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Some
months ago, I received this bit of correspondence: "During WW-2 I spent two months in the 17th General Hospital (US Army which I believe was in the Vomero section of Naples, set high overlooking the bay and an exquisite view of Vesuvius. From the balconies you had a picture card scene in view. Is the hospital still there? If you know, what is its name now?"
Depending on how one defines “modern,” the first great wave of modern hospital building in Naples was an outgrowth of the Spanish incorporation of Naples as a vicerealm in the 1500s. Some of those hospitals still function today (the “Incurabili”, for example). Using a more modern definition of “modern,” in the early 1900s a section of the western end of the historic center of Naples (near the church of San Pietro a Maiella) was cleared to make room for the new Policlinic Hospital—now called (of course!) the "old" Policlinic Hospital. Today,
however, the “hospital
section” of Naples refers to the great
number of hospitals in the “high Vomero” section
of the city, way up on the hill on the way to the
Camaldoli monastery,
a section of Naples that was countryside until the
twentieth century. The major facility up there is
the university clinic, a mini-city known as the
New Policlinic, which opened in 1973. The first
major modern hospital in that area, however, is
the one that Fred inquired about—the Antonio
Cardarelli hospital. A
wartime aerial view of the Cardarelli in its
role as the
Rimini, however, was a Jew
and thus excluded from his professional guild in
1938 by the Fascist racial laws. He was arrested
by the German SS in 1944 and interned at the camp
in Santa’Agata Fossili in the extreme north of
Italy. Then, however, he was put on a train bound
for Auschwitz. The good news is that once again
his art saved his life; he used his artistic
skills to dummy up an arm-band that identified him
as a member of the Italian police (the north was
still Fascist at the time); he then brazened his
way past his captors, got off the train and
escaped to freedom. He hid out in Milan under a
false name until war’s end. He took up his
architecture again, deserting it in 1955 for
painting, his real love. He died in Genova in
1976. The Cardarelli hospital put on a Rimini
exposition in 1997 on the occasion of the 50th
anniversary of the founding of the hospital.
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