European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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Everybody was in the streets, so the parade grew more and more.
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From Castellazzo to Reggio it is seven or eight km.
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A whole group of youths – since the older ones were at war – rode their bicycles all the way to the city.
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Mussolini’s writings were everywhere:
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“Credere, obbedire, combattere” (Believe, obey, fight);
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“L’aratro traccia il solco e la spada lo difende” (The plough cuts furrows, the sword protects them).
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Some boys managed to find paint and went up the ladders to cover them.
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They also tried to pull down some of the monuments, the fasces or Mussolini’s busts.
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Confusion was rather high at that moment.
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The situation seemed to turn more complex, since we still had a King.
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Then September 8th 1943 arrived.
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That day we didn’t listen to the radio, since nobody had one.
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But the news moved fast, on our bicycles.
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Within an hour of the announcement the whole town knew that the King had signed the armistice.
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We began to see soldiers wandering in the country, going back home.
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I had developed an awareness regarding antifascism.
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I was active together with other women in asking local families to offer hospitality
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and clothes for these young men who were disbanded.
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After the King had fled, the army had no leadership.
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Then the Germans occupied the area, on that same day.
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