"Come and study here, don't go abroad, let's take back what's ours", because "we can change".
This was stated by Eugenia Carfora, head of the ITI and Hotel Management Institute 'Francesco Morano' of Caivano, speaking at the National Festival of Civil Economy today in Florence.
"They gave me a small, empty plot of land in 2007," he recalled, "where the school, the home of the state, was abandoned, run-down, and dirty.
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Today my school is beautiful. Then I reported too much, I talked too much, because everyone knows but pretends nothing happened, and they transferred me: a new school, with 14 pitbulls guarding the entrances, the mattresses, and the syringes on the floor. Today it's a functioning school, the kids are great and they want them everywhere for internships, there's a 4-star hotel.
Now we want the agricultural university, we want to build the hydroponic greenhouse where the guns were hidden underground, we want to fix up the empty houses for the students." Also from Naples came the testimony of Cesare Moreno, president of Maestri di Strada Onlus.
"Schools must cultivate the plurality of individual relationships," he stated, "while, unfortunately, they do the opposite by cultivating individualism and competitiveness: this is devastating. We saw it clearly during the pandemic when schools were closed: the disaster was not losing the history and geography chapters, but the system of relationships in this context."







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