Women's Defense Groups

The Women's Defense Groups (Italian: Gruppi di difesa della donna)[lower-alpha 1] were a women's support organization active during the Italian Resistance. The groups were created in Milan in November 1943, on the initiative of the Italian Communist Party.[1] The full original name of the groups was "Women's Defense Groups for Assistance to Freedom Fighters".[1]

Groups for women’s defense
Abbreviation GDD
Foundation 1943
Founder Italian Communist Party
Dissolution 1945
Purpose Emancipation of women
Members ca. 70.000

History

The groups were launched as a result of a meeting between women of different political backgrounds. These included communists Giovanna Barcellona, Lina Fibbi and Caterina Picolato; socialists Laura Conti and Lina Merlin; actionists (social democrats) Elena Dreher and Ada Gobetti; and women active in the Giustizia e Libertà (Justice and Freedom) movement. Republican and Catholic women were also involved, as were women with no previous political or ideological commitments. The groups spread mainly in the center-north. Some scholars attribute this to the clothing typically worn by Italian women in that area, which was said to make women more ready to act on their own and to have greater civic awareness.[2]

Initially the intent was for the women in the groups to play supporting roles in resistance efforts.[1] It wasn't long, though, before they began to take on leadership roles in the areas of information distribution, propaganda, orders and ammunition activities. Some women also participated as "gappistas", directly taking up arms.[1] [3] Ada Gobetti was one of the first to criticize the use of the word "assistance" in the name of the groups.[4] In 1944, a formulation of the organization's goals that was more geared to activities that broadly speaking fostered the emancipation of women took shape.[5]

In Turin, the GDG were primarily organized in factories in groups of about ten workers. They met in private homes and were given practical instructions on topics including how to carry out factory sabotage, typing, telegraphy and first aid. A women's newspaper was published. It was called "Noi Donne" (Our women) after the title used in the Spanish and Paris wars in 1937.

In Milan, the groups were organized by Irma Brambilla, Iole Radice, and Lidia Salvano. The meetings were always held in different places, in the interest of avoiding detection, and almost always on Sunday morning. Impromptu rallies in the factories came about when a young woman from one area went, during her lunch break, to a factory where some companions had already been notified that a rally would occur. There, she would lead a rally in the shortest time possible time and then disappear.

Movies and documentaries

In 2016, a documentary film Nome di battaglia Donna (Battle name: Woman) directed by Daniele Segre was released. It showcased stories of several of the surviving WDG activists from the Piedmont region.[1]

Notes

  1. Full name: Gruppi di difesa della donna e per l'assistenza ai combattenti della libertà (Groups for women's defense and for assistance to freedom fighters)

References

  1. MYmovies.it. "Nome di battaglia donna". MYmovies.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2020-03-30.
  2. Marina Addis Saba, Partigiane. Tutte le donne della resistenza, Milan, Mursia Editore, 1998, pp. 40-50, ISBN 88-425-2299-6.
  3. Gabriella Bonansea, Donne nella resistenza, in Enzo Collotti, Renato Sandri, Fediano Sessi (edited by), Dizionario della Resistenza, Turin, Einaudi, 2000, p. 272.
  4. Patrizia Gabrielli, Il 1946, le donne, la Repubblica, Rome, Donzelli, 2009, p. 45-46.
  5. Franca Pieroni Bortolotti, Le donne della Resistenza antifascista e la questione femminile in Emilia (1943–45), in Donne e Resistenza in Emilia-Romagna, vol. 2, Milan, evangelist, p. 77.
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