European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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I took my bicycle and brought him some clothes, and he was finally able to escape.
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There were six men from Marola and they all managed to escape, two at a time, and make it home.
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They wore plain clothes and ran away at night, just like everybody else, in order not to be caught by the Germans or the fascists.
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Searching for the wounded near Albinea
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They decided to come to Albinea
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so I had to take care of a lot of things, because they always had something to set up.
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The partisans of Modena were a very large group, and they also had to coordinate the Russians who were with them.
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So there were many of us when we arrived at Lupo.
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We left Secchio at night and made it to Valestra at dawn.
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We stayed there the whole day and left again in the evening, arriving at Lupo at two thirty in the morning.
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Leaving Valestra, as we were on the road that goes from Casina to Albinea, you could still see the long line behind.
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There were so many people: the English, the paratroopers, the Gufi Neri, all the partisans from the Central Headquarters.
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We stayed there the whole day and then the following night, at around midnight, they went down for the attack.
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Soon you could hear shots, as well as the sound of bagpipes,
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since the English were used to going to battle playing bagpipes.
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I can’t recall how many women we were, myself and another skinny girl from Villa Minozzo,
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but later Kiss told us that our task for the next day would be to search for any wounded, since anyone wounded had to be retrieved.
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The following day, as soon as it was light enough, we were asking ourselves what we had to do.
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Nobody was around and no partisans had returned. They must have dispersed in all directions.
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We wondered if there were any wounded men or not.
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