About: Erminio Sal   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/RqdbH3WV12ooyjpyuINlYw==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Sal was born in 1922 in Centaburgo, a prefecture of Castelmagno to Geremia Sal, the eldest son of Adamo Sal, former Mayor of Castelmagno (1916-1920), and Anna Sarmoni, a farmer. From 1933 to 1946, he and his family lived in the United States, in fear of a possible Jewish prosecution in Lecrotia. When World War II was over, the family went back to Lecrotia, while Erminio stayed there to finish the Psychology course; he later went back in 1951.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Erminio Sal
rdfs:comment
  • Sal was born in 1922 in Centaburgo, a prefecture of Castelmagno to Geremia Sal, the eldest son of Adamo Sal, former Mayor of Castelmagno (1916-1920), and Anna Sarmoni, a farmer. From 1933 to 1946, he and his family lived in the United States, in fear of a possible Jewish prosecution in Lecrotia. When World War II was over, the family went back to Lecrotia, while Erminio stayed there to finish the Psychology course; he later went back in 1951.
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dbkwik:conworld/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
Birth Date
  • 1922-05-23(xsd:date)
Residence
  • Castelmagno
death place
Spouse
Name
  • Erminio Sal
Education
  • Bachelor of Science
Years Active
  • 1953(xsd:integer)
  • 1964(xsd:integer)
Birth Place
death date
  • 2016-03-13(xsd:date)
Image size
  • 200(xsd:integer)
Religion
  • Judaism
Children
Occupation
  • Member of the Great Council, psychologist, writer
Death Cause
  • Myocardial infarction
Nationality
honorific-prefix
  • MGC
abstract
  • Sal was born in 1922 in Centaburgo, a prefecture of Castelmagno to Geremia Sal, the eldest son of Adamo Sal, former Mayor of Castelmagno (1916-1920), and Anna Sarmoni, a farmer. From 1933 to 1946, he and his family lived in the United States, in fear of a possible Jewish prosecution in Lecrotia. When World War II was over, the family went back to Lecrotia, while Erminio stayed there to finish the Psychology course; he later went back in 1951. From 1953 to 1959, while working at the Castelmagno Greater Hospital, he wrote his first poems, included in the collection La luce che viene ("The light that comes"), published in 1961. The collection fared well back then. In 1961, after publishing the collection, he met Eugenio Montale, who would encourage him into writing. In 1964, he was appointed Minister of Education by Silvestro Longo, as an independent. A year later, after the Christian Party suffered a decades-long internal conflict and finally split, he joined the newly-born Conservative Party and was appointed co-chairman pro tempore by the party founder, Alberto Cosimi; he served that position until 1967. After his term as Minister and Member of the Great Council expired in 1970, he resumed writing short poems, included in the collections Efo at? – Poesie e traduzioni ("Where are you? - Poems and Translations"; 1974) and I candelabri (The candelabra; 1981). In 1991, he also wrote a book, Fuga verso l'ignoto ("Escape to the Unknown"), which is about a boy and his family escaping to a land unknown to him during the Tfutza. In 1994, he left the Conservative Party and stated that he would no longer participate in politics. Since then, he lived in his house in Castelmagno until his death in 2016.
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