A Letter From Home

“A Letter From Home” is a project on the rehabilitation, educational and personal development of a group of residents of San Patrignano, an Italian long-term drug recovery residential community considered among the largest worldwide.

According to the United Nations’ World drug report 2021, “drug use killed almost half a million people in 2019. In 2020, around 275 million people have used drugs, up by 22% from 2010.” The devastating effects of drug use have not been stemmed since last century to date.

Therapeutic communities represent one answer to drug addiction, aiming at the reintegration into society through the change toward a drug-free life. Overall, around 2500 therapeutic communities were identified in 2011 across Europe, of which 708 were in Italy.

“A Letter From Home” is a project on the rehabilitation, educational and personal development of a group of residents of San Patrignano, an Italian long-term drug recovery residential community considered among the largest worldwide, with more than 26000 people hosted and 4000 years of prison converted in rehabilitation programs since 1978.

Upon entering the community, each individual is assigned to one of the work sectors, where, at least for one year, a senior resident will serve as the guide in understanding the mechanisms of addiction and attempting to dismantle them. Every progress of the newcomer is also a boost to the self-esteem of the mentor.

The daily routines are tight and determined by mandatory activities, as well as selected ones, such as studies and sport. Never alone, anyway, loneliness requires stability.

No distractions are allowed. For the first year, letters represent the only contact with the outside world. There are often human relations to be reconstructed, or, at least, to be understood.

After the orientation period, each person is assigned increasingly complex responsibilities based on the progress made.

Access to education is possible when the supervisors, often former residents who have successfully completed the program, observe the achievement of sufficient personal balance.

Sharing emotions, spaces, work and recreational activities with individuals of the same sector is the key. At every moment residents face their own limits, fears, frailties.

It is a hard, deep and never-ending fight. The completion of the three year long program is not guaranteed. Guests live the journey with their own intensity and sensitivity. Internal crises sometimes materialise in the rejection of community dynamics.

In the stories of individuals at the end of the program, there is always an awareness, an acceptance of one's own and others' vulnerabilities, a willingness to share, a clear gaze.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Veronica, 25 yo, walking in a grass field within the community. Veronica entered three years ago, on Christmas Eve.She had heard about San Patrignano tradition of admitting people waiting in front of the community gates the day before Christmas.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Residents are seen through the aquarium in the dining hall. Sometimes reality is so hard to face that it is necessary to exclude it from the visual field. It is necessary to disconnect from the past for a while, trying to find the strength to restart.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Elisa, 26 yo, about two years in the community, making the last check of the day in the kennels. Living in the community is an all-encompassing experience.Every single moment, residents deal with their own limits, fears and frailties.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Kevin, 24 yo, is taking care, changing bandages, of Biba, a 9 yo dog, in the kennels. Each person in their own way, at their own pace, may come to appreciate, perhaps at the end of the journey, the importance of caring for their own and others' emotions.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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The basketball court and kindergarden. San Patrignano covers an area of 540 acres, in the hills between the Apennine mountains and the Adriatic sea, in central Italy.It is a self-sustaining community. Residents work in their assigned sectors.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Martina (left) and Cristina pause during a break. The days’ rhythms are determined by compulsory community activities, as well as selected ones, such as studies and sport. Little time for idleness. Never alone, anyway. Loneliness requires stability.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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The dining room can accommodate up to 1500 people. Three claps by the room manager and a thousand people waiting at the tables sit up at the same time, instantly, then lunch can begin. One can choose what to eat, just one rule: no leftovers.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Sara, 19 yo, three months in the community. On the first day we met, she said: “Please, take a picture of me every time you come. I want my mother to see how I am changing”.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Uniforms used during the dining room service. The dining room manager designation represents a high level of confidence on the part of supervisors and strengthens self-esteem. It is typically reserved for senior residents, and not for all.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Martina and Moro, respectively two and one year in the community, in a running area of the kennels. Martina is aware that, in the phase of reintegration into society, she will probably not have the energy to dedicate to another living being.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Left to right: Giovanni, Giacomo and Matteo Giovanni hopes to become a healthcare assistant during his stay. Meanwhile, he spends his free time in the facility accommodation centre where, since the 1990s, people with AIDS live and are cared for.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Kevin, 24 yo, three years in the community. Guests live the three years long journey with their own intensity and sensitivity. At times, inner crises, which can transform into rejection of community dynamics, seem insurmountable.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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One of the accommodation houses where residents live. Individuals of the same sex assigned to the same working area usually live together. For three years, house like this one will be called home.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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At the top is Graziella, 27 yo. At the bottom, from left to right, are Sara, 19 yo, and Janita, 24 yo. Each person arrives at San Patrignano as an individual, often in a defensive isolation that can sometimes seem unreal. Pain has no unit of measureme

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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A letter from home. The words on focus of the written letter mean "Dad reads you". For about a year, letters represent the only contact with the outside world. There is no limits to the number of letters one can receive and send.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Jessica and Donatella, during the first meeting with outside people, after a year. Jessica was living on the streets when Donatella, a stranger, rescued and welcomed her into her home. "Try, otherwise you will die" Donatella said one year later.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Elena, 23 yo, about two years in the community, here during her daily activities in the kennels. “The core of the problem is not drug, nor the abstinence crisis. It is the human being with his own fears”, Vincenzo Muccioli, the founder.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Left to right: Roomy, Elena, Elisa and Martina in the race field. In the community dynamics, one can accept the frustration of not being enough to others and acquire the awareness that only those who want to be helped can be.

© ELISA MARIOTTI - Image from the A Letter From Home photography project
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Elisa about two years in the community. Shortly after entering, during a day-trip to the city, she was overwhelmed by flavours, colours and noises. That day she decided to remain in the community until she will feel ready to face the outside world.

A Letter From Home by ELISA MARIOTTI

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