By Howie Silbiger -Editor-in-Chief
Two healthcare professionals in Tuscany didn’t just post a video of themselves tossing Israeli pharmaceuticals into the trash, they committed the act in uniform, turning medicine into a political weapon. This incident isn’t just a disgrace. It’s a reminder that the poison of fascist-era hatred still lingers in Italy. From Mussolini’s complicity with Nazi racial laws to today’s words and deeds, anti Jewism has never truly been exorcised from public life.
Dr. Daniel Radzik of the Italian Jewish Medical Association slammed it as a calculated provocation. His group had to push Health Minister Orazio Schillaci and the hospital administration with formal protests before either staff member uttered an apology. “Stay silent and nothing changes,” Radzik warned. “They only apologized after being cornered.” By calling their actions “symbolic,” the two, Dr. Rita Segantini and nurse Giulia Checcacci did more than insult patients, they insulted medical ethics. “Medicines are for healing, not ideology,” Radzik said.
Meanwhile, the fallout reached Rome’s political corridors. Tuscany’s health authority started a probe. Politicians like Deborah Bergamini from Forza Italia demanded real consequences. But the hospital incident echoes louder when placed alongside a wave of anti Jewish attacks and rhetoric sweeping Italy.
Consider recent events:
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A Jewish father and his six‑year‑old son were violently attacked at a highway service station near Milan for wearing kippot. Bystanders screamed “Free Palestine,” “murderers,” and “genocide” before pushing the man to the ground and kicking him. Authorities are now treating it as a hate crime. Anti Jewish incidents in Italy nearly doubled in 2024, jumping from 454 to 877.
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In cities from Milan to Rome, walls and synagogues have been defaced. In Bologna, a synagogue was attacked with fireworks and Molotov cocktails. In Rome, swastikas and “Sieg heil” were scrawled across a place of worship.
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In November 2024, a Milan mural memorializing Holocaust survivors Liliana Segre and Sami Modiano was defaced. Faces scratched. Stars of David erased. Memory violated.
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Posters reading “Israelis not welcome” appeared across Milan. Public spaces in Italy are being used to broadcast hate.
This isn’t isolated. It’s a pattern that reaches into school rooms, streets, restaurants, hospitals, and sickening social feeds. It betrays a legacy that was supposed to have been buried after WWII.
This is the showdown moment for Italy: Will the state act like it learned from 1938, when Mussolini’s racial laws paved the way for rounding up Jews? Or will it allow hate to fester until remembrance itself becomes taboo?
If medical staff can turn pharmaceuticals into a stage for political hate, if fathers and children can be beaten for wearing kippot, if synagogues can be attacked with impunity, this is not only an acceptance of hate crimes, but it is the erosion of civility. Italians should remember that history has shown us where this path leads.
Howie Silbiger is the host of The Howie Silbiger Show and Political Hitman on Truetalkradio and IsraelNewsTalk Radio
