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Foreign Brides Invade Sicily
East meets West in the matrimonial arena
By Marilù Romano
In Sicily, the face of the New Bride, representing a growing number
of Sicily's young wives, has dark brown eyes and honey colored hair.
Or dark hair with blue eyes. Typically Sicilian, she is named Anna,
Valentina or Nicoletta and she's around twenty-eight years old. She
has a university education and a subdued European elegance. She's stylish
in a sophisticated, Italian way, boasting a slender figure that seems
made for a tiny black Valentino miniskirt. She speaks flawless Italian
with a slight Russian accent. Wait a second! No, that last observation
was not an error. Anna, Valentina or Nicoletta (or Tatiana or Svetlana)
has married an Italian man she met in Eastern Europe and now makes her
home in Palermo or Catania. And she is part of a virtual tidal wave
of foreign women - particularly Eastern Europeans - in Italy about to
radically change the balance of the sexes (genders) in Italian society,
where women already constitute a slight majority (about 51%) of the
population. In stark contrast, hardly any of the relatively few foreign
men who marry Italian women decide to live in Italy, choosing instead
to return to their home countries with their new Italian wives - a trend
dating from the time of the infamous "GI brides" who emigrated
with their American husbands immediately following the Second World
War, when thousands of Sicily's young women wed Allied soldiers they
met in 1943 to escape terrible poverty at home. That phenomenon deprived
many Sicilian men of the opportunity to marry some of the most attractive
local women. This time it's the Italian men who are reaping the harvest
of desirable foreign spouses, and it has made some Italian women angry
as can be. Today, nearly all of the immigrants to Italy who wed Italians
and remain here are women from Eastern Europe, and many are remarkably
well-educated compared to their Italian sisters, and certainly compared
to the typical English nanny in Sicily. One cannot generalize, but certain
trends can be identified. Many young Romanian women, for example, work
in Italy as housekeepers, while a significant number of Czech women
work in entertainment-related fields.
A growing number of Italian men seem to find these foreign women more
attractive or appealing than local girls, and in many cases social factors
appear to be as important as aesthetic ones (Italy, after all, has its
fair share of beautiful women). It takes two to tango, and the trend
is partially explained by the willingness of well-educated, attractive
Eastern European women to seek better lives in "the West."
Even Sicily, with its frighteningly high level of unemployment, is preferable
to some impoverished regions of the former Soviet Bloc. For most of
the women we spoke with, Italian men themselves were not a particularly
alluring attraction compared to Americans or anybody else. It just so
happens that immigration into Italy, with its notoriously soft borders
and lax immigration policies, is far easier than getting a visa to enter
the United States or Canada. Many foreign women initially enter Italy
illegally.
___________________________
The
opportunity to court a more flexible, less demanding
foreign woman is a powerful temptation that could
leave many Sicilian women husbandless.
___________________________
Some Sicilian men believe that the new immigrants are less snobbish
or suspicious than women who have grown up in places like Palermo or
Catania. Having experienced more serious hardships at home, they seem
less materialistic, "spoiled" or superficial. At first, this
sounds like simple subjective bias, but such statements could be defended
based on the idea that different social norms and living conditions
prevail in different places. What's clear is that the opportunity to
court a more flexible, less demanding foreign woman is a powerful temptation
that could leave many Sicilian women husbandless. Already there are
numerous stories circulating of irate local women who have lost boyfriends,
and even husbands, to attractive foreign girls. As the Czech Republic
and other countries join the European Union, easier legal immigration
means that even more foreign women will soon be entering Italy each
year, depleting the number of eligible women in those countries while
increasing the number in Italy. As employment opportunities are limited
even for Italian women, it is clear that marriage is one of the main
reasons behind this kind of immigration, though a few Czech and Albanian
women work in Northern Italy as prostitutes (actually a legal profession
in Italy). Immigration for marriage is hardly "balanced" when
the overwhelming majority of immigrants are women.
Internet matchmaking, and the increasing knowledge of English (the world's
most important language) by younger Italians, makes finding a foreign
companion easier than ever. It's no longer unusual to see a local man
with a Slavic woman in a trendy café or elegant restaurant off
Via Libertà, Palermo's stylish, tree-lined main street. Most
of the women in this foreign "invasion" are Eastern Europeans,
but there's also an increasing, if far less evident, presence of Scandinavian
and North African women married to Sicilian men. It's almost as though
these Sicilian men were rediscovering their remote Norman or Arab roots.
The influx of Eastern European brides is too recent a phenomenon for
any credible "scientific" conclusions to be drawn about the
permanence of these marriages or their wider impact on Sicilian life.
Clearly, some foreign women married (in Sicily) to Sicilians have been
more fortunate than others. American women married to Sicilian men report
a higher incidence of marital difficulties, many resulting in divorce.
