European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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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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he joined the march of the Ljubljana brigade and the 18th Division to Gorski Kotar.
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It was a terribly cold winter and his rheumatism got worse.
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There were no antibiotics at the time or any such medicine.
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He slept with high fevers, laying on branches in the snow.
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His fever from the infection affected his cardiac valves.
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None of us, including him, was aware he was deadly ill when he came to the Technical Center.
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When we withdrew from Bela krajina, he was suffering from angina infection.
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Once we had withdrawn from Bela krajina and gone to Gorski Kotar,
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(the entire active militia was heading towards Trieste), we, the reserve units, followed along behind.
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He had his first heart attack in Gorski Kotar, but recovered from that.
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We then got to Ljubljana with the impression the war was ending; the end of sicknesses, the end of all bad things.
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It was only a year and three months later that he died of a cardiac valve infection, a death sentence at that time.
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Cultural work among the partisans
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There were many, many cultural workers with the partisans.
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And my humble self was among them.
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