European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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He would also join my father in these drying-rooms where they would all meet.
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I don’t know what they talked about, but even as a little child I had to go around
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and tell people that a meeting was scheduled, that my father would be there, so they’d know where they had to meet.
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There were quite a few Jews in Marola.
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There was a very good man who would often come to our house, and there was also a younger boy.
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They were a very nice family who had built a beautiful house there, but we didn’t have much to do with anybody.
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Later, when I was away for ten years, I did meet many Jews.
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I worked in a restaurant, and they would come to work in the fields in the summer and winter.
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They were all great people to me.
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I don't know anything else to say about ...
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There was a family in Reggio who was often with my uncles in the house
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where I used to go collect information, and one day the father said they had to leave.
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They had a furniture store. I think they closed it and decided they had to go away.
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At the time I didn’t know or understand why they fled like that.
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We didn’t talk about it, especially in Marola, in the mountains,
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although I would often come to Reggio, since my mother was born in Reggio, in via Emilia San Pietro.
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Introduction, family, work
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My father was a foundling, who was adopted by my grandfather, Carlo Zebenini, when he was just a baby.
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My father’s name was Reino Quadreri.
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My mother was born in Reggio, her name was Valentina Paterni.
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