European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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They were already talking about what would change after the Liberation, about the right to vote for women.
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The commissioner explained to us that the right to vote was the most significant right women could have.
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Throughout history it had not been acknowledged.
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It was the first step towards women’s liberation.
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That was the first time I heard somebody talk about these issues and about emancipation, such a great word.
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Normal, every-day danger
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I used to ride my bicycle from Castellazzo to piazza Fontanesi in Reggio,
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to go tell the landlord if we were buying or selling. Since we were sharecroppers, we had to report to him everything that concerned the land.
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I had to do this journey many times, and I often had to jump in the ditch to hide from the airplanes.
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One day I asked myself if they would fire at a bicycle. I kept going on the road, as the airplane was bearing down on me.
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One time I was stopped at the checkpoint by the hospice.
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There was always one there, but that day a man had been killed.
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So there was a group of fascists walking from San Maurizio towards the hospice,
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where the local fascist headquarters were. They had laid a boy who was slaughtered
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on an improvised stretcher, and walked towards the hospice singing:
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“Allarme siam fascisti” (Call to arms, we’re fascists).
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The checkpoint at the hospice was right by the railway crossing.
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They took my bicycle. That bicycle was everything to me.
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It was a young girl’s Ferrari.
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The problem was I was carrying a bag with some partisan stuff.
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