History of Sicily and the Origins of the Mafia

Like the entomology of the word 'mafia', the history of Sicily and its relationship with the Mafia is very eclectic. Because of its geographic location, Sicily is a desirable location for trade and colonization. It was and continues to be a gateway to the Mediterranean, North Africa and the Adriatic.

The 'mafia' is generally thought of as an Italian secret crime society, but the origins of the Mafia start way before the onset of automatic guns and cocaine. The Mafia began as a way of life: a way to protect one's family and loved ones from the injustice of the government. Only later, with the onset of the media, television and Hollywood did the Mafia take on a glamorous air it now has.

So, one might wonder what environment fosters such violence and slander, as well and family and camaraderie among men? Sicily's violent and oppressive history of government and its numerous corrupt and inconsistent rulers (especially in regards to its justice system) nurtured an atmosphere of self-reliance and cooperation among the people. This reliance and respect was induced by fear, instilled by violence and threats, and backed by a bureaucracy of family and friends.

During the first Punic War between Rome and Carthage, the main point of contention was the sovereignty of Sicily, the island that commanded naval trade and communication in the Mediterranean. After the naval siege of Sicily the Romans emerged victorious, and signed a treaty with the Carthaginians giving Rome control of Sicily in 241 BC. This is when Roman ideals and traditions were imported from the mainland and applied to the already existing traditions of the island. Before the Roman conquest there was very little evidence that remains of Sicilian culture.

Romans constructed a new economic and social system called Latifundia. Unlike the previous system mainly consisting of subsistence farming, this new system was really a feudal formation creating a hierarchy of personnel and a system of taxation that would be central to Sicily's economy until Italian Unification in 1861.

The latifundia also set up a new system of justice. Having different areas of land under the jurisdiction of single men and their personal gangs, made the discrepancy between the judicial decisions of one area versus another distinctly different. The people of Sicily contested this inconsistent rule, but the landlords' influence in Rome was great and thus these men were able to maintain their positions of authority. Although the Roman's actions in Sicily have no direct consequences in the creation of the Mafia, they did set up the social structure of hierarchy from which the Mafia would emerge.

The Roman Empire fell to the Arabs in 826 BC, and along with the empire went the control of Sicily. Arab control of Sicily brought many new aspects of life to the people. Islam was an important new aspect of Sicilian society, although the Arabs were very considerate and allowed non-Muslims to practice their own religions, unlike the Romans. However, this did not stop Islam from manipulating cultural norms in Sicily. One important aspect of Arab life that was adopted by Sicilians, in addition to the spread of literature and the arts, was the mistreatment and subordination of women. Commonplace in Arab life, the Mafia later adopted this idea and kept women out of the business. Another important aspect of Arab life that was adopted by the Sicilians was the idea of internal justice. Instead of having a system of authorities to deal with crime and misconduct, they used personal and internal justice to avenge crimes and set records straight.

Internal justice and the subordination of women became commonplace in Sicilian society and was later adopted by the Mafia. This can easily be seen in the Godfather II when Michael is dancing with his wife, Kate, at the party for their son in the beginning of the film. Here she pleads with Michael that he promised to make the "family business" legitimate, and he tells her he is trying. But this is a blatant lie to keep her away from the business and to maintain her innocence and inability to harm him in court.

The Normans were next to annex Sicily, in the 11th century. The Norman presence only magnified the system of feudalism established by the Romans, creating a system of vassals - or estate managers who were loyal to the king.

These men and their landlord bosses, like the Romans before them, were hard to control and thus created a system of inconsistent justice that raged across the island. These discrepancies in justice created an environment of angst between rulers and subjects. This rift, opened so long ago, made men create small groups and deal with their problems internally rather than take them to the authorities.

Feudal organization continued under the Spanish, and the discrepancies of justice from estate to estate only became greater. The justice was expanded when the Spanish embarked upon the Inquisition. In 1487 it had a strong grip on Sicily, and used this to further subordinate the Sicilians. Powerful Christians had their taxes lifted, while others were financially burdened further with additional taxes. Using fear and intimidation, the Spanish held the power to take the life of any Sicilian or to subdue groups by force and violence. Like the dissent to mafia, the Spanish government covered up any rejection of the Inquisition. These discrepancies between estates with regard to justice created a more intense need for internal justice, which could be regulated by the groups rather than by solely the leader of the area. This is an early form of the Mafia.

In the feudal system that was firmly implanted in Sicily there was no representation of the people. People in public office were not subject to the guidance or critique of their superiors, and thus had no rules of regulations on their actions. Because of these conditions the people began to organize themselves into guilds. The guilds emerged as a way to train personnel and trade goods, but also served as a kind of judicial system. Unlike other European guilds, Sicilian guilds took care of judicial problems internally, without the inclusion of the local or state authorities. The family mirrored internal justice, reflecting the actions of the guilds. This was another step toward the inception of the formal mafia.

