Emanuele Camerini

Commission / S. Anna di Stazzema > Der Spiegel

View over the mountains and the woods surroundings Sant’Anna di Stazzema.

Adele Pardini, 82, is one of the survivors of Sant’Anna massacre. She was only 4 when SS troops entered the small town gathering and killing more than 500 inhabitants. She escaped the massacre thanks to her elder sister who dragged and hid her into a small cellar.

On August 12th 1944, more than 500 civilians were gathered and killed in front of Sant’Anna Church.

Adele Pardini, 82, is one of the survivors of Sant’Anna massacre. She was only 4 when SS troops entered the small town gathering and killing more than 500 inhabitants. She escaped the massacre thanks to her elder sister who dragged and hid her into a small cellar.

Old abandoned house covered in leaves in the woods of Sant’Anna.

Memorial complex and Ossuary built in top of the hill of Sant’Anna di Stazzema to commemorate those who lost their lives on August 12th 1944.

Carla Gamba, 67, has spent her entire life in Sant’Anna. Together with her daughter and her son, she runs a small coffee bar and market at the entrance of the town. She lost several relatives in the massacre of August 12th 1944.

Carla Gamba, 67, has spent her entire life in Sant’Anna. Together with her daughter and her son, she runs a small coffee bar and market at the entrance of the town. She lost several relatives in the massacre of August 12th 1944.

View over the Tuscan coast from Sant’Anna.

Graziano Lazzeri, son of one of the survivors of the massacre, is part of the Victims Association of Sant’Anna.

Giorgio Bernardini, 66, lives in La Culla, a small hamlet very close to Sant’Anna di Stazzema. He was not surprised by result of the political election in Italy.

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