We the Italians October 19, 2015 - 70 | Page 30

th # 70 • OCTOBER 19 , 2015 already an ardent NIAF supporter, became the first Italian American (and the first woman) to be nominated as a Democratic Vice Presidential nominee in 1984; and Antonin Scalia was nominated to the Supreme Court in 1986. To keep the Italian American community at the head of the national consciousness, NIAF supported countless conferences in these years, many in partnership with long-established Italian American groups such as the Order Sons of Italy in America. In the hope of exposing our history to an even wider audience, NIAF played an early role in supporting “The Stonecarvers,” a documentary film that examined the work of the Italian American stone carvers who worked on the Washington Cathedral. The film won an Oscar in 1985, though NIAF is still waiting for the trophy! accurately to NIAF’s own mission. The increased prominence and electoral relevance of the Italian American community was cemented in 1984, when NIAF’s 5th Biannual Congressional Awards Dinner was attended by President Ronald Reagan, Vice President George H.W. Bush, and their Democratic rivals Walter F. Mondale and Geraldine Ferraro. NIAF’s continued growth and expansion of its activities mirrored this trend of the larger Italian American community. When Victor Sal Sciggs, one of NIAF’s earliest scholarship winners, observed about his family that they “didn’t come here to forget their heritage, but to nurture it and to pass along these ideals to their children,” it could not have applied more In October, 1985, in a landmark moment for the organization, Frank Sinatra, the sole honoree at NIAF’s 10th Anniversary Gala Dinner, told the assembled crowd that to him “the NIAF award was special because it came from family.” President and Mrs. Reagan joined Frank and Barbara Sinatra on the dais that evening, and the President praised NIAF’s work in honoring the American Dream. In 1986, in order to further strengthen the ties between the United States and Italy, NIAF initiated a student exchange program with Italy through a cooperative project with USIA. NIAF would send 15 Italian American students to Italy, and Italy would send 15 students to the United 30 | WE THE ITALIANS www.wetheitalians.com 1985–1995: The Italian American Decade In 1985, in celebration of its first decade at the forefront of the Italian American community, NIAF launched major new activities aimed at Americans of Italian heritage, aged 18 to 40, through a newly established Youth Activities Division. NIAF also announced the creation of a national Media Institute to help the national and local media seeking an accurate and authentic portrayal of the realities of Italian American life and contributions to America. The Institute emerged from a 1983 conference on ethnicity and the media, jointly hosted by NIAF and the Commission for Social Justice of the New York Sons of Italy in America.