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ITALIAN BABY GANGS: School Dropouts, not toddlers

9/22/2025

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“You will be the same person in five years as you are today except for the people your meet and the books you read.” ~ ​Charles “Tremendous” Jones, Motivational Author and Speaker 

How true that is! Before reading a recent book by Donna Leon, I had never heard of the phenomenal problem with “Baby Gangs” in Italy, or if I had heard something, I didn’t pay attention. And I listen to the Italian news channels on TV nearly every day with my husband but don’t translate the words. My bad!

WHAT IS AN ITALIAN “BABY GANG”?
Is it this? 
▼                                                       Or this? ▼ 
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  Image Source: tuscanynowandmore.com                                                                              Image Source: restoalsud.it
Unfortunately, we are talking about those children on the right.

Italian Baby Gangs are described by Paul Tierney, writing for independent.co.uk/news as, “Barely pubescent, menacing gangs known to locals as ‘children of the devil’. You hear them before you see them: a low, feral rumble rising to something shrill and uncomfortable. Lungs bellow for prominence, limbs kick and shove. Around the corner they emerge, tanned legs and bum-fluff moustaches, hormones not so much burgeoning as exploding into action.”

These boys and girls, 12 to 15 years old and under, are thought to be a symptom of malaise in Italy resulting from an era of economic crisis. They roam the streets without purpose, some in oversized designer streetwear, shoving one another into the roads, voraciously smoking cigarettes, and taking over the sidewalks “like a squadron of designer rug rats”.


Some believe the gangs are second-generation Italians, some white, some migrants. They don’t share ethnicity or background but invisibility. Children growing up in a vacuum of attention, structure, and love.        Nihilistic attacks, often on other young people, have resulted in fatalities 
                                                                                    
      Image Credit: Alamy ▼- Image Source: independent.co.uk/news
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WHY NAPLES?
Although Naples is particularly well known in Europe for Baby Gangs, the phenome-non exists throughout Italy--Donna Leon’s book was set in Venice–and the gangs’ ebullient attitude and ill-suppressed violence have become a national dilemma.
 
Anything can set these undisciplined youth gangs off, resulting in violent attacks, sometimes with multiple fatalities. They are ruleless and, on general principles, go against anything society tells them.

​
The problem in Naples is characterized as stemming from “…a population who live in silent fear of organized crime...La Camorra." Organized crime knows that in Italy children under 14 cannot be prosecuted to the same degree as an adult and so targets them to commit specific crimes. They can give kids money, cars, designer clothes. In southern Italy, you are always judged by what you wear. It’s a way of showing people how much money you’ve got, or what kind of class you belong to. Kids have to and want to belong to something, and the more popular the better. The young minds are indoctrinated with the idea that you don’t need to go to school or have a career to have it all, and this is how the recruitment begins.

James Anderson, contributing editor at i-D magazine, attributes baby gangs to the internet.
“Being exposed to life, in both its fabulous and gory extremes, does strange things to adolescent minds…To be looked at, talked about, admired or vilified, it’s the classic way of “showing out”. Young people want to do things on their own terms and they are demanding your attention in ever more lurid ways.”

HISTORY OF GANG CUTURE
Youth Gangs are nothing new in Italy. Teenagers for generations have congregated in the piazzas looking for kicks, and it’s mostly been tutto bene. In the mid-1950s, the young swooned to American jazz, immortalized the cup of coffee, and hopped onto scooters to circle the Colosseum.

In the mid-1980s, a “scene” called the Paninari evolved around a pre-McDonalds burger place in Milan named Burghy. This youth gang was right-wing, flashy, show-off kids who wanted to signal how rich their parents were by showing off what they could afford.

However, since the mid-1990s, there have been growing demonstrations of antisocial behaviors in public spaces throughout Europe, causing increased public and political concern with regard to criminal activity. Until about 2000, Italian baby gangs, had not traditionally meant as a 'security' problem, but rather as a matter of educational and social policies.

