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Italians of Brooklyn by Marianna Biazzo Randazzo
Italians of Brooklyn by Marianna Biazzo Randazzo





Italians of Brooklyn by Marianna Biazzo Randazzo

Tina respects her parent's decisions and sacrifices herself for the greater good-even when it is not apparent to her.

Italians of Brooklyn by Marianna Biazzo Randazzo

Despite circumstances that could be categorized as abusive and undeniably negligent. At times, her nonjudgmental stance is disquieting. Tina has earned the right to complain, yet at no point does she play the victim. Tina must live under her roof and her rules until her citizenship is secure. A tyrannical, overbearing, bootlegging aunt in America arranges the match. To gain passage to America she must accept the role as a war bride. By the age of 15, her fate is sealed, again, without her permission. As she grows older, she struggles to keep the harsh realities of World War II and abandonment at a distance through her sense of humor, imagination and determination. Her spirit trumps over adversity during the war times within and around her. She is able to forgive those who took so much away from her. The child witnesses and experiences many disturbing things from her uncouth, unsanitary living conditions to the failed paratroopers dangling from trees during the allied invasion. In wartime Europe, childhood does not exist. This time sickness, warfare and destruction are her enemies. After eight years, she returns home to find her childhood interrupted again. Less than 25 kilometers away her family leads a very different life. Her school is taken over by German soldiers and the things like bread and eggs that were once plentiful, no longer exist.

Italians of Brooklyn by Marianna Biazzo Randazzo

The child grows up while WW II ravages the town. She shares her breakfast with goats and chickens while living in the shadow of fascism. She sleeps between a loving aunt and a deranged uncle. Tina lives in a one-room house in one of the poorest regions of Sicily. It was not an abduction nor was it an adoption. She spends the next eight years of her life absent from their lives. In Sicily, 1935 a four-year child walks away from her loving family, her mother, her sister and an infant brother, with a great-aunt for a vacation.







Italians of Brooklyn by Marianna Biazzo Randazzo