Italian partisan Giovanni Cerbai was shot on this date in 1945.
A communist who fought in the Garibaldi Battalion during the Spanish Civil War, “Giannetto” was interred in transit through France and spent the early part of World War II confined to the Bourbon island panopticon of Ventotene* — a misery shared by many other prospective guerrillas.
“While the flames of the war grew and approached all around, while in the cities and in the countryside workers, employees, professionals and intellectuals were agitating, moving, pressing for peace and freedom, in Italian prisons and confinement islands hundreds and thousands of anti-fascists pined in their forced inactivity,” wrote fellow Ventotene detainee Luigi Longo in his memoir. “The island of Ventotene was like the capital of this captive world. In the spring of 1943 it gathered about a thousand leaders and humble militants from all the currents of Italian anti-fascism … We shared our common sufferings, the same hopes and an equal love of freedom.”
This prison was liberated by American forces in December 1943 but Cerbai had already escaped in August, joining the partisans.
“A fighter of exceptional enthusiasm and daring,” per the hagiographic words of his posthumous military valor decoration, he had a brief but distinguished service in the field, surviving the Battle of Porta Lame. Cerbai was eventually captured, and shot at the outset of a notorious weekslong massacre of prisoners by the fascists.
There’s a street named for him in his native Bologna.
* Another communist political prisoner in this same fortress, name of Altiero Spinelli, drew up with fellow leftists in 1941 an illicit text titled “Manifesto for a free and united Europe” — more familiarly known as the Ventotene Manifesto. (Full text here.) Spinelli’s document called for a federation of European states to mitigate the potential for wars, a crucial precursor of the European Federalist Movement that Spinelli would co-found in 1943; Spinelli for this reason is a forefather of postwar European integration. And not just a forefather: he died in 1986 as a member of European parliament, having dedicated his postwar life to the project.
On this day..
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- 1956: Elifasi Msomi, witch doctor
- 1854: John Tapner, the last hanged on Guernsey
- 1945: Anacleto Diaz, Philippines Supreme Court Justice
- 1973: Tom Masaba, Sebastino Namirundu, and 10 other Uganda Fronsana rebels
- 1892: Four anarchists in Jerez
- 1794: Jacques Roux, the Red Priest, cheats the guillotine
- 2011: Rashid al Rashidi, Mousa mosque murderer
- 1952: Liu Qingshan and Zhang Zishan, the first corruption executions in Red China
- 1956: Wilbert Coffin
- 1905: Samuel McCue, mayor of Charlottesville, Virginia