European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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and they thought he was dead, but he was only frostbitten and suffering.
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I guess they slowly revived him and managed to bring him back to Italy, to Rimini.
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They kept him there for three months and we never even went to visit him,
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because there was no way for us to get there.
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I did go to Milan by foot, but Rimini seemed really too far.
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Fortunately, my father was at home during the war.
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He would check to see if there were Germans around in order to tell the partisans.
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When he wasn’t working he wouldn’t sleep much, because he always had to go see if there was somebody around.
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Did you know that they burned down a whole village if a German was killed?
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They would destroy whatever they found, and kill ten of our people for each German who had been killed.
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That’s why my father was very careful, they burned down only one house in Marola.
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I don’t know if someone was wounded, since I was rarely at home at the time.
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I was always on the move between the mountains and Reggio.
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Antifascist families; Jewish families
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No, thank God! Not my father!
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He was already a partisan
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when he would go to meet the others in the drying-rooms in a forest called “trenta pere” (thirty pears).
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These drying-rooms in the mountains were empty in the winter, so they would hold meetings there.
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Before the fascist regime began, was it 1922? No, maybe in 1928 or 1930 then.
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I was born in 1928 and even when I was very young I was already instructed,
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