European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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They realised I would remember things and take care of everything properly.
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I often didn’t write things down, although sometimes I did, in order to remember the names of the Germans for example.
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I would have eaten the slips of paper if I was caught.
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To give you an example, when they told me to go and inform the others that a mop-up was scheduled, lead by Dolmann or Surmann,
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who were in charge of these things, I would write down the most important names and information.
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At first they had given me the battle name Libertà (Freedom). Later I was called Giorgio, but at the beginning it was Libertà, or maybe Volontà.
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I didn’t even know they had written that name down.
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Maybe it was at the time of the wounded man, when they wrote that I had gone back home.
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I was given that card in Busana, then they took it away from me in Albinea, and it’s still there.
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I don’t have that card now: it was given to me when we had to go to the mountains with the wounded man,
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all the way into the province of Modena, before I came home alone and my sister stayed there.
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I left after no more than two days, I had to go see my parents.
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So I really can’t recall if my first battle name was Libertà or Volontà.
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My sister’s battle name was Foresta, and she was given that name right away,
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just like me, but I didn’t keep it long enough to bother knowing it.
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There was also this other boy from Parma who was in Busana, in Castelnuovo,
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and that’s where we were handed these documents that I don’t have anymore.
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Later I went on working with Kiss. Since we were all women, he suggested I could choose a man’s name,
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so I was given the battle name Giorgio and that’s the name I always used.
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Sister joins the partisans
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