European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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When the lesson was about to start, first two or three pupils were given a good thrashing, with the cane.
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Maybe another thing: I was malnourished and was given 'Quaker feeding'.
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That was from the United States, from the Quaker association
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and there I got half a litre of milk soup and a bread roll.
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You have to see that this was 1920/21, where a lot of problems occurred in this post-war period.
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Post war period – deserting the army
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They wanted to keep me in the army when the war ended.
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I had some sort of Partisan rank,
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something like second lieutenant, but I had no intention of building a military career.
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I deserted the army in September 1945.
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I wanted to study and I believed that I fought for that too, for my own personal freedom, for the right to decide for myself what I would do.
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I didn’t want anybody else deciding for me.
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I wanted to study Slovene; as I had never attended Slovene schools, my knowledge of the language was deficient, and I was a poet.
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That was all just retold rather harshly, but they understood. There were no charges brought against me.
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I had deserted in September and it was December before I received my certificate of discharge.
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For three months I had been de facto, and I might very well have been charged with desertion before a military court.
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It was another of my crazy maneuvers that had simply worked out well.
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They had understood this powerful desire of mine to study
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and they turned a blind eye towards the fact that I had broken the law, that I had deserted the unit without anyone’s permission.
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I just left.
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