LATEST RELEASE
italy's outstanding courage
-il magnifico coraggio degli italiani-
The story of a secret civilian army in world war two
written and published by Brian Lett 2018
Avaliable in both English and Italian.
This is a project that I have been working on since October 2014, and it is very close to my heart. Much has been written about Italy in World War Two, most of it derogatory. This book tells the story of the outstanding courage of those Italian civilians [some ex-military] who helped the 25,000 Allied escapers and evaders who were on the loose in Italy after the Armistice of September 1943. It was proved after the war that more than 62,000 Italian families helped Allied escapers and evaders. Men, women and children were involved, and more than 200 gave their lives for the Allied Cause. Helping Allied Escapers was punishable with death, or, even worse, deportation to Mauthausen Concentration Camp where the inmates were worked and beaten to death.
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I decided, for the first time, to self-publish this book both in English and Italian through Della Cresa Publishing Ltd and Amazon, so that the story is now a public one. The book contains a full list of the award winners, and a Roll of Honour with the names of those who gave their lives on the Allies behalf.
British Senior Officers, writing the citations for the 149 medal winners whom I have been able to identify amongst the Italian civilian helpers, repeatedly used the terms:"outstanding courage, magnificent courage, superb courage, indomitable courage". Hence the book is entitled: "Italy's Outstanding Courage" - a British judgement of Italy's courage in World War Two. In late 1947/early 1948, the Labour Government of Clement Attlee, for mainly political reasons, imposed an embargo on the grant of all British medals to Italian Nationals - a decision described in a Special Operations Executive memorandum as perfidious - with the result that none of the medal winners received their medals after the war.
Readers of the book will make their own judgement. Hopefully, even after seventy-five years, it is not too late to obtain some recognition of this Italian heroism on our behalf.
British Senior Officers, writing the citations for the 149 medal winners whom I have been able to identify amongst the Italian civilian helpers, repeatedly used the terms:"outstanding courage, magnificent courage, superb courage, indomitable courage". Hence the book is entitled: "Italy's Outstanding Courage" - a British judgement of Italy's courage in World War Two. In late 1947/early 1948, the Labour Government of Clement Attlee, for mainly political reasons, imposed an embargo on the grant of all British medals to Italian Nationals - a decision described in a Special Operations Executive memorandum as perfidious - with the result that none of the medal winners received their medals after the war.
Readers of the book will make their own judgement. Hopefully, even after seventy-five years, it is not too late to obtain some recognition of this Italian heroism on our behalf.