European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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After that, we were transferred to different places.
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I was sent to an airport near Rome, in a small village called Furbara.
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Our units were sent to mount guard in Rome,
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so we went to Palazzo Venezia.
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Throughout the week, every night a different unit was in charge of this:
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one night it was the Air Force, one night the artillerymen, and so on.
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So we went to mount guard, and I remember that a new lieutenant came to pick us up with a van at eight in the morning,
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and told us we would be visiting Rome for a while since he had never been there before.
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I went back inside the airport. The mail had arrived and there were also some letters for me.
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I went to my sleeping quarter and was opening a letter when my lieutenant,
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a man from Ancona whose name was Santaroni, came over. He was a good man – he gave me a hug later –
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who had come to tell me that “somebody needed to speak to me”.
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It was three policemen.
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The first thing the sergeant did was take the letter I held in my hands.
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In the letter, my mother had written the following words:
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“You’re lucky to be in the Army, since in the past few days Pattaccini, Boiardi and others were arrested”.
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They were all people I used to be implicated with in our activities,
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and my poor mother was telling me this openly. But that’s exactly why I was arrested.
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I never managed to get that letter back. Wherever I was taken, the letter seemed to follow me.
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You see, we all used to deny knowing someone, but I couldn’t, since the names were written on the letter.
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