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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
DAVID GREENE, HOST:
The Italian region of Tuscany has long been a left-wing stronghold. But as NPR's Sylvia Poggioli reports, it has experienced political upheaval1 as the hard-right, anti-immigrant party known as the League has ousted2 left-leaning political leaders in many towns for the first time in decades.
SYLVIA POGGIOLI, BYLINE3: Pisa's Square of Miracles is a major tourist attraction. The cathedral, baptistery and iconic leaning tower were built more than a thousand years ago in a blend of Byzantine and Islamic styles, symbolizing4 the powerful maritime5 republic's trade links across the Mediterranean6.
Today, Pisa, with 90,000 people, has a Muslim community of 2,000. Two years ago, the center-left administration approved its request for a mosque7 on Pisa's outskirts8. But after the League won power last year, the new mayor fulfilled a campaign promise and vetoed the mosque's construction.
Mohammad Khalil, a Palestinian and Italian citizen who came here 39 years ago to study engineering, is president of Pisa's Muslim community.
MOHAMMAD KHALIL: (Through interpreter) I guess fear-mongering works. The League keep saying Italians first, but many of us are also Italian citizens and just as concerned about security as everyone else is.
POGGIOLI: Repeated requests to see Pisa's mayor or members of his administration were refused. But Davide Cinini, a former leftist, was willing to explain why he embraced the hard-right League. He accuses the center-left Democratic Party, in power at the national level until June last year, of following European Union orders imposing9 austerity measures that he says led to increased economic stagnation10 and high unemployment.
DAVIDE CININI: (Through interpreter) When a leftist party promotes policies that are not leftist, that are against the working class, I'm not the one who changed. What's happening around me has changed.
POGGIOLI: Democratic Party activist11 Michele Ceraolo acknowledges the left failed to grasp citizens' economic anxieties after the financial crisis.
MICHELE CERAOLO: The right, at the moment, has a strong storytelling. The left has none. The right knows how to talk to the heart of the people. I know that you are insecure. You have fear.
POGGIOLI: Fear of the 600,000 migrants who arrived in Italy in the last five years. The migrants' surge was followed by the League's surge in local and national elections. Since party leader Matteo Salvini became Italy's deputy prime minister last year, his popularity has soared as he bulldozed camps where Roma families lived, sharply curtailed12 funds for refugee shelters and shut down Italy's ports to migrant rescue ships.
We're at a spot in Montecatini where men and women sip13 prosecco as they celebrate the League's victory in municipal elections last May. Walls are covered with posters proclaiming Italy first and hailing Salvini, il Capitano, as national savior. Local League leader Andrea Picchielli accuses the Democratic Party of doing nothing to stop the migrant influx14 and rejects its criticism of the League's policies.
ANDREA PICCHIELLI: Sometimes they called us racist15. We are not racist at all. We want to help people who have, really, the right to stay here - but not everybody.
POGGIOLI: Maria Ardagna, an ardent16 Salvini fan, believes in the decades-old racist trope the great replacement17 conspiracy18, which she sees as a plot to replace white Europeans with black migrants. She says she knows the plotters are big names in international finance.
MARIA ARDAGNA: Soros, Rockefeller, Rothschild.
POGGIOLI: Like many other League voters, Ardagna is not a fan of Pope Francis, who recently warned that fearmongers have made people intolerant and, perhaps without realizing it, racist.
ARDAGNA: (Through interpreter) He does un-Christian things. When he travels and finds families in need, he doesn't bring Christians19 back to Rome. He brings Muslims. He's not a pope. For us, he's the Antichrist.
POGGIOLI: The victory party ends with a speech by a rising star, 32-year-old Susanna Ceccardi. As the League's first elected mayor in Tuscany in 2016, she scrapped20 government-funded projects to help migrants integrate in favor of hiring private guards as night-time sentinels. She tells the crowd she's sick and tired of the left accusing the League of being heartless.
SUSANNA CECCARDI: (Speaking Italian).
POGGIOLI: "I strongly believe," says Ceccardi, "that bulldozing Roma camps and curbing21 illegal immigration by shutting down ports, as Salvini has done, are great humanitarian22 acts."
(APPLAUSE)
POGGIOLI: In May, Ceccardi won a seat for the League in the European Parliament in Brussels. Next year, she plans to run for governor of the entire region of Tuscany. Sylvia Poggioli, NPR News, Montecatini.
1 upheaval | |
n.胀起,(地壳)的隆起;剧变,动乱 | |
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2 ousted | |
驱逐( oust的过去式和过去分词 ); 革职; 罢黜; 剥夺 | |
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3 byline | |
n.署名;v.署名 | |
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4 symbolizing | |
v.象征,作为…的象征( symbolize的现在分词 ) | |
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5 maritime | |
adj.海的,海事的,航海的,近海的,沿海的 | |
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6 Mediterranean | |
adj.地中海的;地中海沿岸的 | |
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7 mosque | |
n.清真寺 | |
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8 outskirts | |
n.郊外,郊区 | |
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9 imposing | |
adj.使人难忘的,壮丽的,堂皇的,雄伟的 | |
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10 stagnation | |
n. 停滞 | |
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11 activist | |
n.活动分子,积极分子 | |
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12 curtailed | |
v.截断,缩短( curtail的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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13 sip | |
v.小口地喝,抿,呷;n.一小口的量 | |
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14 influx | |
n.流入,注入 | |
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15 racist | |
n.种族主义者,种族主义分子 | |
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16 ardent | |
adj.热情的,热烈的,强烈的,烈性的 | |
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17 replacement | |
n.取代,替换,交换;替代品,代用品 | |
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18 conspiracy | |
n.阴谋,密谋,共谋 | |
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19 Christians | |
n.基督教徒( Christian的名词复数 ) | |
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20 scrapped | |
废弃(scrap的过去式与过去分词); 打架 | |
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21 curbing | |
n.边石,边石的材料v.限制,克制,抑制( curb的现在分词 ) | |
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22 humanitarian | |
n.人道主义者,博爱者,基督凡人论者 | |
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