimes I cannot stay in the same hotel for more than one night at a time. The calmer the place, the more civilized it is, the farther away it seems to be from crime and the Mafia; and the safer I feel, the more they treat me as though something might explode at any moment. They try to be nice about it, and they are well organized too. But you never really know if they are giving you the kid-glove treatment or if they are actually wearing bomb-disposal gloves. Are you a gift-wrapped present or a parcel bomb?
More often than not I have stayed in rooms in the carabinieri barracks. I smell the leather polish they use on their boots. I hear the football game on television. I notice how they curse when the other team scores a goal or when they have to go back to work. Saturdays, Sundays, every godforsaken day it’s the same. I live in the hollow belly of a big old mechanical whale. Meanwhile, outside, people are on the move. You hear their voices. There is sunshine. It is summer already. And you know that where you are . . . you know that if you could leave this place, you are only a few minutes away from the building where they once said, “Oh, you’re going at last,” and that only five or ten minutes down the road is the sea. But you cannot go there.
You can, however, write. You have to write. You have to and you want to. What you have to avoid is the cynicism that is the mark of many professional writers, barely concealing a disdain for anything that does not have a specific goal or plan. And equally there is the detachment of the writer whose aim is only to turn out a good book, to construct a story, to polish his words until they have achieved an elegant and recognizable style. Is that what a writer does? Is that what turns a text into literature? As far as I am concerned, if that is the case, I would rather not write. I have no wish to be like them.
Cynics feel the need to destroy everything that is wanted or desired. Cynicism is the camouflage that desperate people unwittingly wear. Cynics see everything in terms of sly manipulation leading to self-improvement, they treat people who want to bring about change as jejune young witch doctors, and they attack the ambition to write for a popular audience as a form of posturing fit only for a talking head. Nothing can be taken away from them, they with their constant sneers, because they know that everything will end badly anyway, and because they recognize nothing worth fighting for. They will never be chased out of their homes, homes that are often decorated with much thought and taste. Their art and their ideas about language resemble their homes, and they never want to abandon the boundaries of these well-furnished spaces. Safe within their privileged disillusionment and well-cushioned lifestyles they can have no idea of what the business of writing really means.
Writing has become a way for me to express the pain that I felt early on, when the swirls of accusation and defamation increased in tandem with the sales of my book. At first, when the usual zealots wrote about my commercial success, I gave myself ulcers from the fury.
“He’s written another one.” “I am going literally to rewrite his articles.” “I can prove he’s a liar.” “At twenty-six, you play soccer, you don’t write like this.” “He’s a Latin lover.” “He’s a junkie in hippy garb.” “He’s some politician’s puppet.” “I made him who he is and, believe me, I know all his weaknesses.” “That man’s just after money and fame.” Today, when I re-read these idiotic comments made by people who either craved publicity or were simply bitter, I feel like laughing. I have collected them in a sort of “stupidary”, which I would recommend everyone keeps, especially anyone who comes from a South like my South, where you have to sell your soul and castrate your dreams simply to earn the right to breathe.
In my stupidary I have a space for the letters I received from lawyers of so-called friends or relatives of someone I wrote about, in which they say, in so many words: pay up or we’ll accuse you of lying or plagiarism or else we’ll get the press onto you and “the media will kill you”. Reactions like this made plain to me just how much of a nightmare I had become for people like that. People who thought they could control my stories. But my readers had already taken my words and turned them into instruments for change. They became everyone’s stories.
The whole experience seemed unreal to me. Then, one day, when we were at the Swedish Academy, Salman Rushdie said to me: “The dead – that is, those people who have to prostitute themselves or water down their principles to write, people for whom your very existence means that an individual may behave differently – do not love life. You cannot have any idea how much you upset those people.”
Over time I have come to appreciate just how much I upset those people. They detest my way of writing, being and appearing. They would like me to disappear. They want me to be more discreet. They would much rather I did not lecture at universities or appear on prime-time television. They would much rather that there were only escapism and entertainment on their screens, so they could have the monopoly on seriousness. Over time, I have learned to measure the value of my words by the enemies they make me. When someone tells me that I have been attacked in certain newspapers, by such and such a person, or on a particular television show, I know that I have done well. I know that the more people try to shut me up, the more fear my words inspire. The more drivel spouted by hot-and-bothered intellectuals, the more penetrating are my barbs.
