Just two weeks after a Greek soccer player who celebrated a goal with a fascist salute was banned from representing his country for life, an Italian coach who made the same gesture repeatedly during his playing days has been hired by a club in Englandâs top division.
The appointment of Paolo Di Canio to manage Sunderland, a club struggling to avoid relegation from the English Premier League, was immediately condemned by at least one board member, the former British foreign minister David Miliband, who resigned in protest over âthe new managerâs past political statements.â
The most famous of those statements came in 2005, when Di Canio told an Italian news agency, âIâm a fascist, not a racist,â when he was banned for one game for making what he called âthe Roman saluteâ to Irriducibili, right-wing fans of the club he supported as a boy, Lazio. âI made the Roman salute because itâs a salute from a comrade to his comrades and was meant for my people,â he added. âWith this stiff arm I do no want to incite violence or racial hatred.â
Di Canio, who has the Latin word for âleaderâ tattooed on his arm in tribute to Mussolini, made the fascist salute at least three times in 2005 before being banned. On one occasion he even raised his arm, in in full view of television cameras, at a match in Livorno, where the home teamâs fans were known for their left-wing sympathies and the clubâs star player, Cristiano Lucarelli, celebrated goals by revealing a Che Guevara T-shirt worn under his jersey.
Several years earlier, Di Canio admitted in his autobiography that he was âfascinated by Mussolini.â In a passage that mixed praise and condemnation for Il Duce, Di Canio told Gabriele Marcotti, the journalist who co-authored his memoir:
I think he was a deeply misunderstood individual. He deceived people. His actions were often vile. But all this was motivated by a higher purpose. He was basically a very principled individual. Yet he turned against his sense of right and wrong. He compromised his ethics.
Despite these apparently frank admissions of his political sympathies in the past, Di Canioâs new employers reacted with indignation when the issue was raised on Monday. âIt is disappointing that some people are trying to turn the appointment of a head coach into a political circus,â Sunderlandâs chief executive, Margaret Byrne, said in a statement. She went on to blame the media for misrepresenting the coachâs views. âTo accuse him now, as some have done, of being a racist or having fascist sympathies,â Ms. Byrne said, âis insulting not only to him but to the integrity of this football club.â
For his part, Di Canio said in a video interview for the clubâs Web site that it was âstupid and ridiculousâ to accuse him of racism, naming three black players he was friends with during his career. One of those players, however, the Trinidadian-British goalkeeper Shaka Hislop, told the BBC in 2005 that he no longer considered himself friends with Di Canio after the salutes, âbecause of what those gestures mean and the wider effect of it.â He added, âPaolo was certainly someone I considered a friend who I liked a lot, so I am very disappointed.â
Writing on Twitter on Monday, Di Canioâs co-author argued that even though he does not share the new Sunderland coachâs politics â" he called the salute âwrong and insensitiveâ â" it was incorrect to call him a Nazi or a racist.
He also thanked another journalist for drawing attention to another passage from the memoir, in which Di Canio expressed some sympathy for the difficulties encountered by immigrants to Italy.
In the interview with Sunderlandâs Web site on Monday, Di Canio also claimed that the media was unfairly representing his views by quoting just one portion of the long interview that was used for his biography. âI expressed an opinion in an interview many years ago. Some pieces were taken for media convenience. They took my expression in a very, very negative way - but it was a long conversation and a long interview. It was not fair.â
He added: âWhat offends me more than everything is not because they touch me; they touch what my parents taught to me; the values they gave to me. This is not acceptable. So, what I can say If someone is hurt, Iâm sorry, but that didnât come from me, it came from a big story that people put out in a different way to what it was.â
Robert Mackey also remixes the news on Twitter @robertmackey.