Monday, November 19, 2007

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The tragedy of the master and the Poles conquered Free






illustrates the phases of the convulsive birth of the 8th Brigade Garibaldi, the partisan group which operated in the Apennines Forlì-Cesena, the website Institute for the History of Resistance said: "In early December 1943 he was appointed commander of the detachment Richard Fedele (Free), whose conceptions of the partisan struggle placed him at odds with the first Antonio Carini, military commander of the partisans of Romagna, and then with Hilary Tabarro (Peter), at the end of March 1944, after a dramatic political confrontation, replaced under the command of the brigade, strong at the time of nearly one thousand units. " A tragedy and a crime cleared by reductive phrase 'a dramatic political confrontation'. A perfect example of the power to silence fell over sixty years on the crimes committed in the field of resistance. Yes, because the partisan leader Richard Fedele, nom de guerre 'Free', was ousted from the command and wound up brutally murdered along with his wife Zita Chiapa and vilified after his death. So much so that even his name does not appear in the list of the fallen of Resistenza.Riccardo Fedel Gorizia was a militant communist, born in 1905, that the September 8, 1943 left the Army uniform Italian and became a partisan in Romagna, animating the early formation of the resistance in the mountains. Impatient to party discipline and command directives, he began clashing with the leaders of the Communist Party and especially Hilary Tabarre, a 'bulldog' who had fought in Spain and professed an uncompromising Stalinism. Free scored so his fate. He went out of the way, whatever the cost. Was dismissed and accused of illegally seized a sum parachuted by the Allies. He was kicked, then chased and finally caught. No one knows exactly where he was killed, but it is certain that his conviction - performed after the war - is a fake. As it is the false accusation of being a informant of the fascists. The battles of family historians and researchers have made her dignity, but the 'guardians of memory' - as Pansa - have not yet returned the honor and above all the truth.
Emanuele Chesi

Interview with Giampaolo Pansa

TRAGEDY of Shareware (Riccardo Fedele), first commander of the Brigade Group Romagna (later the 8th Brigade Garibaldi) to be killed by the new brigade commanders who had denigrated the first and then dismissed, was brought to national attention last Giampaolo Pansa's book "The gendarmes of memory." Columnist Espresso one of the biggest names in political journalism Italian, is a historical formation. Born in 1935 in Casale Monferrato, and graduated in 1959 with a thesis on the partisan war between Genoa and the Po, was a pupil of Guido and Alessandro Galante Garrone Quazza. He has written many books but with the latest - from the 'losers' in 'Unknown 1945' - has sparked fierce debate lifting the veil on tragedies and massacres of the civil war and immediate postwar period.
In his latest book "The gendarmes of memory" pages are devoted to bloody episodes that occurred during the period 1945-48 in Emilia. For the first time, however, brings to the fore the national figure of Free. What is the importance of this case?
PANSA "The merit of having discovered and reconstructed the story of all is the lawyer Free Christmas Graziani. I thank him again for allowing me to use his extraordinary research. This case is an example of the 'gray areas' that still exist in the history of the Italian Resistance, as he had said a year ago the President of the Republic, Giorgio Napolitano. Trying to light does not mean slander guerrilla warfare, like the scream 'Gendarmes of Memory'. But it means a return to that tragic phase of our national history, its reality, its drama and also his wounded humanity. " The story of Free
is emblematic of the conflicts and contradictions within the partisan movement?
"For some time, in my book is about many small Porzus that should be told. Almost all have the same origin: the dominance of PCI over other anti-fascist parties and the revolutionary strategy of joint training. Now, this seems almost a trivial statement. But there are still many people left, who does not know and do not want to see. This is also one of the reasons for the revocation of the many sinister born from the dissolution of the old partiton Red. "
For the other protagonist of the story, Hilary Tabarro 'Peter', called 'English', she has the words hard. Who was cloak?
"I do not think I have written harsh words about Tabarro. I tried to tell it in its historical truth. After all, just read his writings to understand that English was the classic picture of the Communist Comintern. A man of some coherent and courageous, but altogether the slave of his own ideology. "
The drama of this story is that after 63 years do not want to acknowledge all the way to honor the Free and even say to his son Luciano Fedel (which was tied to the left after all) where he was killed and buried father!
"drama similar to those of the free and full history of the Second World War and also our strength. Traces of that historical period persist. Silence does not help anyone. The truth is the only law to which a historian must obey. Especially if he is an amateur like me. "
(interview by Oscar Bandini)