The advent of social-media, however, is believed to have introduced more violence into juvenile street group activities, including Baby Gangs, and has become a recurrent topic in media representation, a source of citizens' insecurity, and focus of legislative and law enforcement activity. researchgate.net/Youth_deviance

Nowadays, these groups make videos of their activities on mobile phones and post them on the internet, vying for gang dominance. One preferred method of asserting such dominance is the stesa – a term that comes from the word stendere (“to stretch out”) – the gang bursts into a public space, “riding mopeds and firing at random, usually in the air.”

There is safety in numbers, and the baby gang culture definitely understands this. These gangs want to go incognito; they want to look like they are going something illegal – or are really doing it -- and don’t want to be identified.


WHAT IS ITALY DOING ABOUT THIS?
Italy has some stringent laws about how children under 14 are to be dealt with in relation to illegal activities, making it difficult to address the problems with “Baby Gangs”. Because so much of the phenomenon seems to be tied to dropping out of school, in 2023 Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni signed a measure which crackdowns on parents of Italian children who drop out of school. They could even face jail sentences under new steps to counter juvenile delinquency in the wake of a series of high profile crimes blamed on teenagers.


Italy has the fifth-highest share of school dropouts in Europe, 11.5% in 2022, with percentages peaking above 15% in Campania and Sicily, the regions that comprise Naples and Palermo. reuters.com/italy-govt-targets-parents-baby-gang

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◄ Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni
​

"Juvenile crime is spreading like an oil stain," Meloni said. Indicating that the state had preferred to shy away from tackling the problem in the past, she stressed that "…nobody wants to throw 12-year-olds in jail…the measures are ‘preventative, not repressive’, and are part of a crackdown on youth crime.” wantedinrome.com/news

Although the problem hasn’t gone away since, the measure went into effect, cities and provinces are passing similar laws.

​
JUST SAYIN’
Sources:
https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/italy-govt-targets-violent-teens-parents-baby-gang-crackdown-2023-09-07/
https://www.independent.co.uk/topic/young-people
https://www.thinktank.vision/en/media-en/articles/young-blood-naples-baby-gangs
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/baby-gangs-italy-causes-consequences-solutions
https://theurbanactivist.com/cohesion/italian-rapper-gets-real-on-baby-gangs/
https://www.familyandmedia.eu/en/baby-gangs-what-they-are-what-they-do-and-what-we-can-do-about-them/
https://www.centromachiavelli.com/en/2021/05/29/milano-capitale-crimine-bande-baby-gang-rapine-degrado/
https://www.straitstimes.com/world/europe/italy-govt-targets-violent-teens-and-parents-in-baby-gang-crackdown
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7730211/
https://www.interno.gov.it/it/notizie/mappatura-nazionale-baby-gang-realta-aumento-italia
https://medium.com/@darkitaly/italys-lost-youth-baby-gangs-and-the-violence-we-refuse-to-see-1a31b835a7d4
https://fra.europa.eu/en/databases/criminal-detention/node/7999
https://www.wantedinrome.com/news/italy-to-crack-down-on-youth-crime.html
https://www.milanopost.info/2025/04/09/legge-regionale-baby-gang/
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/377336266_Youth_deviance_urban_security_and_moral_panic_the_case_of_Italy
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/long_reads/italy-young-people-i-bambini-del-diavolo-mafia-organised-crime-fashion-a8525416.html

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THE ELEPHANT ORPHAN PROJECT

9/13/2025

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Because September 22 is World Elephant Appreciation Day, I thought it fitting to post this blog about the elephant rescue and rehabilitation projects in Africa.

ELEPHANT FACTS
African Elephants, the noblest of pachyderms, are the largest land mammal on earth today. We've all seen them in zoos and perhaps at the circus, but up close and personal, they are really big.

