The olive oil business

My fatherโ€™s paternal grandparents, Louis Cascio and Lucia Soldano, immigrated as teenagers with their families and settled in East Harlem, on 106th Street. After they married, Lucia and her youngest brother, Tony, sold olive oil to their neighbors, produced and exported by Louisโ€™ brother-in-law.

The First Great Wars

The rise of fascism in Italy nearly destroyed the Sicilian Mafia before the end of WWII, but due to the political blunders of the Allies following Operation Husky, the Mafia was able to reform itself under their protection. Angelo di Carlo, a veteran of the Italo-Turkish War in Libya, is considered one of the architects of this renaissance.

The Mafia without godfathers

Jonathan F. Shulz (2016) has shown that not only is consanguineous marriage highly significantly correlated with mafia activity, โ€œcousin marriage is a highly significant and robust predictor of democracy.โ€

The Addolorata courtyard

Of the hundred churches of Corleone, one of the most beloved is dedicated to San Leoluca, one of the townโ€™s two patron saints. The Church of Sorrows, the Chiesa dell'Addolorata, is in the San Nicoloโ€™ district, built on what was called at that time โ€œthe left side trazzera of Corleone.โ€ (A trazzera is a path... Continue Reading →

The Borgo Piano

Swift and ruthless justice was delivered in a broad plaza to the north of Corleone. When Republicans in Sicily revolted, their insurrection was put down violently by King Ferdinandโ€™s military battalions. Several of those involved, including two who survived the crackdown, had ties to one of the earliest documented organized criminal gangs in Corleoneโ€ฆ and... Continue Reading →

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