Ministry for Post-War Assistance explained

Ministry for Post-War Assistance
Native Name:Ministero dell'assistenza postbellica
Type:Ministry of the Kingdom of Italy
Preceding1:Ministry of Occupied Italy
Jurisdiction:Government of Italy

The Ministry for Post-War Assistance (Italian: Ministero dell'assistenza postbellica) was a government body of the Kingdom of Italy and later the Italian Republic responsible for providing assistance to Italian military personnel and civilians in the aftermath of World War II. The ministry existed from 1945 to 1947.

History

The Ministry for Post-War Assistance was established by Lieutenancy Decree Number 380 of 21 June 1945 to provide moral and material assistance to Italian civilians and soldiers who were repatriated after being interned or taken prisoner during World War II; civilians displaced by bombing attacks during the war; civilians coming to Italy from former Italian colonies; refugees; partisans of the Italian resistance movement demobilized following the dissolution of their formations, and the families of partisans who either had died during the war or demobilized after it. The new ministry brought together what had been the responsibilities of the high commissioner for prisoners of war, the high commissioner for moral and material assistance to war refugees, the high commissioner for veterans, and the Ministry of Occupied Italy. After the creation of the Ministry for Post-War Assistance, the Ministry of Occupied Italy was abolished by Lieutenancy Decree Number 391 of 5 July  1945.

The Ministry for Post-War Assistance was abolished by Legislative Decree of the Provisional Head of State Number 27 of 14 February 1947. Its responsibilities were split between the Ministry of the Interior’s General Directorate of Post-War Assistance, the Ministry of Defence, and the Undersecretariat of State of the Presidency of the Council of Ministers.

Activities

The ministry coordinated the search for missing persons and the repatriation of Italians from abroad, refugees, internees, and Italian prisoners. It managed 109 refugee collection centres, built accommodations for assisted compatriots, provided basic necessities, and dealt with the reintegration of war veterans into the Italian economy, including offering them jobs in public administration. It also provided social and health assistance. In 1947 the ministry drew up a report that calculated the number of Italians still held in prison camps around the world at 1.45 million.

The ministry included the Commission for the Recognition of Partisan Qualifications, which was responsible for the recognition of the status of "patriots," “fighting partisans”, and those killed, disabled, or wounded during the War of Liberation, the Italian name for the Kingdom of Italy's participation during World War II on the Allied side between 1943 and 1945, including operations by the Italian Co-belligerent Forces and the Italian resistance movement against the Axis powers during both the Italian campaign and the simultaneous Italian Civil War between the Kingdom of Italy and the Italian Social Republic.

The ministry had strong roots across Italy, with offices present in every provincial capital. Until 1946, a separate branch of the ministry in Milan coordinated its activities in northern Italy. Although the ministry itself was abolished in 1947, the provincial offices remained open until 1954, when they were abolished and merged into the Assistance Division of the offices of the prefectures.

List of ministers

MinisterPartyGovernmentTerm of officeLegislative
assembly
Took officeLeft officeTime in office
bgcolor=gainsboro colspan="9" Minister for Post-War Assistance of the Kingdom of Italy
Emilio Lussu
(1890-1975)
Action PartyParri21 June 194510 December 1945National Council
Luigi Gasparotto
(1873-1954)
Labour Democratic PartyDe Gasperi I10 December 194514 July 1946
bgcolor=gainsboro colspan="9" Minister for Post-War Assistance of the Italian Republic
Emilio Sereni
(1907-1977)
Italian Communist PartyDe Gasperi II14 July 19462 February 1947Constituent Assembly of Italy

See also

Sources

External links