Italy: Anti-Semitic Scrawl on Nazi Camp Survivor’s Door

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The anti-Semitic inscription appeared on the front door of Aldo Rolfi, son of Lydia, partisan deported to Ravensbruck in 1944, one of the great voices of the horror of the concentration camps, January 24, 2020. The inscription "Juden hier", "here there are Jews" , as in German cities during Nazism, appeared on the night just spent in Mondovì (Cuneo) on the door of the house where the woman lived until her death in 1996. The street where the house stands was named after Rolfi just a few years does. ANSA / RAFFAELE SASSO

MILAN (AP) — Anti-Semitic writing was scrawled overnight on the door of a now-deceased member of the Italian anti-Fascist resistance who survived a Nazi concentration camp, a family friend and historian wrote Friday on Facebook.

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‘’Juden Hier,’’ German for ‘’Jew Here,’’ with a Star of David was written in black paint on the door of the house in the Piedmont town of Mondovi, where Lidia Beccaria Rolfi lived until her death in 1996.

Her son Aldo Rolfi, who lives there now, reported the offensive graffiti to police, the news agency LaPresse reported.

University of Turin historian Bruno Maida noted on Facebook that the writing appeared after a local newspaper printed an article by Aldo Rolfi remembering his mother. It was titled: ‘’The memory grows, but also anti-Semitism: The words of Lidia Rolfi anticipated today’s themes.’’

‘’Beyond the patent ignorance, Lidia was deported to Ravensbrueck for political reasons, this is one of the many signs that should make us raise our voices to remind everyone that to be anti-fascist is the first duty to memory that we have,’’ Maida wrote.

Beccaria Rolfi, who was born April 8, 1925 into a rural farm family in the northern Piedmont region, joined the anti-Nazi-Fascist resistance in December 1943, and was arrested four months later. She was turned over to the Gestapo and deported on June 27, 1944 to Ravensbrueck, a concentration camp for women in northern Germany. She was liberated in May 1945.

She wrote about the horrors of her time in the concentration camp in the 1978 book “’The Women of Ravensbrueck,’’ which was translated into German and Spanish.


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a yid
a yid
4 years ago

even though this incident is sad Italy has a splendid record regarding Jews, During WWII there was la divisione garibaldi and any Jew who reached their group was save. Italians were killed in Mauthausen and Buchenwald. The orthopedic hospital S.Corona in Pietra Ligure hid Jews so the fascists were not able to arrest them. Go on the internet and key in suora artemisia a cathlolic nun who involved in hiding Jews on the hospital ward