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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: USICILIANU]
#775555
05/04/14 09:55 AM
05/04/14 09:55 AM
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Joined: Apr 2014
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cornuto_e_contento
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Celeste Morello wrote books about the Sicilians and Calabrian OC groups in Philadelphia during the decades you asked about.
Her extensive research showed that people who were Calabrian or Campanian, or Neapolitan and involved in OC, were not involved in the Sicilian famiglia, and were instead just street thugs, blackmailers, and extortionists in the black hand gangs.
Last edited by cornuto_e_contento; 05/04/14 10:04 AM.
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: RollinBones]
#775569
05/04/14 10:24 AM
05/04/14 10:24 AM
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cornuto_e_contento
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very slightly related, but how did the term "siggie" come about? i've only heard this word in books about philly OC like leonetti's and previte's. It's a bigoted/quasi-racist term used by mainland Italians for people who are Sicilian.
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: RollinBones]
#775592
05/04/14 11:16 AM
05/04/14 11:16 AM
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Joined: Apr 2014
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cornuto_e_contento
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thanks, i'm aware of the meaning just wondering if anyone knew the origin. when you say used by mainland italians do you mean it originated in italy? I mean people who are not Sicilian, as Sicily is an island and not part of the mainland of Italy; but neither is Sardinia. It's an Italian-American slang term based on prejudice/bigotry, and the slang word originated in the United States.
Last edited by cornuto_e_contento; 05/04/14 03:57 PM.
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: cornuto_e_contento]
#775648
05/04/14 05:06 PM
05/04/14 05:06 PM
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Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 2,292 NJ
carmela
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It's an Italian-American slang term based on prejudice/bigotry, and the slang word originated in the United States.
You got that right. You can call my husband "siggie" all day long, and he'll think you're speaking chinese. This is an italo-american term/word/whateveritis. Same goes for "zip". Nobody in Sicily would know what that is. With regard to Philly (and I know nothing about Philly but this), I know for fact that the Massimino's are related to the Massimino's in Agrigento, Sicily and in Sicily, they are inter-married with the Bruno family. Many Massimino's in Sicily are married to Bruno's.
La madre degli idioti e' sempre incinta.
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: HuronSocialAthletic]
#775720
05/05/14 04:48 AM
05/05/14 04:48 AM
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Posts: 52
USICILIANU
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Yeah I read how Scarfo and Leonetti saw Sicilians as "different" from them; that you can't trust a siggy. Most sicilians will say the same about neapolitans ahahah.
Last edited by USICILIANU; 05/05/14 04:48 AM.
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: carmela]
#775734
05/05/14 06:01 AM
05/05/14 06:01 AM
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Joined: Oct 2013
Posts: 294 Merica
NickyWhip
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[ With regard to Philly (and I know nothing about Philly but this), I know for fact that the Massimino's are related to the Massimino's in Agrigento, Sicily and in Sicily, they are inter-married with the Bruno family. Many Massimino's in Sicily are married to Bruno's. Bruno wasn't Angelo Bruno's real last name. It was Anallaro. The tension between the Sicilians and the Neopalitans/Calabrese/Etc., exists in all of the families; not just philadelphia.
Boss of tha toilet!
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: NickyWhip]
#775736
05/05/14 06:06 AM
05/05/14 06:06 AM
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Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 2,292 NJ
carmela
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[ With regard to Philly (and I know nothing about Philly but this), I know for fact that the Massimino's are related to the Massimino's in Agrigento, Sicily and in Sicily, they are inter-married with the Bruno family. Many Massimino's in Sicily are married to Bruno's. Bruno wasn't Angelo Bruno's real last name. It was Anallaro. It was still a family name, though.
La madre degli idioti e' sempre incinta.
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: USICILIANU]
#775772
05/05/14 08:28 AM
05/05/14 08:28 AM
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Joined: Apr 2014
Posts: 339
cornuto_e_contento
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Most sicilians are looking down at neapolitans, they say they are "mariuoli" which means "thieves", and they say calabresi are particularly stubborn. In fact in Sicily when you call a guy "testa i calabrisi" it means that he is stubborn. I grew up with a guy that had a Neapolitian last name/heritage and he IS a thief, and pathological liar as well. He would steal pretty much anything from anyone even people he did not know, his parents, other people's families including their parents as a kid, and his teachers from school. I cut ties with him as a teenager/young adult. I hope he got help for his Kleptomania and pathological lying but I wouldn't be surprised if he's still into it and lying.
Last edited by cornuto_e_contento; 05/05/14 08:43 AM.
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: dixiemafia]
#775794
05/05/14 10:12 AM
05/05/14 10:12 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296 Throggs Neck
pizzaboy
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Bruno wasn't Angelo Bruno's real last name. It was Anallaro. I didn't know that, what was his real full name? Seamus Flynn O'Boyle.
