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Tullia Zevi

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Full Name
  
Tullia Calabi

Spouse
  
Bruno Zevi (m. 1940)

Role
  
Journalist


Name
  
Tullia Zevi

Occupation
  
Journalist

Education
  
University of Milan

Tullia Zevi httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu


Born
  
2 February 1919 (
1919-02-02
)
Milan

Died
  
January 22, 2011, Rome, Italy

Tullia zevi intervistata da enzo biagi


Tullia Zevi (née Calabi) (2 February 1919 – 22 January 2011) was an Italian journalist and writer. Zevi's family fled Italy to France and then to the United States of America after the rise of Fascism in the 1930s. While in New York City, she married Bruno Zevi. She returned to Europe in 1946, and was one of the few women journalists to report the Nuremberg Trials. On her return to Italy, she played a major role in Interfaith dialog, and was active in Italian Centre-left politics. Zevi was President of the Union of Italian Jewish Communities from 1983 to 1998.

Contents

Early life

Zevi was born in Milan, one of four children of a middle-class Milanese Jewish-Italian family.

Her father Giuseppe Calabi was a lawyer and prominent anti-fascist. Her brother is the mathematician Eugenio Calabi.

Study and displacement

Zevi studied philosophy at the University of Milan and studied music the Milan Conservatory. When the Fascist government of Italy passed Anti-Jewish laws, Zevi was on holiday in Switzerland with her family. Later they moved to France, where Zevi continued her studies at Sorbonne in Paris. Anticipating the Fall of France, the Calabi family emigrated to the United States, where she joined the antifascist Mazzini Society and considered Gaetano Salvemini her teacher. In New York she met architect Bruno Zevi. The couple married in 1940.

Return to Europe

As a journalist, Zevi reported the Nuremberg Trials. Zevi returned to Italy in 1946.

Journalism

Zevi was an Italian correspondent for London-based newspaper The Jewish Chronicle from 1948 to 1963 and Israeli newspaper Maariv from 1960 to 1993.

Awards

Zevi was awarded the Knighthood of the Great Cross in 1993 .

References

Tullia Zevi Wikipedia