Abstract

Abstract Prior to the Second World War, Malta appeared vulnerable to fascist influence due to the connections between the Italian Fascist regime and Malta’s irredentist political movement, then led by Nerik Mizzi. In part this Fascist influence was present in cultural propaganda promoting irredentist ideas such as the ‘Mare Nostrum’, which Mizzi and his conservative political party, the Partito Nazionalista, helped propagate. However, previously unseen British documents also reveal significant financial support by the Italian government to Mizzi and his political activities. Mizzi never disclosed this, including the financial support he was granted by Mussolini after having met him personally in Rome on 30 November 1936. Mizzi never openly expounded fascist views, although he consistently supported an irredentist vision of Malta and openly campaigned for Malta to fall under Italy’s jurisdiction. Meanwhile, support for domestic fascist organisations was negligible. At the onset of the War, the Imperial Government started to clamp down on the irredentists, eventually exiling Mizzi and most of his collaborators. The author argues that Mizzi’s dalliance with fascism was not just a convenient relationship for a greater cause, but also a direct acceptance of fascist politics given that making Malta part of Italy’s jurisdiction would also have meant accepting fascist rule.

Highlights

  • Prior to the Second World War, Malta appeared vulnerable to fascist influence due to the connections between the Italian Fascist regime and Malta’s irredentist political movement, led by Nerik Mizzi

  • In part this Fascist influence was present in cultural propaganda promoting irredentist ideas such as the ‘Mare Nostrum’, which Mizzi and his conservative political party, the Partito Nazionalista, helped propagate

  • I will not be delving into this case since we know of its facts already, but, instead, I will be examining dalliances with the Italian fascist government and with fascist activity in Malta

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Summary

Nerik Mizzi and the Irredentists

Soon after Nerik Mizzi returned to Malta, he immediately took over the reins of his father’s party, and started working on founding the Società Dante Aligheri, an Italian state imitation which promoted the Italian language, and the Circolo Giovane di Malte. According to the British file quoted here, there seemed to be an extensive network of Italian agents and Maltese collaborators who together channelled funds to Malta for Mizzi and Italian government bodies to spend on Italian propaganda and pro-Italian activity. The newspaper subscriptions were meant for institutes and bodies such as Casa del Fascio (the Italian funded Malta based clubhouse)[54] and the cultural institutes.[55]

The Official Maltese Fascists
The Clampdown
Findings
Is There a Historical Maltese Fascism?
Full Text
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