"I got news for you. If it wasn't for the toilet, there would be no books." --- George Costanza.
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: pizzaboy]
#775796
05/05/14 10:35 AM
05/05/14 10:35 AM
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dixiemafia
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ROLL TIDE!!!!!
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: carmela]
#784078
06/15/14 10:38 PM
06/15/14 10:38 PM
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Joined: May 2014
Posts: 145
Italianheritage
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It's an Italian-American slang term based on prejudice/bigotry, and the slang word originated in the United States.
You got that right. You can call my husband "siggie" all day long, and he'll think you're speaking chinese. This is an italo-american term/word/whateveritis. Same goes for "zip". Nobody in Sicily would know what that is. With regard to Philly (and I know nothing about Philly but this), I know for fact that the Massimino's are related to the Massimino's in Agrigento, Sicily and in Sicily, they are inter-married with the Bruno family. Many Massimino's in Sicily are married to Bruno's. I was reading a book today about Philadelphia that mentions John Avena and it said his original name was Giovanni D'Aveni in Novara di Sicilia in the province of Messina on April 7, 1893. USICILIANU-The books "Before Bruno" books 1 and 2 will answer your questions. They're by Celeste A. Morello or some she published as C.A. Morello.
Last edited by Italianheritage; 06/15/14 10:40 PM.
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: RollinBones]
#784357
06/17/14 03:14 PM
06/17/14 03:14 PM
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Joined: May 2014
Posts: 145
Italianheritage
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very slightly related, but how did the term "siggie" come about? i've only heard this word in books about philly OC like leonetti's and previte's. I am reading the Phil Leonetti book and they use that term. Scarfo and Leonetti are Calabrian last names; but they are both related to each other. In the Leonetti book Phil would say how his uncle would claim you "can't trust 'siggies'". In that line of work or business, I don't think you would want to trust anyone too much. Some Calabrians do have Sicilian ancestry, or vice-versa as they both would marry each other. I looked up Italian-American slang, and they have this term on the link below it. sigilian’ – Sicilian (siciliano) http://xeroth.wordpress.com/2009/04/14/italian/I have an Italian friend from Genoa. I showed her that site and she said that with some Italian-Americans they use words that are based not on Italian but the local dialects. Or some can be regional slang like in Philadelphia and other cities in the Northeast they call marinara sauce "gravy". The comments on the slang blog page are interesting.
Last edited by Italianheritage; 06/17/14 03:18 PM.
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: USICILIANU]
#784428
06/17/14 11:18 PM
06/17/14 11:18 PM
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Joined: May 2014
Posts: 145
Italianheritage
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Most sicilians are looking down at neapolitans, they say they are "mariuoli" which means "thieves", and they say calabresi are particularly stubborn. In fact in Sicily when you call a guy "testa i calabrisi" it means that he is stubborn. What are other stereotypes for the different regions? My grandmother and mother are Calabrese-American, as am I. My grandmother is in her mid 90s, and my mother jokes that "being stubborn is what kept her alive that long". I remember growing up one year my grandmother came for Thanksgiving and she was not happy that my mother did not allow her to cook the Thanksgiving day dinner, or help cook at all. During the meal she said something like, "The turkey tastes OK but it needs more salt."
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: Italianheritage]
#784431
06/18/14 01:00 AM
06/18/14 01:00 AM
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Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 210 philly
SonnyL
Made Member
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philly
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Most sicilians are looking down at neapolitans, they say they are "mariuoli" which means "thieves", and they say calabresi are particularly stubborn. In fact in Sicily when you call a guy "testa i calabrisi" it means that he is stubborn. What are other stereotypes for the different regions? My grandmother and mother are Calabrese-American, as am I. My grandmother is in her mid 90s, and my mother jokes that "being stubborn is what kept her alive that long". I remember growing up one year my grandmother came for Thanksgiving and she was not happy that my mother did not allow her to cook the Thanksgiving day dinner, or help cook at all. During the meal she said something like, "The turkey tastes OK but it needs more salt." My Sicilian grandmother is pretty much the same way we also say the reason she's alive for so long is because she's so mean that god is scared of her haha, She was married to a philly wise guy back in the day before Bruno was the boss but he died young, natural causes he didn't get whacked or anything, Then years later for a while she dated a pretty well known member of the Philly family I don't wanna say his same because he's still alive even though he's in prison and is never getting out.
Last edited by SonnyL; 06/18/14 08:34 AM. Reason: Spelling
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Re: Calabrian and Sicilian faction in Philly
[Re: USICILIANU]
#784767
06/19/14 08:57 PM
06/19/14 08:57 PM
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Joined: May 2013
Posts: 999
mulberry
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Yeah I read how Scarfo and Leonetti saw Sicilians as "different" from them; that you can't trust a siggy. Most sicilians will say the same about neapolitans ahahah. I thought Scarfo is Calabrian
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