European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
-
As soon as I got home I told my father I didn’t want to work at home anymore.
-
I wanted to shape my own life, find a job and become self-sufficient.
-
At home I felt repressed. My father agreed.
-
I started working, setting up women sections and the feminist movement.
-
I studied in a party school and was sent to take care of trade-unions.
-
I started to get involved in the movement for the protection of women’s rights.
-
I had decided I would work for all those who had died, to accomplish what they had hoped for.
-
Their dreams were also mine.
-
We wanted a few simple things:
-
a job, a chance to support our families properly, the right to send our children to school,
-
to live in a democratic society, maintain our individual values and at the same time defend the rights of the community.
-
So as soon as I started working for the party, I set up women sections, even if I wasn’t particularly skilled.
-
Women were all coming from the same background I came from.
-
We had to discuss together about our own issues, learn to vote, identify our problems and develop our demands.
-
If we discussed with men, women would not speak out.
-
Having a women-only group allowed us to develop those issues and build up our claims.
-
After the war there was dramatic poverty. The children were on the street.
-
The first thing I recommended was to set up a nursery school. We had one, but it was too small for all the children.
-
In Bainsizza street, with all the working-class housing, a multitude of kids spent the whole day on the streets waiting for their mother to come back from work.
-
They ate only at breakfast and dinner, hardly at lunch. Their families didn’t have enough money for another meal.
No more segments to load.
Loading more segments…
© 2009-2024 WebTranslateIt Software S.L. All rights reserved.
Terms of Service
·
Privacy Policy
·
Security Policy