You Can Take Little Italy Off the Map, But You Cannot Take It Out of History

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There are moments when a government document reveals more about the worldview of those who produced it than perhaps they ever intended. New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s newly released official map identifying the city’s immigrant enclaves is one such document. Presented as a celebration of the diverse communities that have enriched New York, the map identifies thirty neighborhoods associated with immigrant populations, highlighting communities such as Little Palestine, Little Haiti, Little Egypt, Little Senegal, Little Yemen, and Little Poland. Yet conspicuously absent from this official portrait of New York’s immigrant heritage is one of the most famous ethnic neighborhoods in the history of the United States. Little Italy is simply gone.City Hall has attempted to explain away this glaring omission by claiming the map reflects neighborhoods with substantial contemporary foreign born populations rather than historic immigrant communities. That explanation only deepens the offense. It suggests that once an immigrant community succeeds, assimilates, raises generations of proud Americans, and becomes woven into the fabric of the nation, its story somehow loses its value. Such reasoning transforms success into historical invisibility. It substitutes ideology for history and revisionism for gratitude.Stone Cold Truth with Roger Stone is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Little Italy is not merely another neighborhood on a tourist brochure. It is one of the sacred landmarks of the American immigrant experience. During the late 19th century and early 20th century hundreds of thousands of Italians arrived in New York carrying little more than faith, determination, and an unshakable belief that America offered possibilities unavailable anywhere else on earth. They settled in crowded tenements, worked impossible hours, endured prejudice that would shock modern sensibilities, and slowly built lives that transformed both their families and the city around them.These were the men who excavated subway tunnels beneath Manhattan’s streets, erected towering skyscrapers that forever altered the skyline, built bridges connecting boroughs, labored on docks, filled factories, and helped create the greatest city in the world through sweat, sacrifice, and perseverance. Italian American craftsmen became synonymous with excellence in construction, masonry, and engineering. Their entrepreneurial spirit filled neighborhoods with restaurants, bakeries, grocery stores, and family businesses that became institutions. Their devotion to faith and family established churches, civic organizations, charitable societies, and cultural traditions that continue to define New York generations later.The Feast of San Gennaro remains one of the city’s most celebrated festivals because it represents something far greater than food and entertainment. It is a living reminder of a people who carried their traditions across an ocean while embracing their new American identity with extraordinary patriotism. Mulberry Street became a symbol recognized throughout the world because it embodied the promise that immigrants could preserve the best of their heritage while becoming fully American. That story deserves honor rather than omission.Italian Americans did not arrive in this country to universal applause. They encountered suspicion, ridicule, discrimination, and violence. They endured restrictive immigration quotas and social exclusion. The largest mass lynching in American history was inflicted upon Italian immigrants in New Orleans. Countless businesses openly refused to hire them. They were stereotyped in newspapers, mocked in popular culture, and treated as second class citizens despite their unwavering loyalty to their adopted nation. Rather than embrace permanent grievance, they embraced opportunity. They fought in America’s wars. They joined police departments and firehouses. They became judges, doctors, teachers, scientists, artists, entrepreneurs, legislators, and public servants. They earned their place in American history through discipline, resilience, and love of country.That remarkable story is precisely why the omission of Little Italy carries significance far beyond the boundaries of lower Manhattan. When government officials choose which communities deserve official recognition and which are quietly discarded, they are making a statement about whose history matters. A city that proudly highlights newly established immigrant neighborhoods while erasing perhaps its most celebrated immigrant neighborhood is engaging in historical revisionism whether it acknowledges the fact or not.This pattern is entirely consistent with Mayor Mamdani’s broader political philosophy. His administration consistently views society through the narrow lens of identity politics, dividing Americans into categories of favored and disfavored groups based upon contemporary ideological preferences rather than historical reality. Communities that reinforce fashionable political narratives receive celebration, while communities whose stories emphasize assimilation, patriotism, self reliance, and economic achievement become inconvenient reminders that the American dream has worked for generations of immigrants willing to embrace it.The irony is impossible to ignore. Diversity is celebrated so long as it fits within an approved ideological framework. Yet one of the most successful immigrant communities in American history suddenly becomes invisible because its descendants became fully integrated into American life. Success itself appears to be treated as disqualification. Assimilation becomes grounds for exclusion rather than the ultimate triumph of the immigrant experience.This past Columbus Day in 2025, I wrote an article entitled “Why Columbus Day Must Be Revered and Why Our Italian Heritage Is the Bedrock of the American Story”. In that essay, I chronicled the extraordinary contributions Italian Americans have made to the United States from the nation’s earliest years through the modern era. I argued that no honest accounting of American history can be written without acknowledging the indispensable role played by generations of Italian immigrants who helped build our industries, defend our freedoms, enrich our culture, and strengthen our institutions. That argument has only become more compelling in light of this latest insult from City Hall.Italian American organizations have rightly condemned this omission as cultural erasure. Their outrage is entirely justified because history belongs to all Americans, not merely to those who satisfy the political preferences of the moment. Public memory should unite rather than divide. Official recognition should reflect historical truth rather than ideological fashion. Little Italy has earned its place in the American story through more than a century of extraordinary contribution, and no municipal map can erase that legacy from the hearts of millions who continue to honor it.New York achieved greatness because generation after generation of immigrants came to this city determined not merely to preserve their old identities but to become Americans. Few communities embodied that aspiration more completely than the Italians of Little Italy. Their labor built the city. Their families strengthened its neighborhoods. Their patriotism defended the Republic. Their culture enriched the nation. Their descendants continue to serve every profession, every branch of government, every corner of commerce, and every level of public life.Mayor Mamdani may remove Little Italy from an official map, but he cannot remove it from history. He cannot erase the bricks its builders laid, the bridges they constructed, the churches they established, the businesses they created, or the enduring spirit they infused into New York City. Little Italy remains one of the defining chapters of the American immigrant experience, and any official history that pretends otherwise is not merely incomplete. It is intellectually dishonest and historically indefensible.Thanks for reading Stone Cold Truth with Roger Stone! This post is public so feel free to share it.Share