In the book The Light in the Ruins, the Nazis and the Italians were shown to …show more content…
Germans were told to capture them because they were seen as a threat to their army. In another part of Ghiringhelli’s memoir, it talks about how they took them back to Germany, and they tortured them through intensive interrogation. After weeks of the same methods and interrogation, the partisans ended up being killed in the electric chair, without a fair trial. (Ghiringhelli, 2014, para. 41)
The Italian Resistance was admired by many of the peasants of Italy and was often supported by them. They had an impact on the war and they are one of the only armies that were feared by the Germans. At the end of World War 2, the Resistance and the Germans were at a stalemate. Not one could beat the other. But sadly, after the War, they never made an appearance in any future war up to this day.
In conclusion, In World War 2, the Italian Resistance and its occupants were shown to hate the German occupation of Italy, and the book The Light in the Ruins, accurately shows how they felt about each other in Italy during World War 2. The Italian Resistance, the interaction between the Germans and Italians, and the consequences of what happened when they crossed paths with each other, was all illustrated in this