The novelty or prestige of being married to a pretty blonde foreigner
(not that all foreign brides are blondes, but blondness is an obsession
with many Sicilian men) doesn't always translate into an enduring relationship.
What's certain is that perceptions have changed since the 1850s, when
Emily Lowe penned her very Victorian Unprotected Females in Sicily.
___________________________
Milli
loves me, not just what I can buy her."
___________________________
Love has no universal pattern, and it knows no geographical boundaries.
But people usually have at least a general idea of what they seek, or
do not seek, in their hypothetically "perfect" mate. With
that in mind, we asked a few Sicilian men how, after years of dating
Italian girls, they so easily fell in love with foreign ones. You may
be surprised at some of their direct, if slightly opinionated, observations.
Giacomo, who lives in Palermo, is 35 years old, and his marriage to
Ludmilla, 27, who's from Northern Russia, is his first. They're expecting
their first child soon. "We met in Russia through a matchmaking
service," he explains. "Milli is a dream. My mother was a
little reticent when she first met her, but now they absolutely adore
each other. Look, I have nothing against Italian women, but they're
a strange breed, even if they say the same thing about us men. When
I would give a gift to my last (Italian) girlfriend, who was with me
for almost four years, it's as if it was never enough. I suppose that
a diamond can always be bigger... But Milli loves me, not just what
I can buy her."
Salvatore, 42, also Palermitan, is married to Maria, 32, who is from
Romania. Both were divorcees, but neither had children from the earlier
marriage. "We got married in the Orthodox church. Initially, it
was a new experience to be involved with a woman who considers spirituality
important, because among 'sophisticated' Italian girls that kind of
thing really doesn't exist today. But the Romanians appreciate freedom
of worship because they were deprived of it for so long. I was surprised
at how family oriented and traditional Maria is. Much more so than most
Italian girls. The Romanian language is a Latin tongue, and Maria already
spoke Italian well when we met. In fact, she had lived in Italy for
three years. She wasn't a 'mail-order' bride. It took me a long time,
but I've finally found the love of my life!"
Stefano, 34, lives in Catania and is engaged to Larissa, 30, who's Russian.
He had these strong (and uncensored) remarks about Italian attitudes:
"It's very unfortunate that many Italian women view the Russian
girls as opportunists or prostitutes. It's plain envy. The typical Sicilian
girl doesn't know how to compete against a woman from a different culture.
A lot of Sicilian girls I've met over the years play it coy and demure
at home but will do almost anything with any foreign man when they're
outside Italy. I know a pretty Sicilian tour guide in her mid thirties
who has 'boyfriends' in London, Paris, New York and any place but Sicily.
She actually hates Sicilian men, and considers us all 'pigs,' but she'd
be the first person to criticise Larissa and other foreign girls who
live in Italy and are happy with somebody like me. That 'holier than
thou' attitude really annoys me because it seems to imply that single
Sicilian women are all precious virgins while the foreigners are all
worthless whores. But Italian women often use sex or flirtation to get
what they want. In Italy, even a woman being interviewed for a position
as a teacher uses her nice legs and sultry smile to get the job! So
the criticisms of foreign women seem hypocritical. In Russia, the role
of women is a little different - in marriage but also in academic and
professional life. What's important is that Larissa and I are happy
with each other."
___________________________
"It's
very unfortunate that many Italian women view
the Russian girls as opportunists or prostitutes.
___________________________
Roberto, 38, who lives outside Palermo, recently wed Sonya, now 31,
who's from Belarus. "Most of my (male) friends who've met my wife
envy me, not because Sonya is physically beautiful - though she certainly
is - but because she's a real person. With Sicilian women, I got tired
of things like the girl who dated me three or four times before telling
me she was having an affair with a married man in Catania on trial for
Mafia association, and the girl who angrily accused me of being 'out
of place' for sending her flowers after she had led me to think she
wanted to go out with me. Then there was my long-term girlfriend, usually
a really sweet girl, who got angry with me when I gave her a Christmas
present - an expensive piece of jewelry - that she didn't particularly
like. That's when I began thinking about looking for romance outside
Italy. Don't misunderstand me. There are good people here, but many
Sicilian women are fickle or immature and it gets tiresome after twenty
years. And I cannot tell you how many cheat on their husbands! I found
that Eastern Europe was a little different. Not necessarily better in
every respect. There are cultural differences, naturally, but it's amazing
how quickly my wife adapted to life in Italy."
About the Author: Marilù Romano has written for various Italian
magazines. This is her first article for Best of Sicily, and it required
extensive "in-the-field" research. Special thanks to the men
who allowed her to interview them, and to Mira Ivanova.
This article first appeared in Best of Sicily at www.bestofsicily.com.
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