European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
-
the responsibility, not only as one regards one’s own behavior, but also towards one’s comrades.
-
If a comrade was wounded, you would rescue him.
-
Even if he fell, you would rescue his body so that the enemy wouldn’t get him and desecrate his body.
-
It was a matter of honor; you would not hesitate to risk your own life.
-
Once I dragged a fatally wounded comrade almost three kilometers.
-
Luckily, the Germans knew that a Partisan brigade was somewhere in the vicinity,
-
so they chose not to hunt me down directly but tracked me through the shooting lines.
-
That time I was almost sure I would die too.
-
Honor prevailed over thoughts of self survival in such moments.
-
It was one year later when the army ‘lent’ me to civilian society,
-
to help organize Slovenian Partisan schooling in the entire Primorje territory.
-
I had always collaborated in the Karst. Then I returned once again to the unit.
-
I was very active in cultural matters: I wrote songs, recited at meetings.
-
Brigades were named after poets, I was in the Kosovel brigade.
-
There was also the Gregorcic battalion and the Levstik brigade.
-
Culture and combat were amalgamated at the time.
-
I had founded schools, taught, been the district headmaster and I don’t know what all, anything that was needed,
-
I’d recited my poems at many a meeting…
-
It was 1944 and we were sure the war would end almost the very next day.
-
I was called back to the armed forces yet again. They put me among the miners.
No more segments to load.
Loading more segments…
© 2009-2024 WebTranslateIt Software S.L. All rights reserved.
Terms of Service
·
Privacy Policy
·
Security Policy