African emigrants to Italy
Total population | |
---|---|
1,096,089[1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Rome, Milan, Turin, Palermo, Bologna, Brescia, Bergamo, Florence | |
Languages | |
Italian, Afro-Asiatic languages, Niger–Congo languages, Nilo-Saharan languages | |
Religion | |
Predominantly Roman Catholicism, also Orthodox, Other Christians · Sunni Islam |
African emigrants to Italy include Italian citizens and residents originally from Africa. Immigrants from Africa officially residing in Italy in 2015 numbered about 1,000,000 residents.[1]
Modern history
[edit]In 2014 over 170,000 migrants arrived which represented the biggest influx of people into one country in European Union history.[2] A large percentage of them arrive via Africa.
African migrants specifically use Libyan coasts to travel across the Mediterranean Sea in large numbers, hoping to land on Italian shores.[2] Although departing from Libya, most are from Ghana, Senegal, Nigeria and Eritrea.[2] The route is dangerous and often unsuccessful; in 2015, 2,000 people died crossing the Mediterranean and the Libyan coast guard intercepted many of the boats transporting the migrants from Africa to Italy.[2] As this route has gained more and more attention throughout the years, smugglers have started to use alternate routes such as Egypt, the Balkan route from Greece, and a very risky route from mountain passes in Albania.[3]
In 2016, Italy's finance minister pushed for financial compensation from the European Union for his country's financial losses because of mass migration.[3] As of 2016, the European Union had put forth 1.8 billion euros for the entirety of Africa's refugee efforts in Europe.[4]
Countries of origin
[edit]North Africa
[edit]The largest group of immigrants from Africa are Arabs/Berbers from North Africa, numbering 641,085 official residents in 2016.[1] By country of origin, most of these recent arrivals are from Morocco (437,485), Egypt (109,871), Tunisia (95,645) and Algeria (71,765). Italy also has a number of immigrants from Libya (1,819), territories where Italian expatriates had a presence during the colonial period.
Sub-Saharan Africans
[edit]Compared to Maghrebis/Berbers from North Africa, the percentage of Sub-Saharan Africans as a proportion of immigrants to Italy from Africa is 35.7% (370,068 official residents in 2015).[1] Most come from Nigeria (98,176), Senegal (77,264) and Ghana (48,637). There are also smaller numbers from Eritrea (9,579), from Ethiopia (8,000) and from Somalia (7,903).
Notable immigrants to Italy
[edit]The following is a list of notable people of African birth who later immigrated to Italy and resided there, either wholly or at least part time.
Sports
[edit]- Audrey Alloh - Athlete born in Côte d'Ivoire
- Zahra Bani - Javelin thrower born in Somalia
- Migidio Bourifa - Athlete born in Morocco
- Paolo Dal Molin - Athlete born in Cameroon
- Nadia Ejjafini - Long-distance runner of Moroccan birth
- Jaco Erasmus - Rugby player born in South Africa
- Mostafa Errebbah - Long-distance runner of Moroccan birth
- Matteo Ferrari - Footballer born in Algeria
- Marcello Fiasconaro - Athlete born in South Africa
- Mario Balotelli - Footballer born in Palermo to Ghanaian immigrants
- Claudio Gentile - Footballer born in Libya
- Edwige Gwend - Judoka born in Cameroon
- Leone Jacovacci (1902–1983) - Italian boxer born in Sanza Pombo, then in the Kingdom of Kongo. Also known as: John Douglas Walker (while serving in the Bedfordshire Regiment), and Jack Walker.[5]
- Sumbu Kalambay - Boxer born in Zaire
- Stephan El Shaarawy Footballer born in Savona to Egyptian Father
- Christian Manfredini - Footballer born in Côte d'Ivoire
- Adam Masina - Footballer of Moroccan birth
- Nicholas Northcote - Cricket player born in South Africa
- Desmond N'Ze Kouassi - Footballer born in Ghana
- Gert Peens - Rugby player born in South Africa
- Nicola Pietrangeli - Tennis player born in Tunisia
- Jacques Riparelli - Athlete born in Cameroon
Politicians
[edit]- Magdi Allam - Former member of the European Parliament (born in Egypt)
- Toni Iwobi - Former member of the Italian Senate (born in Nigeria)
- Cécile Kyenge - Former Minister of Integration and former member of the European Parliament (born in Democratic Republic of the Congo)
- Souad Sbai - Former member of the Chamber of Deputies (born in Morocco)
- Jean-Léonard Touadi - Former member of the Chamber of Deputies (born in the Republic of the Congo)
- Aboubakar Soumahoro - Member of the Chamber of Deputies (born in Ivory Coast)
- Dacia Valent - Former member of the European Parliament (born in Somalia)
Music
[edit]- Saba Anglana - singer and actress born in Somalia
- Bello FiGo - singer born in Ghana
- Franco Califano - singer born in Libya
- Nour Eddine - singer and filmmaker born in Morocco
- Laïoung, rapper and music producer, (born 1992, in Brussels to) Italian father and British mother of Sierra Leonean origin
- Bruno Lauzi - singer born in Eritrea
- Ma Rue or Maruego - rapper, (born 1992 in Morocco), grew up in Milan, naturalized Italian
Communications and other media
[edit]- Khaby Lame - prominent TikTokker of Senegalese background
Acting, television and filmmaking
[edit]- Elisa Kadigia Bove - actress of Italian-Somali descent
- Remo Girone - actor born in Eritrea
- Sandra Milo - actress born in Tunisia
- Claudia Cardinale - actress born in Tunisia
- Zeudi Araya - Eritrean-Italian actress
- Edwige Fenech - actress born in Algeria of Maltese father and Italian mother
- Youma Diakite - model born in Mali
Community activists
[edit]- Josephine Bakhita (c. 1869–1947), Catholic religious sister, born in Sudan; declared a saint by the Catholic Church in 2000
- Michele Amatore (1826 - 1883), born in Sudan, enslaved in childhood, later freed and established in Italy; soldier and sharpshooter in Piedmontese army, attaining rank of captain. Decorated for distinguished service in Sicily during a cholera epidemic.
- Adel Smith (1960–2014), controversial Italian anti-Christian activist. Born Emilio Smith in Alexandria, Egypt to an Italian father and an Egyptian mother; raised in Italy as a Catholic, he later converted to Islam
See also
[edit]- Italian Africa
- Italians in Africa
- Black people in Ancient Roman history
- African admixture in Europe
- Somali people in Italy
- Ethiopians in Italy
- Eritreans in Italy
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Dati ISTAT 2016. "Cittadini stranieri in Italia - 2016". tuttitalia.it.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c d "African migrants: What really drives them to Europe?". Al Jazeera. 6 June 2015.
- ^ a b Adler, Katya (April 19, 2016). "Mass migration threatens national crisis in Italy". BBC News – via www.bbc.com.
- ^ "European Union/African Cooperation: the externalisation of Europe's migration policies". www.robert-schuman.eu.
- ^ Fikes, Robert (2015-11-29). "Leone Jacovacci (1902–1983)". Black Past. Retrieved 22 June 2021.