Lea Schiavi
Lea Schiavi | |
---|---|
Born | March 2, 1907 Borgosesia, Province of Vercelli, Piedmont region, Italy |
Died | April 24, 1942 South Persia (Iran) | (aged 35)
Cause of death | Gunshot |
Burial place | Tabriz, Iran |
Nationality | Italian |
Alma mater | Conservatoir de Paris |
Occupation | Journalist |
Political party | anti-Fascist and Communist |
Spouse | Winston Burdett |
Lea Schiavi, also known as Lea Schiavi Burdett, (March 2, 1907 – April 24, 1942), an Italian dissident journalist writing for left-wing journals in opposition to the Italian fascist government led by Benito Mussolini. Her husband Winston Burdett believed Schiavi was assassinated by either the Russians, Italian anti-fascists, or Persians while traveling through Iran.[1][2]
Personal
Lea Schiavi was born in Borgosesia, Province of Vercelli, in the Piedmont region, Italy in 1907.[1][3] Schiavi was educated in the fine arts at the Conservatoire de Paris.[citation needed]
She became a writer and journalist and met Winston Burdett, an American CBS News correspondent, in 1940 while they were both reporting from Belgrad, Yugoslavia.[1][4][5] The couple was married while both were reporting from East Europe during World War II.[1][3] They also reported from the Middle East and were in Lebanon, Turkey, Syria and Iran from 1940-1942.
Schiavi was 35 at the time of her murder in South Persia (Iran) and her body was taken to Tabriz, Iran for burial.[6]
Career
Lea Schiavi was an Italian dissident, anti-fascist and possibly a communist.[5][7] Her opposition to Nazism and Italian Fascism hardened while reporting during the war. She hoped to create an organization that would fight against fascism and Nazism.[citation needed]
She was an Italian journalist and author. Schiavi wrote primarily for left-wing journals. During World War II, Schiavi was reporting from Belgrade, Bucharest, Budapest, and Sofia and while working for Italian newspapers L'Ambrosiano and Il Tempo.[3] Schiavi was doing a photography assignment for the New York City newspaper PM in northern Iran at the time of her death.[5]
Death
Lea Schiavi was murdered by undetermined assailants in South Persia on April 24, 1942 while her husband Winston Burdett was reporting in India.[8]
While the murder was never solved it is believed to be, based on the testimony of Burdett, that the murder was directly related to Burdett's no longer spying for the Soviet Union due to his ongoing disillusionment with Communism. The story Burdett told at the Congressional hearing was that his wife was working in South Persia, reporting from Kurdistan. When her vehicle was stopped by a truck full of Russian soldiers, they immediately started specifically asking if she was in the car. When they found out she was, she was killed instantly. Burdett believed she was killed because she had uncovered links between military training camps in Iran and an upcoming communist coup in Yugoslavia.[2]
In another version of this story, Schiavi was traveling on assignment with the New York newspaper PM, which involved travel through Azerbaijan with Zina Agaian, her Armenian friend and a daughter of a deputy, when a Kurdish boy stopped the vehicle and asked for Schiavi by name. When she responded that it was her, the Kurd killed her by shooting her in the chest.[6]
Yet another version of the story told by Schiavi's father Natalino Schiavi was that Lea had fallen victim to the anarchy that broke out during the Hama Rashid revolt in Iran around 1942.[6]
Another theory was that Lea Schiavi was killed by the Italians because she was too important in anti-fascism efforts by the Italian community in Iran.[1][6][3] This theory was investigated at the time by Lauro Laurenti while seeking answers to Schiavi's murder and taken up later by Italian historian Mimmo Franzinelli.[7]
Context
Iran in the early 1940s has been described as a "crossroads" for spies as it was strategically important.[6]
According to Burdett, an officer of the American Counterintelligence Corp told him that there was evidence that Schiavi was assassinated with arrangements by the Russians. During her trip to Iran, Russians had been in training there, and Schiavi came across important information the Russians did not want a journalist to know about. The death of Schiavi caused Burdett to get the American Embassy officials and Tabriz officials involved in helping him investigate the crime.[2]
Impact
Schiavi's murder partly influenced Burdett to testify about his espionage before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee.[9][10]
References
- ^ a b c d e "Lea, l' antifascista ammazzata in Iran". Archivio - la Repubblica.it.
- ^ a b c United States, Congress, Senate, Committee on the Judiciary (1955). "Strategy and Tactics of World Communism: Hearing Before the Subcommittee to Investigate the Administration of the Internal Security Act and Other Internal Security Laws of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Eighty-fourth Congress, First Session, Pursuant to S. Res. 58, Parts 11-17". U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 1802.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c d Franzinelli, Mimmo (2004). "Il colonnello Luca e un omicidio politico impunito : L'assassinio della borgosesiana Lea Schiavi". Revista di storia contemporanea. XXIV (2). Istituto nazionale per la storia del movimento di liberazione in Italia. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
- ^ "Winston Burdett, longtime CBS correspondent, dead at 79". UPI. 21 May 1993.
- ^ a b c Alwood, Edward. Dark Days in the Newsroom: McCarthyism Aimed at the Press. Temple University Press.
Schiavi.
- ^ a b c d e Mazzone, Piera (2005). "Lea Schiavi: un enigma valsesiano". Revista di storia contemporanea. XXV (1). Istituto nazionale per la storia del movimento di liberazione in Italia. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
- ^ a b Williams, Manuela (22 November 2006). Mussolini's Propaganda Abroad. ISBN 9781134244409.
- ^ Ghiglione, Loren (6 October 2008). CBS's Don Hollenbeck. ISBN 9780231516891.
- ^ "INVESTIGATIONS: The Eagle's Brood". TIME.com. 11 July 1955.
- ^ "C.B.S. Man Admits He Was a Red Spy: Burdett Tells of Work Abroad -- Names Others at Inquiry". New York Times. June 30, 1955. p. 1.