European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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It was near the train station.
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One night, or morning really,
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a wagon filled with arms exploded.
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My mother was left with nothing from what had been, before,
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the quite comfortable lifestyle of an intellectual Ljubljana family.
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I also had nothing. When my husband and I were demobilized, there was nothing left.
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We were used to living modestly already during the war. But this wasn’t the main problem.
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The main problem was that my father was gone, my husband was gone, and many of my friends were gone.
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One had to survive. So I’ve gotten by for most of my life.
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I’ve supported myself as an art teacher, initially in high schools and then, following the reorganization of the schooling system, in elementary schools.
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Up to my retirement in 1969, when I finally found my true calling.
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Partisan Vito, Alenka's husband
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Later on, Vito, a partisan not yet 26 years old, came to the Technical Center.
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Vito was an extremely talented painter, despite not being schooled.
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He wanted to become a vocational painter after the war.
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Vito came to the Technical Center after me.
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Before, though, he'd spent a long time in an Italian internment camp.
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Due to the long, harsh conditions there, he suffered from a very bad case of articular rheumatism.
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He didn’t go home when Italy surrendered, because it would have still been too dangerous.
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Instead, he went straight to the partisans, and in the dead of winter,
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