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Christian Picciolini : ウィキペディア英語版 | Christian Picciolini
Christian Picciolini (born November 3, 1973) is the co-founder of the nonprofit peace advocacy organization, Life After Hate, and penned a memoir, ''Romantic Violence: Memoirs Of An American Skinhead'', that was released in 2015 and details his time as a leader of the American white power movement. He has been profiled in publications like ''Vice'' and Noisey, and has appeared on nationally broadcast television programs like ''Anderson Cooper 360°,'' ''The Blaze'' and the ''CBS Evening News''.〔〔〔 ==Early life and education==
Picciolini was born and raised in Blue Island, Illinois, the son of Italian immigrants. His father was a hair salon owner and his mother is a restaurant owner. At age 14 in 1987, Picciolini was recruited to join the Chicago Area Skinheads (CASH) by the group's founder, Clark Martell.〔 Two years later, after Martell had gone to prison for a second time, Picciolini became the group's leader at age 16. He facilitated a merger between CASH and the Hammerskins, a more violent and well-organized white supremacist skinhead organization.〔 He would go on to head the white supremacist punk band, White American Youth (W.A.Y.) and, eventually, a hate rock band called Final Solution. Final Solution was the first American white power skinhead group to perform in Europe. The concert was held in a former cathedral in Weimar, Germany, attended by 4,000 people, and was made up of several other white supremacist bands.〔〔 In 1994, Picciolini opened a record store called Chaos Records where he often sold white power music.〔 He officially renounced ties to the American Neo-Nazi movement in 1996 at the age of 22. Picciolini attended DePaul University later in life earning a degree in international business and international relations.
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