Italy’s Fragile Beauty
Milan If you put a pin right in the middle of a map of Italy, youre likely to hit Amatrice. A small, historic city known as the town of the hundred churches, it lies two hours from Rome and 3,280 feet above sea level, in the scenic Gran Sasso National Park, on the watershed between the Adriatic and the Tyrrhenian Seas. The area straddles four of our most famous regions: Lazio, Abruzzo, Marche and Umbria. Amatrice is the centerpiece of picture-postcard Italy, for those who find Tuscany too obvious, Rome too noisy and Venice too crowded.
And in the space of just one summers night, Amatrice is all but gone.
So are the nearby villages of Accumoli and Pescara del Tronto, wiped out by a 6.2 magnitude earthquake that struck central Italy early Wednesday, killing at least 160 people, including children, trapping scores more under debris, leaving thousands homeless and setting off tremors that were felt from Bologna to Naples.
Today, according to one witness, The area looks like Dantes Inferno. But until yesterday it looked like paradise. A lovely corner of the country. Ancient, unspoiled hilltop villages for many foreigners, the quintessence of their Italian fantasies. For us Italians, a source of pride.'>>>
http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/25/opinion/italys-fragile-beauty.html?