European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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And also families of the illegals, who didn’t get coupons for rations.
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So we had to collect necessities for everyday life.
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Places had to be arranged for meetings, in houses, where people were willing to risk letting people in for LF meetings.
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We, the participants at these meetings, didn’t know each other, but we had codes.
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You’d arrive with a code, introduce yourself to the owner of the apartment. Then he would respond with a code.
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That way we knew we could trust each other. We even had code names for each other.
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We expressed ourselves publicly with writing actions to instill courage in the population of the city and Slovenia.
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We would write codes on walls advocating the LF. We would litter the city.
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Sometimes it was completely strewn with papers advocating the LF.
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Once, two of us, both members of the district committee of the LF in Siska –
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it was Vida Janezic, who today is proclaimed a national hero, and I –
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we both used a bucket and poured axle grease along the length of Celovska Street and covered it with LF inscriptions.
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Another time we wrote all over Celovska Street, opposite the Union brewery.
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But it snowed the next morning and covered over everything we wrote.
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Another very important thing: demonstrations.
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I don’t know if any other country in occupied Europe arranged demonstrations, or as many as were in Ljubljana.
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First they were women’s demonstrations, demanding that the men be released from the internment camps.
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These demonstrations were held in front of the train station,
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and then in front of the military leadership and the administrational leadership of the occupier.
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Eventually, in front of the Ljubljana diocese, as well. I was at all of these demonstrations.
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