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​Their average life span in the wild is 70 years. Their height at the shoulder is from 8.2 to 13 feet, and can weight from 2.5 to 7 tons. They are slightly larger than their Asian cousins and can be identified by the larger ears. Asian elephants have smaller, rounded ears.  Height comparison between elephant and man ►
                                                           Image Source: letstalksport.co.uk


Elephant ears radiate heat to help keep these large animals cool, but sometimes the African heat is too much. Elephants are fond of water and enjoy showering by sucking water into their trunks and spraying it all over themselves. Afterwards, they often spray their skin with a protective coating of dust. An elephant's trunk is actually a long nose used for smelling, breathing, trumpeting, drinking, and also for grabbing things—especially a potential meal. The trunk alone contains about 100,000 different muscles.
   ▼ Image Credit: R. Ann Siracusa (2008)
   

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Elephants are social animals and travel in herds of 6 to 12 (but can expand to about 20). The family consists of the matriarchal head, her daughters, and their calves. The matriarch dictates where the herd goes and helps to teach the younger elephants proper behavior. Female elephants, or cows, live in multigenerational family groups with other females, and they remain with their natal group for life, sharing responsibility for calves. The females assist each other with the birth and care of their young.
​
Males stay with the family until they reach 12 to 15 years of age, when they leave the herd to live alone or join up with other bulls. Male and female elephants live separately with bulls only visiting when some of the females are in their mating season, known as estrus.
​

Elephants are a keystone species and dramatically affect their landscape. They are seed dispersers and influence forest composition, creating clearings to boost tree regrowth and reducing cover to create suitable habitat for browsing and grazing animals.

AN ELEPHANT RIDE

In 2008, I traveled in Zimbabwe, Botswana, South Africa, and Namibia. There, we not only observed and photographed elephants in the wild...but we rode them. To be truthful, we rode elephants that are part on an elephant rescue project and not in the wild.

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​Poaching is a major issue throughout Africa, as well as loss of habitat. The Victoria Falls Wildlife Trust plays a role in the rescue of injured or trapped animals and their rehabilitation. This is one of the many elephant rescuse/ rehabilitation projects in Africa.
                                                            Image Credits: R. Ann Siracusa
            Ann, her friend Shirley Wilder, and Donald (the keeper), riding Tatu.
►

          ▼Members of tour group mounting their elephant.

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​Mounting the elephant in this fashion proved to be hazardous. When the elephant stood, the passengers tipped back and nearly fell off. The rest of us made the smart choice and climbed steps to a wooden platform more or less level with the elephant's back. Still, the animals are so big that it wasn't easy getting into the saddle.

The elephants we rode are part of a program which rescues injured and "homeless" elephants. Usually, these are babies who have lost their mothers or sick elephants left behind by the herd. After they are brought back to health, and when they are old enough, some of them provide tourists with a half-hour to forty five minute thrill. This helps finance the rescue program.

The older elephants are not released back into the wild even though elephants are social animals and one of the few species that will take outsiders into the herd. However, they accept the outsides on a trial basis, but if the visitor misbehaves, it may be thrown out.

Donald told us he had taken care of Tatú for fifteen years.


THE ELEPHANT ORPHAN PROJECT
The African elephant is endangered due to poaching (for ivory) and loss of range through deforestation. In the early 1900s, there were about 10 million elephants in Africa. By 1970 there were 1.3 million; by 2007, somewhere between 500,000 and 700,000; by 2016, only an estimated 352,000 survived. According to ourworldindata.org/,  in 2024 the estimated African elephant population in the wild was 415,000. Asian elephants number 40,000 to 50,000. As of 2021, the African elephant species is on the IUCN Red List of Endangered and Critically Endangered Species.

​    ▼Image Source:www.foxnews.com/ivory-poaching

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​Elephant Orphanages exist in several locations in Africa, but the most significant is in Kenya. It exists within the Nairobi National Park under the auspices of the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust. The project was previously overseen by Dr. Daphne Sheldrick, who died in 2018 at the age of 83. The mantle of matriarch passed to her daughter Angela, who had  run the program for over 17 years, supported by her husband Robert Carr-Hartley, and sons Taru and Roan. 

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                                      Dr. Sheldrick and daughters, Angela Sheldrick & Jill Woodley.►
                             Image Credit:The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust/A.F.P.,Getty Images
                             Image Source: www.nytimes.com/2018/04/17/obituaries


At the heart of the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust's conservation activities is the Orphan’s Project, which has achieved world-wide acclaim through its successful elephant and rhino rescue and rehabilitation program. According to 2018 data, they had successfully raised 247 orphan elephants and hand raised 140 infants. In addition, 31 babies had been born in the wild, off spring of orphans raised and released back into the wild.

