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Ruggero Cipolla

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Padre
Ruggero Cipolla
OFM
Personal life
Born(1911-12-02)December 2, 1911
Turin, Italy
DiedDecember 1, 2006(2006-12-01) (aged 94)
Turin, Italy
Religious life
ReligionRoman Catholic
OrderFrancescani (en-Franciscans)

Ruggero Cipolla (1911–2006) was an Italian Roman Catholic priest who aided and corroborated Sister Giuseppina De Muro when she worked during the German occupation of Italy to save over 500 people from Nazi concentration camps.

Career

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Father Cipolla was a member of the Franciscan religious congregation, and the chaplain for the prison "Le Nuove" where Sister De Muro also worked.[1] He personally spiritually accompanied at least 72 prisoners who had been sentenced to death.[2] The museum in Turin notes that "Durante l'occupazione tedesca si adoperò per sorreggere spiritualmente i detenuti confortandoli, aiutandoli con i mezzi possibili, utilizzando il saio per introdurre medicine, indumenti, piccole quantità di cibo, facendo da tramite nelle comunicazioni con le loro famiglie. Taluni erano in transito, in attesa della deportazione, altri, detenuti politici, condannati a morte dal tribunale straordinario."[1] ("During the German occupation he worked to spiritually support the prisoners by comforting them, helping them with the means possible, using the habit to bring in medicines, clothes, small quantities of food, acting as an intermediary in communications with their families. Some were in transit, awaiting deportation, others, political prisoners, sentenced to death by the extraordinary tribunal.")

After Sister De Muro wrote a report for Cardinal Archbishop Maurilio Fossati, who had urged Catholics to take Jewish refugees into their homes, describing the horrors and the suffering, Fr. Cipolla wrote to him as well, asserting that everything she said was true.[3][4][5]

References

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  1. ^ a b Museo Torino. "Ruggero Cipolla (Torino, 1911-2006)". Museo Torino, Comune di Torino (in Italian). Retrieved December 10, 2024.
  2. ^ Cipolla, Ruggero (1998). I miei condannati a morte. Lettere e testimonianze. Torino, Italy: Il Punto.
  3. ^ TIME Magazine. Milestones 9 April 1965
  4. ^ Romaniello, Carmine; Milione, Nicola (January 1, 2014). El Velero Lanse Rogge - Marzo 2014 (in Spanish and Italian). Polo Multimedia. p. 212. ISBN 978-88-911-4158-3.
  5. ^ Tuninetti, Giuseppi (1999). "Strategie pastorali, guerra e Resistenza nella diocesi di Torino: l'opera dell'arcivescovo Maurilio Fossati e dei suoi principali collaboratori". Cattolici, ebrei ed evangelici nella guerra: vita religiosa e società, 1939-1945 (Catholic, Hebrew and evangelical in the war: religious life and society, 1939-1945). Milano: FrancoAngeli. p. 135. ISBN 978-88-464-1194-5.