European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
-
Their problem was that they didn’t have a place to hide me in,
-
so they couldn’t do anything if someone offered me a cigarette.
-
Once we arrived in Florence, however, the Carabinieri decided to get off and change train.
-
Later I understood that they did this to prevent me from talking to the people that were on the first train.
-
The other one – from Bologna to Reggio Emilia – was a lot less crowded.
-
When we arrived in Reggio Emilia I was immediately taken to the Police Station.
-
There, I was confronted with a lot of stories, and I still had to deal with the issue of the letter.
-
I would have never told anything to the authorities,
-
but Pagliarello had my letter in his hands while he questioned me, and I did not know what to say.
-
At a certain point, although I was handcuffed,
-
I managed to see out of the corner of my eye that he was about to hit me from behind,
-
so I protected myself: he ended up hitting the handcuffs, got angry and smacked me a couple of times.
-
We were all waiting in line. There were people
-
like the guy who told on me, a baker whose name was Montermini.
-
He was sentenced to fifteen years by the special court, and served quite a few of them.
-
We were the last ones, and our sentences were lighter: as for myself, I was sentenced to four years of confinement.
-
Nobody defended you, it was only up to you to stand up for yourself.
-
In any case, when you got into the movement you were aware that there would not be much you could do:
-
we all knew that if we got caught we would end up doing a couple of years.
-
It came to no surprise.
No more segments to load.
Loading more segments…
© 2009-2024 WebTranslateIt Software S.L. All rights reserved.
Terms of Service
·
Privacy Policy
·
Security Policy