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Muscle Woman Strangled

Predappio

in the picture: Polish soldiers in 1944 to Predappio


Emanuele Chesi
"Although he leaves the hospitable city of Forlì I offer to God Hottest prayer for the freedom of oppressed Poland, Italy and prosperity 'as the inscription of the plaque in St Mercurial by the Polish military Kresowa Division. I soldiers who had fought valiantly up the peninsula to Monte Cassino and Ancona to Bologna, Forlì officially leave Nov. 15, 1947. Emilia Il Giornale reported the next day the record of the celebrations presided over by civil authorities, the Polish commander Piatkowski and by Bishop. Rolla, with these words: "After the salute to the last Polish units from the start, something beyond the hype, was something that will stay in the heart of Romagna and Italy, something big, which will remain in history, and something small but extremely important and will remain in life. "

Polish soldiers, after an initial time of suspicion for the 'city of Il Duce', had in fact set the best in Romagna. Obvious hostility (replacement) to the communists, the Polish catholic we had found a second home. And many - says even the Journal of Emilia seven thousand - had even found a wife. "Children chubby arms supported by Polish and Italian ': This is the image chosen by the contemporary chronicler, Arnaldo Bueri to emphasize the special relationship which evolved around the tragedy of war. A bond that has been perpetuated over the years thanks to the lively Italian-Polish Forlì and the association of veterans.

Army created by the Polish General Anders was born in 1942 in Iraq: there were gathered the patriots who survived the Nazi occupation and former concentration camp by Soviet soldiers freed under pressure from English, after the failure of the alliance between Hitler and Stalin. Italy sent in early 1944 (but other contingents fought with the Allies in Africa and then in Normandy), the Polish soldiers were covered with honor deserving the symbolic recognition of the 'conquest' of Predappio, October 24, 1944 , on the anniversary of the March on Rome. In 1939, Mussolini had greeted the Nazi invasion with an enthusiastic "Poland is dismissed." Five years after he wrote an official Anders in the register of the visits the birthplace of Mussolini: "Poland is not settled."

IN ROMAGNA Poles took part in the bloodiest fighting, paying a heavy toll. Their contribution to the liberation of our lands was crucial. It has not always been recognized in the right shape.

THE CEREMONIES 's farewell November 15, 1947 were "short and simple," writes the Journal of Emilia. In the church of Saint Lucia was officiated a religious ceremony presided over by the Polish chaplain Adalberto Rolek, in the presence of the Bishop of Forlì. The link between Italy and Poland (highlighted even in the verses of the two anthems national) was enhanced with the laying of a wreath at the tombstone, under the portico of City Hall, which commemorates the sacrifice of Francesco Nullo, Forlì fallen hero for freedom in Poland in 1863. And to the Poles, who was preparing to return to a country now under the iron heel of the Soviet was not secondary to remember the struggle for independence from Russia.