All of this really does make me appreciate those who read me without resorting to insult and slander, fabrications and lies. Only a loyal critic can help me grow and improve. The totalitarian mindset that lies behind the cynicism of certain media channels is my worst enemy, and it is also an ally (often without being conscious of it) of criminal power. If you are trying to show that everyone is dirty, everything is rotten, and that behind every attempt at change is a hidden lie or agenda, then one thing equals another and everything is fair and possible. This attitude is the means whereby people are “honestly” corrupted, to accept compromises, to retreat, somehow to survive the everyday pornography of seeing terrible things at close quarters, even getting pleasure from them. Everything can be justified by the belief that things have always been like this, everybody does it – or, worse still, there is no possible way out.
For me, the act of writing is the opposite of all this. It is itself a way out. It is a way of inscribing my words on the world, of passing them on like a clandestine message; one of those notes you have to read, memorize and destroy: chew it up, let your saliva break it down, so the message is properly digested. Writing is a form of resistance; writing is resisting. “Resistance and Resisting”, Enzo Biagi’s television interview with me, was built around this idea.
My work over the past few years has also allowed me to meet people I will never forget. Enzo Biagi, for instance. I had the chance to meet him and to have him focus his attention on me. I witnessed first-hand how this old man still made the effort to understand for himself our era and our country by asking questions of others. It is not enough that I bade him farewell at his funeral or wrote a page or two about him after his death. We need to pay attention to him now, to keep him with us a little longer. This is what words can accomplish when they are brought together in a book, united in the name of something that lasts.
And then there was Miriam Makeba, the great “Mama Africa”, whose voice sang for the freedom of her continent and who died in Castel Volturno after a concert she gave in memory of six brothers who were killed by the Camorra. She came to express her solidarity with me, although we had never met, even though she did not even know the name of my enemy. She was not well, but she came anyway. The woman who once filled whole stadiums sang for a small group of us. And she died in my land, which by extension also became hers. From now on, the struggle for that land, which is my own struggle and the struggle of anyone who chooses to make it theirs, will carry the name of Miriam Makeba on its invisible flag.
I was escorted into the Barcelona stadium by Mossos, the Catalan special forces unit. At first they insisted that I watch the match from a bulletproof glass cube, but eventually they were moved to compassion and spared me that grotesque form of imprisonment.
At the stadium I met Lionel Messi, Barça’s Argentine forward, the boy who perfectly succeeded in recreating Diego Armando Maradona’s famous goal. Messi’s baby face reveals no hint of the suffering he experienced from years of daily hormone injections, which helped him grow into a champion, one of the greatest players of our time. His nickname is still “the Flea”.
Despite his prodigious talent, it seemed impossible that Messi would ever be able to compete alongside the titans of the game. But even football can be a kind of resistance, an art form that can come alive in every new centimetre of elongated bone and in every strip of flesh grown around it. If I could have one wish – and if this were a fairy tale – it would be that my pages resemble the way Lionel Messi runs towards his opponent’s goal, faster and faster, the ball glued to his foot all the way. He would not have to score. He could pass it to one of his teammates. Because it is not the goal that counts. It is the forward movement. The dribbling, the feinting, never losing control of the ball.
Unlike Messi, I have to glance over my shoulder now and then. And that is how I know for whom this book is not written. I know it will not be read by all the people I grew up with, people who are happy enough just to get by, who spend their time sitting at the bar and cursing, day in, day out. It is not written for those who are resigned to keeping things the way they are, or for lazy cynics. For those who are content to spend an evening at the festa di paese or at the local pizzeria. For those who are still there after all these years, swapping girlfriends, choosing from the ones left over as if they were a pair of old shoes in a dusty box at the back of the wardrobe. For those who believe that becoming an adult means hitching up to the failures of another, rather than joining forces in a shared challenge. This book is not directed to them.
Naturally, we know for whom we write, but we also know for whom we do not write. I am not writing for them. I am not writing for people in whom I recognize nothing of myself, nor am I writing letters to a past I cannot and no longer want to reconnect with. I know that if I look over my shoulder I risk ending up like Lot’s wife, turned into a pillar of salt when she gazed upon the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. That is what pain does when it is senseless and has no outlet: it petrifies you. Your tears – especially those you cannot shed – run into your bitterness and hatred, forming small crystals that in turn become a fatal trap. That’s why, when I glance over my shoulder, the only thing left in which I recognize part of myself and that manages to trace my perimeter and path like the chalk outline of a living and breathing body, are my words. For this reason I have chosen to include here a few pieces written before Gomorrah, as a gift to those for whom this book is meant.
