European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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As he was killed in battle she took his place.
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Laila was the first name of a woman fighter, so I thought it would be right for me to choose that name.
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She was a combatant, and I chose a name that would reflect what I was doing.
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Becoming a partisan: rights, obligations
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After a while of walking, a partisan patrol came towards us.
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They were from the Rosselli detachment. Rosselli was one of the local partisans. Then we reached the detachment.
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There, the commander started talking to us. He wanted to know why we went to the mountains.
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We explained to him what had happened. And the situation changed again. A different reality hit us.
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We didn’t only have to learn to fight, as the commander told us:
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“From this moment you’re not men or women anymore, you’re partisans.
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You’ll do what the others do, share things with us and sleep in the same rooms,
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share our meals and all the tasks we must carry out, like patrolling the area.
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You should learn to handle weapons, know how to care for them, load them, and how to use them.
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You’ll mount guard and take part in the patrols. Little by little you’ll become combatants.
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Here you have the same rights and obligations as everyone else.
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Nobody should put you into trouble and you should behave so that nobody else ends up in trouble because of you”.
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At night, at first they had given us a room which was full of bedbugs.
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We had to run out of it as we couldn’t sleep because of the bites.
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So the first night I slept with them I was between De Pietri, a partisan from Reggio
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and a young Sardinian carabiniere who had refused to follow the Germans’ orders and went to the partisans.
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