After each orphan rescue, the long and complex rehabilitation process begins at the DSWT’s Nursery, nestled within the Nairobi National Park. During this crucial phase, milk-dependent elephant calves are cared for and healed both emotionally and physically by the Trust’s dedicated team of elephant Keepers. Each elephant remains at the Nursery until they are ready to journey to one of two rehabilitation stockades in Tsavo East National Park, over one hundred miles southeast of Nairobi. This second phase of rehabilitation sees each orphan gradually transition back into the wild herds of Tsavo, taking up to ten years before the orphans can finally return to the wild.

YOU CAN "ADOPT" AN ELEPHANT
As with most mammals, the baby elephant's world is its mother, then the extended family. Elephants are particularly vulnerable to psychological despair if it loses its natural family. Even bulls, which separate from pod, never forget their female family.

In the orphanages, the elephants need a replacement human family i.e. enough keepers to represent a “family”. The orphan needs physical and mental care to grow up psychologically stable. If they are psychologically unstable and neurotic they will not be welcomed into the wild herds and risk rejection.


The keepers are with the young elephants 24 hours a day, traveling with them as a group during the day, sleeping with them at night. Babies need contact at all times. Keepers rotate so that a different keeper sleeps with a different elephant each night, to avoid strong attachments to just one person.

Source of Images:
​www.nytimes.com/2018/04/17/obituaries/daphne-sheldrick-who-saved-orphaned-elephants-has-died-at-83.html

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As you can imagine, the orphanage costs a lot, in part because they are labor intensive, in part because elephants eat a lot. As part of the funding raising, you can adopt a particular elephant for fifty dollars and contribute to their upbringing, while receiving information about the rescue and ongoing progress report and photos. There are pages of elephants waiting for adoption. Contact https://www.sheldrickwildlifetrust.org/orphans
JUST SAYIN’

Current Sources
:
https://nationaldaycalendar.com/elephant-appreciation-day-september-22
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2018/apr/24/dame-daphne-sheldrick-obituary
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/424534702347703553/?lp=true
https://www.elephantand.co/blogs/blog/world-wide-elephant-charities
https://gifts.worldwildlife.org/gift-center/gifts/species-adoptions/african-elephant.aspx
https://www.foxnews.com/science/queen-of-ivory-africas-infamous-poaching-mastermind-nabbed
https://sciencing.com/elephants-mate-4574022.html
https://secure.awf.org/page/161332/donate/1?utm_campaign=fy26_brand&supporter.appealCode=b26qa5e01w&utm_source=bing&utm_term=cpc&utm_content=null&msclkid=eb75579d593a13bb5ef63febf2f6e288&utm_medium=cpc
https://ourworldindata.org/elephant-populations
https://www.sheldrickwildlifetrust.org/nursery-visit
https://www.ourendangeredworld.com/david-sheldrick-wildlife-trust/
https://www.sheldrickwildlifetrust.org/orphans
Prior Sources:
http://vicfallswildlifetrust.org/VFWT%20Website/Wildlife%20Rescue.html
https://www.safarious.com/en/posts/4555-elephant-rescue-at-camp-hwange
http://www.rescue.org/program/programs-zimbabwe
http://www.amanzitravel.co.uk/rhino-and-elephant-sanctuary
http://www.afrizim.com/Activities/Victoria_Falls/Elephant_Rides.asp
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/a/african-elephant/
http://www.elephantsforever.co.za/family-structure.html
http://www.cnn.com/2016/08/31/africa/great-elephant-census/index.html
http://mentalfloss.com/article/82974/10-royal-facts-about-babar-elephant
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    Author R. Ann Siracusa

    Novelist, retired architect and urban planner, world traveler, quilter, owl collector, devoted wife-mother-grandmother, great-grandmother, and, according to some, wild-assed liberal (but a registered Republican). 

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