Crown windows, banks and air chairs, broken doors. If that explosion had taken place at another moment, in which the hundreds of girls and boys frequented La Balzani of Centocelle had been there, an immense tragedy would have been accomplished.
Fortunately, it was not so, but for the school, which is part of the overall salacone institute, as for other important places in the area, today is zero day.
Yes, because the message that comes from the manager “The Balzani plexus is unusable and certainly we will not be able to reopen it in September“It is the coup de grace, on this day of July unfortunate.
In WhatsApp groups, the mothers of those little ones realize the escaped tragedy, sending and crossing videos and images that have dearly:
But just look at those images to understand that: blackened walls, rubble everywhere, a maternal classroom transformed into a heap of debris. An explosion that devastated not only a physical space, but also a educational garrisona place of daily affection and growth.
The Balzani school, for the neighborhood, is much more than a building: it was a firm point, a refuge, a beating heart. Now it looks like a battlefield, and it is afraid of thinking what could have happened.
Is one slap in the face of the city: Today there are the damage, tomorrow you will have to face the weight of responsibilities, with one of the many questions in the lead: will the fuel distributors ever continue to be in city centers?
Meanwhile, the official communication arrives from Balzani: these classrooms in September will not be able to reopen:
We know that on September 15 he is around the corner and that we must imagine a beautiful and comfortable school for all Balzani’s boys and girls: they are entitled to be welcomed in the best way and to hear, with the strength we are capable of, the warmth of the educating community of our institute -writes the DS Labalestra -. With the whole municipal school network we have already started looking for the most suitable solutions.
The void remains: that left by classrooms that will not return to live in September, by a school community that will have to be uprooted and relocated, and by parents and teachers who ask – with anger and pain – how it was possible to get to this point.