CONCLUDING ceremonies with a short speech, Colonel Piatkowski paid tribute to four thousand deaths of the Polish in Italy. The chorus of the soldiers of the 2nd Corps who sang the national anthem sealed the solemnity of the moment. "Out of the fog melted in a drizzle thick dense - says the chronicler of journalists - and that did seemed to rub the faces and also the current officers of the 2nd Polish Corps property at attention, away from the porch. "

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Arditi and proud


Arditi and proud, Savio Valley, 1941

Friday, November 9, 2007

Women Strangling Men Fetish

November '44: hospital massacre of Forlì


propaganda posters of the Italian Social Republic




Twenty Years of dictatorship, an unfortunate and terrible war, the alliance with Hitler and the persecution of the Jews. After the liberation, the fascists were called to the stand by mass accused of a court formless, blind and bloody. Often spared the major culprits and instead ruthless against the weak and even against the innocent. No need to boil the revisionism controversy about the atrocities, the war is over, even stained our land. Gianfranco Stella, who has devoted several books to partisan massacres in Romagna, is about forty dead after the liberation of Forlì and more than 160 deaths in total in the province of Forlì-Cesena between '44 and '45. More reliable data to the memory that a scientific task that never was.

ONE OF the most appalling massacres is undoubtedly Hospital Forlì occurred in the early hours of the liberation of the city. A dozen soldiers and fascist sympathizers hospital (for wounds of war but also for simple illnesses or accidents) were killed in breach of any provision of the law of war. "For me that confidences were made from old partisan - said Vittorio love, Councilor of the National Alliance - but it was not preordained by acts of combat units down from the mountain. It 's more likely to have acted last-partisans: people who wanted to be accredited with the massacre as' patriots'. "
The victims' families for years are locked in a painful silence and celebrating the end of the war have always mercilessly forgotten the tragic event. Everything has been linked to the pious memory of their wives and children. As Vera Zang November 10, 1944 that mourned the death of his father. "Indelible is the memory of that distant day - he says - and the searing pain is still inside of us, our companion in life for orphans, never comforted."
"We had four children: three girls and a boy of nine years - continued - We had so much need in our father, but we have taken off, unloading a machine gun in the chest as he lay helpless, immobile and plaster for an accident in a bed placed in the cellar, shelter to protect them from possible attacks British planes. " William Zang had been admitted to the Morgagni a car accident: he had been hit by a German car and had been cast. He had no particular party or military positions, but his family was known fascist. He knew he was being targeted and why he asked the family members back home, in the Towers. But the three partisans went to look there, perhaps after passing the hospital.
"We have smaller shots were fired and saw three young partisans (in uniform) run away - people say the woman - had 'executed' a good man, a citizen who loved his country, a good family man, that he had brought up to respect others in the name of justice and freedom for all. His death is a tragic past in silence. The passage of the front, the sense of loneliness and abandonment in the long winter beset by foreign troops filled us with fear. It was the shock of young lives deprived of any hope for the loss of a loving father, mentor and support for their journey still to be undertaken. "

'NEXT YEAR and more years - concludes Vera Zangari - marked the end of so many other mysterious and absurd men, young fathers, he had joined the fascist criminals where they believed the strength of social ideals and national. We had believed, they had fed them and had lived in full awareness and honesty. Were eliminated as criminals brutally killed in cold blood by ruthless judges, incapable of human feeling, soaked in a perverse ideology that is modeled on the numerous killings carried out in the Russia of Lenin and Stalin. This is history, truth should make us reflect and guide our lives, without being misled by lies and deceit. "

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

How Much Is A Barbara Weber Painting

'Benito, I am a turncoat'



E
manuele Chesi

C 'is that those who swear in a blurred picture of the assault of the anti-clerical forlivesi the statue of the Madonna, evicted from the square to make way for Saffi, next to a wild young Mussolini himself cloves, Aldo Vittori, better known as E ZOP to Vitoria. It was 1909 and with his knotty club hit like a madman at the statue of the Virgin, engaged in a race with his friend Benito blasphemous. The rest on the card sported the title of which he was most proud of: sbranatore of the clergy. Aldo
Vittori is one of those characters that surround their existence in the soul of a city and they distill their attitudes of the characters, even when they are completely contradictory. And so his biography becomes rapidly epic, enriched with a thousand anecdotes of uncertain veracity, but of great charm.

