Camilla Ravera Explained

Honorific Prefix:Senator for life
Camilla Ravera
Office:Member of the Senate of the Republic
Termlabel:Life tenure
Term Start:8 January 1982
Term End:14 April 1988
Appointer:Sandro Pertini
Office2:Member of the Chamber of Deputies
Term Start2:8 May 1948
Term End2:11 June 1958
Constituency2:Turin
Birth Date:18 June 1889
Birth Place:Acqui Terme, Kingdom of Italy
Death Place:Rome, Italy
Nationality:Italian
Party:PCI

Camilla Ravera (18 June 1889 – 14 April 1988) was an Italian politician and the first female lifetime senator. She was also among the driving forces behind Italian feminism.[1]

Ravera participated in the founding of the Italian Communist Party in 1921.[2] She was General Secretary of the party from 1927 until 1930 following the arrest of Antonio Gramsci.

Ravera attended various congresses of Comintern, meeting both Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin in person. She was arrested in 1930 and was sentenced to 15 years. After her arrest, she was succeeded as General Secretary by Palmiro Togliatti. Along with Umberto Terracini, she was expelled from the Italian Communist Party for opposing the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact in 1939 and was not allowed to rejoin until 1945.

Early life

Ravera first entered socialist circles after delivering her brother Cesare's dues to the Italian Socialist Party, of which she later became a member.[3] Ravera began writing essays promoting socialism, and later moved to Turin to become a teacher. Her writings attracted the attention of Antonio Gramsci, who invited her to write columns for his newspaper L’Ordine Nuovo. In July 1921, she joined the paper's editorial board.

Political career

Communist Party of Italy

In November 1922, Ravera attended Comintern’s Fourth Congress as a delegate for the Communist Party of Italy. Here she met important figures within the communist movement, including Clara Zetkin, Khristo Kabakchiev, Joseph Stalin, and Vladimir Lenin. After the March on Rome, the Communist Party was forced underground, with Ravera becoming a wanted figure under Mussolini's regime. She became the General Secretary of the party in 1927. She partook in Comintern's Sixth Congress in 1928 in Moscow, and was offered permanent residency in the city, which she declined. On 10 July 1930, at Lake Maggiore, Ravera was arrested.

Italian Communist Party

After World War II, Ravera became a part of the Italian Communist Party, the successor to the Communist Party of Italy. She served as a member of the Italian Parliament as a member of the party, where she signed onto bills, including those which focused on the protection of mothers and equal wages for women. Ravera retired from this role in 1958.

Honours

In 1982, Italian President Sandro Pertini made Camilla Ravera a Senator for Life.

Electoral history

width=12%Electionwidth=30%Housewidth=30%Constituencywidth=5% colspan="2"Partywidth=12%Voteswidth=20%Result
1948Chamber of DeputiesTurin–Novara–VercelliFDP68,716 Elected
1953Chamber of DeputiesTurin–Novara–VercelliPCI43,650 Elected

Notes and References

  1. Book: Forsas-Scott . Helena . Textual Liberation: European Feminist Writing in the Twentieth Century . 1991 . Routledge . 238.
  2. News: Camilla Ravera, 98, Italy Communist, Dies. The New York Times. April 16, 1988.
  3. Web site: Alfano. Lorenzo. 2020-06-18. The First Woman to Lead a Political Party Was an Italian Communist. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200621171651/https://jacobinmag.com/2020/06/feminism-woman-leader-politics-italian-communism. 2020-06-21. 2020-06-21. jacobinmag.com. en-US.