Bandits are another group from which the Mafia stemmed. Like the guilds and the family units, bandits were upset with the system of justice under the Spanish. However, unlike the guilds they tried to oust the lords and barons of the Spanish by thievery and murder. It is with the emergence of banditry in Sicily that the mafia concept of 'omerta´ was fashioned. One bandit, named Saponara, was captured in 1578 and held in solitary confinement for his crime. While he was in prison he was poisoned and died. Many people at the time, as well as historians, believe that he was murdered for what he might tell. It is unclear whether he had information about the authorities or about his fellow bandits. But what is clear is that the code of silence used by the mafia, 'omerta', was a valued quality. The fear of an imprisoned member of the group revealing their secrets or intentions was significant to the bandits, and then later applied to the Mafia as 'omerta'.

In the late 1500s and the early 1600s Sicily's feudal system undertook some administrative changes. From Roman times important statesmen and landholders wanted to live near the centers of commerce. This still held true by the early 1600s and large landholders in Sicily lived in Palermo, handing over the supervision of their estates to estate managers called gabelloti. Appointed by the landlord, these men usually already prominent and respected and could use their power to control the people who inhabited the land. The use of the gabelloti continued through a succession of leaders and became the principle method of rule. The gabelloti, using the power vested in them by the landlord, began to create entourages consisting of uomo di fiducia. The uomo di fiducia served as tax collectors, and they had direct contact with the people. They were accompanied by campieri who were mounted, armed forces to keep the peace through fear. They commanded respect and control through their use of violence and trepidation.

The emergence of these new groups also marks the creation of the middle class in Sicily, and from the middle class emerged the Mafia. All members of the Sicilian middle class used subversive tactics to gain power and money. Middlemen exploited peasants, artists kept people out of guilds to perpetuate their own success, and magistrates and attorneys delayed cases in an already twisted legal system. In all the confusion, the magistrates were able to suppress the revolutionary ideas that were taking Europe by storm in the late 1780s with the onset of the French.

As no new democratic thought was entering Sicily during the late 1700s and early 1800s, the separate powerful groups started to make contacts with each other. In addition to befriending each other, they also befriended local and regional magistrates. Pietro Calla Ulloa (a magistrate to the Neapolitan Minister of Justice) gave a good description of these groups and their relationship to the government in 1838. He said, "Many high magistrates…protect these brotherhoods with an impenetrable network. It is impossible to compel the city guards to search the streets, not to find witnesses for crimes that happened in daylight…. In the umbilical capital of Sicily, public office is on sale, justice is corrupt and ignorance is encouraged…." Thus it is clear that as the brotherhoods began to unite themselves with the government and became a stronger and more formidable force in Sicily's justice system, they were also gaining political ties that would allow them to carry out their business without interaction from the authorities.

In 1860 Garibaldi, the Italian commander in the struggle to unify Italy, landed in Sicily and after kicking out the Spanish, declared himself dictator and set a new ruling class of governors while Italian Unification was being debated in Rome. However, this had little actual effect on the Mafia, for Garibaldi chose men who were in the upper crust of society, and these men already had ties to the Mafia. During this period of uncertainty, crime and violence surged.

A vote was cast that year to unify Sicily to mainland Italy, only one percent of Sicilians voted. To vote one had to be literate, and this meant that the people who voted in Sicily were the rich or magistrates, which made it drastically different than the North. In the north the bourgeoisie were active in the development of capitalism, however in the South, especially Sicily, it was the landowning classes and their allies who fought for the Risorgimento. Sicily's majority did not want change. They had been fighting different governments for centuries, and were not prepared to be overthrown again. They had created their own economic markets and judicial system (a.k.a. the Mafia), and from these institutions they were able to thrive. Even though it was a system where fear and terror created loyalty and respect, it worked for their purposes, the thus they did not want change.

The new Italian government made the gabelloti and other locally powerful men (usually Mafia Dons) the local and rural administrators. The local authorities were expected to reciprocate the favor by beguiling support from the peasantry and other groups within the region. Those opposed to the Mafia's way of running things was promptly eliminated, in what became a string of political assassinations.

During the period of Risorgimento the Mafia began to take on a new role in Sicilian politics. Before it had strived to be the stable judicial and political force in Sicily. Now men in Rome were making decisions regarding the future of Sicily, and the Mafia along with other Sicilians, were outraged. Mainland Italy was using the island to grow raw goods, and imported finished goods to the island. This colonial use of the island, along with the lack of modernization by way of industry, created economic hardships for the Sicilian inhabitants. Thus in an effort to redistribute wealth in Sicily, the new government in Rome decreed that all large properties were to be seized and sold by the Catholic Church at auction. One person was only allowed to buy a given amount of land, however, the Mafia through extensive organization to by up the majority of land per capita in Sicily. However, contrary to the intent of the Italian government (which was to give back to the peasantry) this redistribution of the land only perpetuated their position in society.

