• Mondo
  • Venerdì 3 febbraio 2012

Un mese di scarpe

Quelle regalate a Sarkozy e quelle indossate da Djokovic per vincere gli Australian Open; quelle perse dal ministro britannico Theresa May e quelle abbandonate sui cavi elettrici a San Paolo

Iron shoes are pictured on the bank of the Danube on January 27, 2012, marking the Holocaust in Hungary. Hundreds of Hungarian Jews had to leave their shoes on the bank before they were shot into the river by Hungarian militaimen during the World War II. The United Nations declared in 2005 the Holocaust Memorial Day on January 27 to commemorate the 6 million Jews and other victims murdered by the Nazis. AFP PHOTO / FERENC ISZA (Photo credit should read FERENC ISZA/AFP/Getty Images)
Iron shoes are pictured on the bank of the Danube on January 27, 2012, marking the Holocaust in Hungary. Hundreds of Hungarian Jews had to leave their shoes on the bank before they were shot into the river by Hungarian militaimen during the World War II. The United Nations declared in 2005 the Holocaust Memorial Day on January 27 to commemorate the 6 million Jews and other victims murdered by the Nazis. AFP PHOTO / FERENC ISZA (Photo credit should read FERENC ISZA/AFP/Getty Images)

La Giornata della memoria, il presidente francese Nicolas Sarkozy e quello tedesco Christian Wulff, le proteste per i diritti degli immigrati e quelle contro la tv di stato egiziana, i fili elettrici di San Paolo e le macerie del terremoto ad Haiti, Rafael Nadal e San Valentino: nell’ultimo mese molti eventi e notizie accaduti nel mondo hanno avuto per testimoni, o protagoniste, delle scarpe. Enormi, perse, regalate, vendute o mostrate come insulto.