In the second half of the 19th century, the Italian social system and agrarian structure underwent a serious crisis that affected small farmers and sharecroppers. The shift from the countryside to the city caused by industrialization, together with the concentration of rural property and the growth of poverty, pushed Italian farmers to emigrate to America.
Of the 52 million Europeans who emigrated between 1830 and 1930, about 11 million landed in Latin America: most came from northern Italy and Spain. Almost half of them, about 5 million Italians, settled in Argentina.
Boretto, a small farming town on the Po River, was also affected by the agrarian crisis. And the Zatti family suffered from economic difficulties. From an early age all family members, including the children, went to work in the fields. The older children and other family members worked as laborers or farmhands to earn bread and porridge: “Born into a poor home, where there were many mouths and little income, it was necessary to work if one wanted to live,” summed up Salesian Fr. Raúl Entraigas, Zatti’s main biographer.
Like the rest of his family, Artemide led the poor life of hard-working and self-sacrificing peasants. And like other Italians, he saw America as a way out. Information from relatives who were already on this continent was enthusiastic. In particular, his uncle Giovanni Zatti, who had settled in Bahía Blanca, was acting as a “callback.”
Migratory chains, networks of acquaintances, and ethnic and religious identity made it possible to channel news, discover job opportunities, and take advantage of the few resources available. Friends and relatives already residing in the “promised land” initiated these chains. Thus, in early 1897, the Zatti family set sail for Argentina. Artemide was 16 years old.
Bonds and faith to feel at home
Once they arrived in America, the Italian immigrants, the vast majority of whom were agricultural workers, engaged in a variety of activities that allowed them to earn a living or, at best, achieve a slight social uplift. The Zatti arrived in Argentina on February 7 and settled in Bahía Blanca, then a small town in the south of the province of Buenos Aires.
The support of family members and the solidarity of social networks, such as mutual aid societies and Church action, facilitated the migrants’ inclusion in social, cultural, and productive life. Don Bosco’s Salesians, many of whom were also Italians, facilitated this inclusion in local society.
As part of this migratory chain, Artémide serves as an advisor to newcomers to the country: “I heard that cousin Iginio arrived from Italy, or rather, from the unforgettable Boretto. From the distant lands of Patagonia, I wish him good luck (…) Advise him not to let himself be trapped (applies to everyone) by that master who makes people work even on holidays, under the pretext of necessity, saying and putting into practice what he will have already heard, that in America everything is allowed as long as one earns money.”
The Zatti’s, a religious family, accustomed to the practices of peasant piety, were frequent visitors to the parish of Boretto. Once in Argentina, Artemidé, like all his brethren, joined parish life and soon became an assiduous participant in activities organized by the Salesians. From his contact with the Salesians, his religious vocation and desire to become a Salesian was born.
With the memory of the homeland
Migrants, even those who joined “welcoming” societies such as the Zatti in the late 19th century, experienced poverty and uncertainty. While trying to maintain ties with their place of origin, they built new ties locally to make their way. Through an intermediary, Artemidé got in touch with his parish priest in Boretto and sent greetings to all his fellow villagers: “I have written to Boretto, to Father Costante Solian, asking for certificates of Baptism and Confirmation. He has already sent them to me, taking care to send greetings to all of you and to the ‘Borettans’ who live in Bahía Blanca.”
In Artemide’s life, we can see his resilience in the face of adversity in his new life context: precarious work, incomplete studies, severe health difficulties, and uncertainty about the future. Yet, in the face of all this, he was able to recover. Finally, in 1914, he obtained a “citizenship card” as a citizen of the Argentine Republic. Only in 1934, on the occasion of Don Bosco’s canonization, did he return to Italy and visit his native town.