Motherlands by Amaryllis Gacioppo
There is no word for our English-language notion of home in Italian; the closest is ‘casa’, but that has the more literal meaning as the physical place where one lives. Amaryllis Gacioppo’s parents are Italians from Sicily; they met in Australia and Amaryllis was born in Sydney, with the family later moving to northern New South Wales. Her occasional trips back to Palermo, to see her maternal grandmother, stuck in her heart. Palermo, Italy, felt like home: familiar and safe. In this fascinating book she tries to make sense of these feelings by navigating her own movements within Italy alongside those of her grandparents and great grandparents, tracing the cities in which they lived: Benghazi, Turin, Rome and Palermo.
Gacioppo looks at the history of those places and how her relatives lived and moved in them. She ponders what is her place in them as a child ‘of migrants who shares a past with one place and a future with another’. In the cities of Italy she sees another version of herself, one who cries every time she leaves Palermo afraid that she might not return.
The recent census shows that 29% of Australians were born overseas and 48% have a parent born overseas. For many of us, Gacioppo’s brilliant book will resonate; for all of us it will make us think about our idea of home.