This book is dedicated to my readers. It goes out to those who absorbed my words, who passed them on to friends and family, who used my book in schools. To those who gathered in piazzas across Italy to read aloud from it, proving that my story had become everyone’s story, because my words had made it so. This collection goes out to all these people, without whom I am not sure I would have been able to carry on, to write, and therefore to resist, to exist, to think about the future. My readers reminded me that my life in a bulletproof bubble is, after all, still a life. Without them I would never have received so much attention. I would never have made it on to the front pages or on to prime-time television. If I had not had so many readers who did something to my book – making it more than an object to put back on the shelf after reading – none of this would have been granted to me. And if I became a media sensation, it is thanks to my readers.
I have, over the years, come to realize the value of the media. When you take away the emptiness, the gossip, and the background dramas, which do nothing but distract and entertain people, and when there is the desire and will of people to learn and to bring about change, why cannot the media – the many mediums available to us – be used to unite those forces? Why are we so suspicious and afraid of it?
But I understand the fear. It reminds me of something strange, and difficult to explain. In all of my interviews, in every country where my book was published, I am invariably asked, “Aren’t you afraid?” The question obviously refers to the fact that I might be murdered. “No,” I reply, and stop there. Later I wonder how many people believed me. But it is true. I had – and still have – a lot of fears, but I rarely feel the fear of dying.
My worst fear – and it constantly returns – is that they will manage to ruin me, to destroy my credibility and drag my name through the mud. They did it with everyone who tried to denounce them. They did it with Don Peppino Diana, the priest they murdered. They smeared his reputation the day after he died. They did it to the union leader Federico Del Prete, who was massacred in Casal di Principe in 2002 and slandered on the day of his funeral. They did it to Salvatore Nuvoletta, a carabiniere who was only twenty years old. He was murdered in 1982 in Maran, and was buried amid the busily circulated rumours that he was connected to the extremely powerful Camorra family.
I used to have another, more complicated fear: fear for my image. I was afraid that if I exposed myself too much – if I became too much of a celebrity – I would no longer be the person I wanted to be. Truman Capote once said something awful and true that comes to mind now and then: “We shed more tears for prayers that were answered than for those that go unanswered.” If I ever had a dream, it was to carve out a space with my words, to show that literature can still have weight and change the world. In spite of everything that has happened to me, my wish has been granted, thanks to my readers. But I also became a different person to the one I imagined I would be. And this has been painful and difficult to accept. Then I realized that no-one chooses his destiny. You can, however, choose how to live your life. As far as I am concerned I want to do it in the best way possible, because I feel I owe it to the readers who have sustained me.
That is why, when they invite me to talk on television and I know that there will be a large audience, I try to do the best I can, allowing no polemics, sentimentality or simplifications. That is why the contents of this book are not intended to be – and are not – homogeneous. My writings from the past have many voices and stem from a desire to explore things I am passionate about, as well as things I felt I had to write about. Seeing what was happening in Abruzzo after the earthquake, for example. Or continuing to follow criminal matters, especially those that are making some people rich while killing generations of others, as is happening with the toxic waste situation in my area. I am no longer afraid to use all kinds of media – television, the Internet, radio, films, theatre – because I believe that the media – used without cynicism or too-easy-cunning – is exactly what the name suggests: the means whereby we may break through a blanket of indifference and amplify the voices that should be heard from on high.
The title of this book has a very simple meaning. It reminds us, on the one hand, of the freedoms and the beauty that are vital for the living writer, and on the other hand of their opposite, their negation: the hell that seems to have become the norm. In one of his most important books, The Rebel, Albert Camus (a writer whose work I adore) tells the story of a German lieutenant who ends up in a work camp in Siberia where “cold and hunger were almost unbearable”. Camus tells us how he “constructed himself a silent piano with wooden keys. In the most abject misery, perpetually surrounded by a ragged mob, he composed a strange music audible to him alone.” Camus then explains that “for us who have been thrown into hell, mysterious melodies and the torturing images of a vanquished beauty will always bring us, in the midst of crime and folly, the echo of that harmonious insurrection which bears witness, throughout the centuries, to the greatness of humanity.” And right afterwards, he adds a little sentence that does not seem very important to the writer. For me, however, it has taken on a special meaning because it reminds me of the unforgettable words of a man – Giovanni Falcone – who said that the Mafia is a human phenomenon and, like all human phenomena, it has a beginning and will have an end. Camus said: “But hell can endure for only a limited period and life will begin again one day.”
This is what I, too, believe, hope, want and desire.