European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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Warrants for arrests were found in the archives. They were addressed to the chief of the Home Guard political police, Lovro Hacin.
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Later I found out, also from my students, of whom some were on the opposite side, with the Home Guard…
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One of my students gave me lots of information because his family was
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and still is in contact with the Home Guard immigration.
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Through this student I found out where my father was killed.
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Not just through him, I also found out directly at Hacin’s procession.
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There was a huge procession in Ljubljana against Rösener, the chief of the SS in the Ljubljana province.
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Against Rupnik, who was the president of this Ljubljana province as well as the military head of the Home Guard.
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And against Hacin, who was the chief of the Home Guard political police.
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I was informed already during the war, from the intelligence service of the LF that Hacin was my father’s enemy.
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I should tell my father that the LF can help him get to safety.
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I went to my father and I told him this. He said that he’d done nothing and wasn’t going anywhere. It was a matter of life or death.
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There were malicious false reports, and they were coming from the very hospital where he was the head.
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It came from the lower level of employees, the cleaners and the male nurses, the non-qualified workers.
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But neither he nor I knew it was a matter of life or death. The same night of his arrest they took him away to Rudnik.
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There was an outpost like the one at Sveti Urh. They killed him there at Rudnik.
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Father did not agree with her decision
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He was an important man and, in terms of his political orientation in former Yugoslavia, he was conservative,
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belonging to the Catholic party.
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As most conservatives were oriented during WWII, they began to cooperate with the occupier.
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