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Saturday, November 29, 2025

FEMMINICIDIO

by Annie Rachele Lanzillotto


Giulia Cecchettin, a 22-year-old university student was killed by her ex-boyfriend in 2023.
Graphic: 
Giulia Cecchettin Foundation


Italy Passes a Femicide Law, Seeking to Prevent Violence Against Women: Murders of women killed for misogynistic reasons will now be classified as femicide. Campaigners say a broader cultural shift is still needed. —The New York Times, November 26, 2025

 

Femminicidio

a word not in daily use 

Femicide 

a word that needs to be in use.

 

I am the product of violence. 

That’s a pretty word for it.

It sounds like, I dunno, parfait.

I’ll have the parfait violence per favore.

Soft sibilant whispering sounds

for being quartered and drawn emotionally.

 

Violence might as well as be my name.

The very existence of me is a scenario of violence.

My mother escaped my father several times.

The year before I was born, she lost a pregnancy, 

from getting hit or kicked or punched 

or pushed down the stairs, or maybe she fell out of fear, 

this story has been told different ways over lifetimes.

 

He wooed her, pursued her, wouldn't let her go.

Impregnated her. Whether it was romance between beatings

or violence amidst a beatingI will never know. 

She was subjugated; that’s for sure.

She was a woman enslaved in a Bronx Italian marriage.

None of her family wanted to see her pregnant again.

They wanted her to get out. 

 

Yet. Here I am.

 

Born into a violent hell

My body shakes when I hear glass breaking.

There are reasons for this.  Facts.  Episodes.  

Shattered glass around my crib.

I am sensitive to noises, beeps, neighbors’ fighting.

I wonder how it was that I was not killed.  

That my mother was not killed.

That my father had some kind of emergency brake

That my mother got the hell outta there, finally.

That we survived, I consider miraculous.

 

My father remembered being beaten as a boy 

and as a Marine, he learned to kill and to dismember.

He survived one of the more vicious battles on earth.

The very last major battle of WWII:

the American invasion of Okinawa in 1945,

eighty-two days of ferocious rabid hell 

over 241,000 people were killed

Soldiers and civilians.

 

Femminicidio

the killing of women

 

In 2018, I walked the streets of Roma and Napoli

where exterior walls of buildings

are covered with the photos of women

all who have been killed to violence

most from men they knew

brothers boyfriends husbands acquaintances

 

Femminicidio

the killing of women

 

In Italy, there's a long history of "honor killings"

killing of women—basically sanctioned

the kill

understood

 

One day in New York, I ran into an old friend.

I was feeding the meter

standing on the sidewalk

pushing a quarter into the metal slot

turning the nose of the meter

when I looked over at two women in straw sun hats

walking down the sidewalk, in my direction.

I pushed the quarter into the slot

heard it click and our eyes locked, 

me and the younger woman.

I recognized her instantly from high school.

Her eyes were the same, from years ago.

She was one of the sweetest kids I'd gone to school with.

Now we were in our fifties.

 

In that moment, we hugged and talked 

as if no time had passed at all.

I asked her, "Ya got a quarter?"

And she dug in her pocketbook and filled my meter up.

 

Her mother remembered me from when I was sixteen.

She recalled a moment I spoke with her at the high school gong show.

She said, you came up to me and said, 

“I have to tell you that your daughter 

is the sweetest kid I ever met,

and she stands up for the underdog, 

if a kid is being bullied,

she always sticks up for them.”

 

There was a street fair going on.

All flowing dresses on racks on the sidewalk.

We happened to be standing, 

right outside a new place,

where a portrait of a beautiful girl was in the window.

I read the inscription.  She had been murdered 

by a man she was dating.

The place was called "One Love,"

a non-profit for education to combat femicide.

I remember saying,

“Isn’t this wild, in between these boutiques

probably paying thirty grand a month rent,

is a foundation for domestic violence?”

 

We fell into a conversation about domestic violence

And I was open about the violence I grew up with

And how it affected me.

I’d always feared for my life 

didn't want my blood relatives knowing where I lived.

The declining health of my mother exacerbated family interactions.

Emergency room visits and holidays were tense.

Most holidays we ended up in the Emergency Room

my mother getting dangerous blood pressure spikes from tension.

 

Looking back on our reunion,

I wish I read things semiotically, spiritually. 

Paid attention to the signs:

The parking meter

My memento mori

Time expiring

The portrait of the beautiful dead girl in the store front window

 

Femminicidio

 

Not long after that, 

My friend was shot dead by her brother

in front of her mother,

on their front lawn.

They’d been bickering about emptying the dishwasher

 

No one knew he kept the old gun in the basement.

The old gun their father had many decades ago

For his own protection.



Annie Rachele Lanzillotto is an American memoirist, poet, and performance-artist whose stage presence has been called riveting and volcanic.  She was born in the Bronx. Her books include Whaddyacall the Wind? (Bordighera Press); Hard Candy: Caregiving, Mourning, and Stage Light and Pitch Roll Yaw (Guernica World Editions); L is for Lion: an italian bronx butch freedom memoir (SUNY Press; finalist for LAMBDA Literary Award); and  Schistsong (Bordighera Press).  Lanzillotto has been awarded grants from New York State Council on the Arts, New York Foundation for the Arts, The Rockefeller Foundation, Dancing in the Streets, Dixon Place, Franklin Furnace, Puffin Foundation, Creatives Rebuild New York, and Trickle Up NYC.