Anti-Fascism and the Shaping of National and
Ethnic Identity: Italian American Volunteers in
the Spanish Civil War
FRASER OTTANELLI
ON AUGUST 20, 1937, a front-page article in the Italian American Communist
weekly L'Unità Operaia, reported that one of its leaders, Nello
Vergani, had been killed while fighting Fascist troops in Spain. Vergani,
whose real name was Mafaldo Rossi, was born and raised in Molinella, a
town near Bologna well-known for its tradition of militant rural labor
activism, where his political activities had earned him the designation
by Italian police of "Communist terrorist," as well as several beatings
from Fascist Blackshirts. In 1924, Rossi emigrated and Fascist police
traced his movements from France to Germany, Brazil, Algeria, and, eventually,
North America. In 1926, arrested while trying to cross illegally from
Canada into the United States, Rossi jumped bail and settled in New York.
Although he adopted several aliases to conceal his identity, Rossi remained
under surveillance by Italian authorities from virtually the moment he
arrived in the United States. By June 1927 the Italian consulate in New
York had reported to Rome that Rossi was one of the most active, visible,
and "dangerous" Communists within the Italian American community. He soon
became one of the leaders of the Alleanza Antifascista del Nord America
(Antifascist Alliance of North America, or AFANA). After its dissolution,
Rossi headed the Italian-language bureau of the Communist Party of the
United States (CPUSA) and served as business manager and editor of L'Unità
Operaia, as well as of the Italian bulletin of the United Shoe and
Leather Workers Union.
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