In the Parliamentary Commission of 1867 the redistribution of land was considered a success, along with the restructuring and expansion of education in Palermo. However, with the exception of the creation of schools, it was an utter failure. The commission also advised building roads and railroad tracks and lessening laws and funding for combating the Mafia. It is seems apparent from these decisions that the Mafia had a hand in influencing the politicians who wrote this commission.

While Italy strived for international recognition, they understood that like the empires that had ruled Sicily before them, that Sicily was an important place for power to manifest. It showed the rest of the Mediterranean that the Italians had succeeded in gaining control of Sicily, and hence political legitimacy. However, this shows that the Mafia already had strong ties to legitimate institutions (Servadio, p. 34). The Mafia was not just gangsters, even from the beginning. There were those who carried out the dirty work, but the leaders were more political and economic thinkers than thugs.

Until 1876 there were no inquiries into the Mafia: how it functioned, and its administration were still very much clouded by its mystique. But in 1876 two Tuscan deputies, Sonnino and Franchetti conducted an unofficial inquiry into the lowest classes of Sicily. They arrived in Sicily unannounced and interviewed the least important people, as to not raise suspicions. This way they were able to understand the everyday intricacies of coexistence with the Mafia. After finishing their study, they concluded that the Mafia was a fungus on Sicilian society, which was deeply rooted in culture, politics and everyday life. "…The Mafia was neither an organization nor a passing development: its great effectiveness had come from infiltrating successive governments and cooperating with the police. Its main function was that of enforcing rudimentary order in an archaic system, and crimes were a means to an end of winning respect, money and power."

Sonnino and Franchetti's investigation is considered one of the most in depth and realistic accounts of the Mafia . It was the first to probe into the everyday reality of the Sicilian life to understand how the Mafia affected everything in society. Before this study the working and effects of the Mafia were only understood from a political and economic vantage point. This investigation shed light on the modern interpretation of the Mafia and how it affected people on an everyday basis. Understanding how the mafia influenced ordinary, everyday life is central in understanding the Mafia. It not only explains why Sicily allowed these impetuous men to rule and dictate law, but also how these men aided the lives of those they helped and protected.

It is precisely Sicily's varied history and multiple governments that led to the creation and necessity of the Mafia. Sicily's long string of judicially inept governments fostered an environment where those who were wily enough could manipulate the system to their advantage, creating wealth, power and prestige.

By the turn of the century the Mafia had become very powerful and widespread throughout Italy in the face of widespread unemployment and poverty that permeated not only Sicily, but the rest of Europe as well. Many of the underprivileged began to immigrate to America to find better jobs to support their families. It is speculated that this is when the Mafia formally entered America and began to set up shop. By 1922 Mussolini had taken a firm grip on Italy and began to crack down on the Mafia, either sending them to prison or assassinating them. Mussolini's wrath pushed more and more Mafiosi out of Italy and into America.

The Mafiosi originally settled in large cities, like Chicago and New York, where industry was predominant and there were opportunities for crime, fraud and racketeering everywhere. Initially the American Mafia gangs focused primarily on "protection rackets", but with the coming of Prohibition they began to expand to gambling, bootlegging and prostitution. It is in these fields that the American Mafia became enormously wealthy and powerful.

Al Capone, the notorious leader of the Chicago Mafia during and after Prohibition, was arrested and imprisoned at Alcatraz, in San Francisco, CA in 1936. After his arrest, Chicago fell to the wayside, while New York emerged as the center for the American Mafia. It was then, after Capone, that "Lucky" Luciano became the 'cappo di tutti cappi', or the 'boss of all bosses'. He moved organized crime from backrooms and smoky bars to more profitable area of big business. With his help Bugsey Siegel, a infamous Jewish gangster, built a huge casino in Las Vegas and began legally doing the things they were doing back in New York: gambling and prostitution. Although Siegel was killed before he could really reap the benefits of his operation, Las Vegas emerged as the new hot spot for gangsters from around the country.

Luciano, unlike his predecessors like Capone, included men in his organization who were not Sicilian let alone Sicilian. This made his organization hated by more ethnocentric organized crime organizations. This hatred eventually ended in a series of gang wars between the various organizations that ravaged New York starting in the mid-fifties.

By 1957 a new man emerged as a powerful Don, after killing some important Mafiosi. This man was Carlo Gambino. He would eventually build a powerful reputation, and his family would become one of the current five most powerful Mafia families in New York.

At the end of his life, Gambino appointed his long time friend John Castellano as the new Don of the
John Gotti

family. However, there was concern among the lower ranking men that he was "greedy" and not good for the family. One of these men decided to take action. In 1985 Castellano was killed by John Gotti, who then emerged as the boss of the Gambino Crime Family.

Known as the "Teflon Don", Gotti was eventually exposed along with his right hand man, Sammy "The Bull" Gravano, in 1991 for "racketeering and murder conspiracy charges". Gotti was imprisoned, but Gravano proved to be a pentito (one who defies omerta, and reveals secrets to non-family members) and testified against Gotti, then entering into the Witness Protection Program. The Gambino Family is now held together by Gotti's son, John Gotti, Jr..