Renato Curcio (; born 23 September 1941) is the former leader of the Italian far-left terrorist organization Red Brigades ( Brigate Rosse), responsible among other facts of the kidnapping and murder of the former Italian prime minister Aldo Moro.
A poor student, Curcio failed several subjects in his first year of high school and had to repeat the year. He then resumed vocational training classes until moving to Milan to live with his mother. He enrolled in the Ferrini Institute in Albenga, where he became a model student. During this period he was active in youth organization "Giovane nazione".Jean Luc "Giovane Europa" (Barbarossa, 1992), pp. 46-47 citato in Sergio Flamigni "La Sfinge delle Brigate Rosse" (KAOS Edizioni, 2004), p. 30
On completing his degree in 1962, he won a scholarship to study at the new and innovative Institute of Sociology at the University of Trento, where he became absorbed in existential philosophy. During the mid-1960s, he gravitated toward radical politics and Marxism as a byproduct of his interest in existentialism and the self. By the late 1960s, he had become a committed revolutionary and Marxist theoretician. In addition to Marxism, Curcio also studied the philosophies of Lenin and Mao, further influencing his leftist ideology.
According to Alessandro Silj, three political events transformed him from a radical to an activist: two bloody demonstrations at Trento and a massacre by police of farm labourers in 1968. During the 1967-69 period, Curcio was also involved in two Marxist university groups: the Movement for a Negative University and the publication Lavoro Politico (Political Work).
However, after getting arrested in February 1971 for occupying a vacant house, the Curcios and the most militant members of the Proletarian Left went completely underground and organized the Red Brigades and spent the next three years, from 1972 to 1975, engaging in a series of bombings and kidnappings of prominent figures. One of these assassination victims was the Chief Inspector of Turin's anti-terrorism task force. In February 1975, Cagol and a small commando group from the Red Brigades broke Curcio out of a poorly secured prison without having to use any violence.
After Curcio's incarceration, the Red Brigades began changing its identity, with its members becoming younger and increasingly more militant. This increased militarization of the group led to a sharp uptick in the number of attacks and assassinations between the years of 1976 and 1978, culminating in the assassination of former Italian Prime Minister Aldo Moro in 1978.
In 1990, while still incarcerated, Curcio started a publishing company, along with Steffano Petrella and Nicola Valentino, called Sensibili alle Foglie, or Sensitive to the Leaves.
In April 1993 he was allowed to spend the day outside the jail in order to work as a writer, then in 1998 he was freed. An article about Curcio in 1993
To date, Curcio has not expressed remorse for the activity of the Red Brigades.
In August 2007, French actress Fanny Ardant expressed her "admiration" for the Red Brigades leader as a "hero", adding she "considered the Red Brigades phenomenon to be very moving and passionate". For her comments, the actress was sued in the Italian courts by Piero Mazzola, the son of an Italian policeman killed by the Red Brigades. BBC NEWS | Entertainment | French star sued for hero comment From BBC an article about Ardent and Curcio
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