Paying Your Dues
Failure to pay pizzo means arson or physical attack. Clothing maker Libero Grassi was the first to stand up to the Mafia and was gunned down outside his flat. He was labelled "a trouble-maker" says his widow, since no businesses then dared admit they paid pizzo. She draws strength from the brave youngsters who in recent years formed the Addiopizzo (Goodbye Pizzo) movement in defiance of the protection racket. When they took on the Mafia, "All hell broke loose." Payments made with bundles of cash are caught on camera, with business owners begging for a reduced price. The list of who pays reads like a rosary. "The greengrocer, the fishmonger... Even the brothel pays!" Campaigners acknowledge what a complex decision it is to defy the Mafia. Indeed, many pay without being threatened. But people are at last speaking out. Businessmen testify in court about the racket - Gianmario Masia's building firm faced demands at gunpoint of 10,000 euros. Guiseppe Todaro owned a warehouse. The Mafia "told me that it was a matter of paying my dues... to have a quiet life, to run the business as usual." The Mafia claim there are "certain advantages" for businesses that pay: protection, the recovery of stolen goods and putting the competition out of business. According to Prosecutor Gaetano Paci "the "Pizzo" ends up financing the "Cosa Nostra", because it is used to maintain "honourable men" who are in prison." Imprisoned mobsters are filmed discussing weapons shipments, likely bankrolled by extorted money. A major breakthrough came when the homes of Mafia bosses were raided and handwritten notes of thousands of "pizzini" were seized. Later, a massive victory is hailed by Addiopizzo when two Sicilian extortionists Salvatore and Sandro Lo Piccolo are each given thirty years in jail. "Mass rebellion," it seems, can stop them. "An entire nation that pays the pizzo is a nation without dignity" is Addiopizzo's slogan. Some Sicilians are at last clawing back their self-respect.
Starring Giuseppe Provinzano
Director Laura Schimmenti, Andrea Zulini