him the nickname came directly from his condition of polio since birth. Cripple, it was then, in times unwilling to politically correct. And he reacted with anger and rush to his physical disability: he had the air of wanting to be pitied, even went to the attack, attacking others. And the men in particular. By anarchist and revolutionary conviction, the son of a captain Garibaldi, they made a boast of anticlericalism without discounts. When dragging his injured leg to the center of Forlì and could see a tunic, rolled up his stick and shouting unrepeatable. Daniele Gaudenzi in 'Family Album' attributes the invention of the phrase became the slogan of the anti-clerical Forli 'Pull the network, which transfers go! ", Referring to the procession of seminarians in black skirt that were conducted around the center citizen under the guidance of superiors. And the leader Stefano Romagna Servadei said that one day, crossing Piazza Saffi covered by snow, and ZOP Vitori cruised to a monk all numb and feet uncovered and red-faced in the poor footwear. Mercilessly hissed back: "Oh, little tern, if there is the paradise you've got a pretty scam." And the expression in the original dialect was much more colorful and obscene sexual innuendo.

GOLDSMITH by profession, lived in Vittori via Guerrini and was, like many of Forlì, a regular visitor to pubs. Among revolutionary projects and jars of wine, pulled later in a tavern in Piazza XX Settembre. And with a crash into a breathalyser alcohol from returning home by George Regnoli and wowing the honest citizens with a chant of profanity and exaltation of the few virtues of the pious women of Forlì. A lover of opera, attended the municipal theater, but still could not stop his spirit of opposition and often gave in outburst from the gallery. So much so that for a time he was even barred from entering.
In the twenties, while the former revolutionary comrade became dictator Benito and made peace with the Pope, even Vittori suddenly denied his anti-clericalism. Needless to say, the 'conversion' was all due to a pious lady who incredibly managed to soften his character. It is said that Vittori, rather than lose the opportunity to start a family (he was in later years and had no relatives), even agreed to marry in church. But put the condition that the ceremony to happen at six in the morning, in a church with a priest and outlying discreet. But the news was the same, throwing the confusion among the ranks of the poor Vittori anticlerical and was greeted by a hail leaving the Church of insults, the lightest of which were traitors and vigliac.

HAD BEEN past the other side, that of right-thinking people and lovers of the established (like his friend Benito ...), but obviously something's gnawing still inside. In February 1929, the day of reconciliation between church and state, found himself in the Piazza Saffi pass and stopped to chat with some friends. There was discussion of the resolution of the problem of temporal power, and he, alluding to the cold and snowy place, came up with a joke of his: "luit TNU and if the computer on and let tempurel ia nuit" (they were held power and we left the storm).
But the moment
critical of his epic was yet to come. Indeed, I wonder if it ever really arrived. Although the story has become a popular historical truth. However, it is said that during an official visit by Mussolini to his old city, Vittori donned an old coat turned inside out and stood in the street, blocking the car led the procession of the Duce. And before the guards could catch him, looking into the eyes of old revolutionary socialist, he shouted: "Fat Curago Benito, AIO vult gabana NECA me", referring to marriage in church and agreed with the Holy See. It seems that the Duce recognized him on the fly, smiled, and with a wave of hand stopped the fascists forlivesi ready to give him a sound lesson. "And also the fact - known Servadei - highlights two positive virtues Romagna: solidarity in the transgression, and the continued friendship of the performers, with personal roles changed dramatically." In more mature Aldo
Vittori changed, however, truly life. He and his wife went to Mass at the Church of the suffrage, became a friend of Don Pippo, and taken to the dental profession, dedicated to assisting the poor and needy, working with nuns and monks who once saw as a smoke screen! But his figure on the political battle was not over yet: Catholics tell who died in 1950 at seventy comforted by faith and attended by Don Pippo, but lay claim to his last theatrical gesture and desecrated. "In point of death of the old clergy sbranatore woke up - ensures Servadei - and got a funeral without a priest in the early morning, a ritual is not unusual for the era
Romagna."