ORGANIZED
CRIME:
SICILY
2
OF
3
ORGANIZED
CRIME:
SICILY
PART
2
OF
3
The
Mafia
(also
known
as
Cosa
Nostra)
is
a
notorious
Italian
criminal
secret
society
which
first
developed
in
the
mid-19th
century
in
Sicily.
An
offshoot
emerged
on
the
East
Coast
of
the
United
States
and
in
Australia
during
the
late
19th
century
following
waves
of
Sicilian
and
Southern
Italian
emigration
(see
also
Italian
diaspora).
In
North
America,
the
Mafia
often
refers
to
Italian
organized
crime
in
general,
rather
than
just
traditional
Sicilian
organized
crime.
According
to
historian
Paolo
Pezzino:
"The
Mafia
is
a
kind
of
organized
crime
being
active
not
only
in
several
illegal
fields,
but
also
tending
to
exercise
sovereignty
functions
–
normally
belonging
to
public
authorities
–
over
a
specific
territory..."
Some
observers
have
seen
"mafia"
as
a
set
of
attributes
deeply
rooted
in
popular
culture,
as
a
"way
of
being",
as
illustrated
in
the
definition
by
the
Sicilian
ethnographer,
Giuseppe
Pitrè,
at
the
end
of
the
19th
century:
"Mafia
is
the
consciousness
of
one's
own
worth,
the
exaggerated
concept
of
individual
force
as
the
sole
arbiter
of
every
conflict,
of
every
clash
of
interests
or
ideas."
Many
Sicilians
did
not
regard
these
men
as
criminals
but
as
role
models
and
protectors,
given
that
the
state
appeared
to
offer
no
protection
for
the
poor
and
weak.
As
late
as
the
1950s,
the
funeral
epitaph
of
the
legendary
boss
of
Villalba,
Calogero
Vizzini,
stated
that
"his
'mafia'
was
not
criminal,
but
stood
for
respect
of
the
law,
defense
of
all
rights,
greatness
of
character.
It
was
love."
Here,
"mafia"
means
something
like
pride,
honor,
or
even
social
responsibility:
an
attitude,
not
an
organization.
Likewise,
in
1925,
the
former
Italian
Prime
Minister
Vittorio
Emanuele
Orlando
stated
in
the
Italian
senate
that
he
was
proud
of
being
mafioso,
because
that
word
meant
honorable,
noble,
generous.
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