European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
-
When I was in the brigade, we’d usually march at night.
-
We walked all night long just to get a little bit further, for instance from the Karst to the Trnovski gozd via the Vipava valley,
-
where the ambushes and outposts were. I often thought these actions were dangerous or just too straining.
-
So I often volunteered for various new tasks that would arise amidst a battle.
-
These were more dangerous, but at least I could channel my individualism this way.
-
So I became an informer. I would travel alone to Trieste with forged documents.
-
It was highly risky, but I felt that my life was at my own disposal.
-
Later I was with the miners. That was just a small unit, maybe there were 13 or 15 of us. It was easy to command.
-
One year I worked in the educational system
-
organizing the school system and appointing teachers who didn’t even exist.
-
I was alone in appointing these teachers and without Slovenian schools.
-
I decided to call a meeting for all the women who stayed home alone so I could present them with a dictation of a text.
-
I had some knowledge of the Slovene language I reviewed the results
-
and decided that the one who made the fewest mistakes would be the teacher.
-
The children needed someone to present them with at least the basics of the language and a little math and reading.
-
They couldn’t just go through the war without any schooling … The official schooling system had disintegrated.
-
So it was necessary to establish a Slovenian school.
-
Things were easiest for me while I worked in the schooling system.
-
Although for a long time I felt like an informer.
-
Being 18, I strained to be a great informer, like all those characters I’d read about, Sherlock Holmes for instance,
Il n’a plus de segments à afficher.
Chargement d’autres segments en cours…
© 2009-2024 WebTranslateIt Software S.L. Tous droits réservés.
Termes d’utilisation
·
Politique de confidentialité
·
Politique de sécurité