Giuseppina Tuissi

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Giuseppina Tuissi
Born(1923-06-23)23 June 1923
Died23 June 1945(1945-06-23) (aged 22)
Cernobbio, Italy
Cause of deathkilled (uncertain)[1]
Occupation(s)Laborer, Italian resistance member
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Giuseppina Tuissi, better known as Gianna (also La Staffetta Gianna;

52nd Brigata Garibaldi "Luigi Clerici".[3] From September 1944, she was a collaborator of the partisan Luigi Canali (known as the captain Neri) and, with him, had an important role in the arrest and the execution of Benito Mussolini and Clara Petacci.[4]

Early life

Giuseppina was born in 1923 in

, a Milan suburb.

Partisan

In 1943, she started serving as a partisan courier, using the pseudonym "Gianna". On 6 January 1945 she was arrested with Canali in Lezzeno by the members of the XI Black Brigade "Cesare Rodini" and tortured for 23 days.[1] After this period, she was transferred to SS headquarters in Monza by a Gestapo officer, Captain Vernig, who pitied her condition and was impressed by her bravery. On 12 March, she was released. Refusing an escape route to Switzerland, she continued participating in the partisan struggle in northern Lombardy. She and Neri were present during the arrest of Mussolini and Petacci, on 27 April near Dongo; and to their execution, the day after, in Giulino.[4]

She was suspected of betrayal and having revealed the names of partisans during her detention. She was arrested in Baggio on 29 April and detained until 9 May. She was interrogated by Pietro Vergani, regional commander of the

Garibaldi Brigades and PCI member.[5][1]

At the end of May 1945. she went to Milan with Luigi's sister Alice Canali, to learn more about his death. Despite threats, she continued to ask questions, threatening to reveal what she learned. In June, she met Ferruccio Lanfranchi, editor of the Corriere d'Informazione, that investigated Mussolini's death.[6] Feeling abandoned by her comrades, she disappeared on 23 June 1945, on her 22nd birthday. It is presumed she was killed and her body thrown into Lake Como near Cernobbio.[1][7]

Her death and those of Neri and other partisans in the late spring of 1945, represent an unresolved mystery of the Italian resistance history.[1] In 1957 Dante Gorreri, PCI secretary of Como, and Pietro Vergani, were charged for the murder as instigators; Dionisio Gambaruto and Maurizio Bernasconi as executors. The trial, held in Padua, was not completed because of a series of procedural impediments.[8]

Literature

References

External links