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#diamociunamano: with the new issue, Vanity Fair takes the field in favor of the Zan Ddl

Vanity Fair takes a stand on civil rights and invites its entire community to do so. While the chronicle tells us the story of Malika, a 22-year-old girl from Florence, thrown out of her home by her parents after having confessed to them that she loves another woman (and that the director of Vanity Fair Simone Marchetti interviewed in a very popular instagram direct on Monday 12 April), and while in the Senate the discussion in the Justice Commission of the Zan Bill, the bill against homophobia, transphobia, misogyny and skill is postponed, the weekly comes out on newsstands with an invitation on the cover: #diamociunamano.

To launch it Alice Pagani, 23, former star of the hit Netflix series Baby and the upcoming romantic thriller Do not kill me. In the interview, the actress joins the chorus of voices that, from the Italian entertainment world to entrepreneurship, gives Fedez a Carlo Cracco, calls for the rapid approval of a bill that is against violence and hatred towards homosexuals, trans and disabled people, and promotes respect for all, regardless of sexual orientation and physical conditions. A stance in line with the sentiment of the generation Z, which sees a country far ahead of its political class, and with its personal story of a bisexual person, which he tells Vanity Fair for the first time.

Why talk about the Zan Bill now, during the pandemic, at a time when people are still getting sick, dying and losing their jobs? As the director explains Simone Marchetti in the editorial: «There is never a good time to talk about the rights and the right to be different from others. It is always the right time. A civilized country, a democratic country protects the rights of minorities and the weakest, because doing so does not mean weakening the majorities, but strengthening everyone».

Alongside the voice of Alice Pagani, the interviews with the deputy Alessandro Zan, promoter of the bill, to the senator Simone Pillon, opponent of the same, and a whole series of young tiktokers who are well followed and committed to spreading a new awareness of civil rights.

Voices that we find on the magazine’s social channels, which promotes a digital campaign with the hashtag #diamociunamano: an initiative that starts from the cover and continues on digital with an invitation to readers to post a photo of them with the word Ddl Zan written on the open hand. A gesture shared by the editorial staff and supported by many friends of Vanity Fair: singers, actors, entrepreneurs, artists, creatives who will support the project with their photographic contributions.

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