21 Eylül 2016 Çarşamba

"Racist" booklet generates more controversy for Italy"s fertility day

The controversy surrounding Italy’s first fertility day, a day designed to encourage Italians to have children, was reignited on Wednesday following accusations that the cover of a booklet published by the health ministry illustrating good and bad personal habits was racist.


The cover of the booklet showed two white couples, arms draped around one another, exhibiting behaviour that was good for fertility, while the image that represented poor habits showed a black person among a group doing drugs.


— Claire Fernandez (@CFerKic) September 21, 2016

Outrageously racist cover of Italian gvt fertility leaflet (which doesn’t even touch upon #infertility you can’t “prevent”) #fertilityday pic.twitter.com/QDcPjfkimE



The image, which appeared to show people smoking marijuana, looks like it was first used in an anti-drug campaign by the US state of Arizona, according to an image published by the Phoenix New Times.


An article in La Repubblica said the contrast between the “good” and “bad” images smacked of racism and the booklet was criticised on social media outlets as being racist.


The accusation was rejected by health minister Beatrice Lorenzin.


“The photos represent a homogeneity of people, as is the multi-ethnic society in which we live,” the health ministry said in a statement. “Racism is in the eye of the beholder.”


Italy’s first fertility day is being held on Thursday.


The controversy came just weeks after the original ad campaign to promote the national fertility day, an initiative meant to raise awareness about infertility and promote reproductive health and fertility treatments, was widely derided as offensive.


In one ad, a woman was shown holding an hourglass and the campaign included the catchphrase: “Beauty knows no age. Fertility does”.


The campaign was dropped and was meant to be replaced by one that was more scientific and focused on useful information. Lorenzin is a member of the New Centre Right, a conservative coalition partner in prime minister Matteo Renzi’s centrist government. She is known for her opposition to parental rights for same-sex parents and has been an outspoken critic of surrogacy, which is illegal in Italy.



"Racist" booklet generates more controversy for Italy"s fertility day

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