The Screams of Istria
The Foibe Massacre: the ethnic cleansing of Italians by jews.
Marxist (Jewish) Atrocities
After the Kingdom of Italy capitulated to the Allies in 1943, the German military stepped in to head off Yugoslavian communists under the leadership of Josip Broz Tito. After the German Wehrmacht liberated the Italian people in the Italian region of Istria, what they discovered horrified them. The communists had begun the massacre of civilians and ethnic cleansing of Italians by throwing them into deep sinkholes called Foibe.
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The massacre occurred in two waves, the first during the Armistice of Cassibile (capitulation of the Kingdom of Italy) and the German occupation of Istria in September of 1943, and the second after the Wehrmacht was pushed out of Istria by the communists.
Italian historians, Raoul Pupo, Gianni Oliva and Roberto Spazzali, all argue that this was the deliberate plan of Tito to spread terror among the Italian population and exterminate any anti-communists.1 |2
Not only were the victims massacred by being thrown into the Foibe, many more were executed and buried in shallow mass graves or died in Yugoslavian prisons or concentration camps.
According to Raoul Pupo:
“It is well known that the victims [most] didn’t end their lives in a Karst cave, but met their deaths on the road to deportation, as well as in jails or in Yugoslavian concentration camps.”3
Regarding the terror caused by the massacres, Raoul Pupo wrote:
“… the horrible death in a cave… became the very representation of barbaric and obscure violence hanging over as a political doom of an entire community. This is the image that settles in the memories of contemporaries, and became an obsession in moments of political and national uncertainty.”4
Norma Cossetto Slain in Cold Blood
After the Wehrmacht fought back the communists, stopping the civilian slaughter, the 41st Corps Fire Brigade of Pola, under the command of Third Class Marshall Arnaldo Harzarich, recovered 204 bodies from the region’s Foibe.
Marshall Harzarich had this to say:
“Over and over again, when returning to Pola I was targeted by the rosary of machine gun shots fired by Slavic partisans…. who sought by all means to hinder the exploration and recovery of corpses from foibe.”5
These bodies were severely mutilated from the jagged edges of the seemingly endless caverns and they were immensely bloated, making it hard for the locals to identify their loved ones.
One of the bodies that was identifiable was that of Norma Cossetto, a substitute teacher, and the daughter of a local Fascist leader. The discovery of her body and the story around her brutal killing has made her the most infamous victim of the Foibe Massacres.
Licia Cossetto, Norma’s sister, attested after Norma’s murder that their family had begun to receive threats after the Armistice of Cassibile. Soon after, their home was raided by Yugoslavian communists. Then Norma was summoned at the local anti-fascist headquarters in Visignano.6 She was told that she had to join the anti-fascists and disavow her own father, which Norma refused.7|8 Despite her disobedience to the communists, Norma was allowed to leave the headquarters and rushed home.
However, a couple of days later Norma was kidnapped and brought to a barracks with some of her relatives and friends. Her sister tried to save her, but to no avail. And as the Wehrmacht encroached on the communist strongholds, Norma and the other captives were transferred to a torture chamber farther away from the frontlines. It was there that Norma was separated from the other captives and brutally raped by the communists.9|10
Nearly a week later, Norma and the captives were bound with wire and forced to walk to the nearby foiba.11 Norma and the two other female captives were again raped, but this time in front of the foiba. Afterward, all the captives were thrown into the foiba.12 Near the foiba where Norma and the other Italians were slaughtered, there was found hundreds of corpses, including those of Albina, Caterina and Fosca Radecchi, and Amalia Ardossi, all of whom were Italian.13
The Story of a Survivor
96 year old, Lida Tomaro Urbaz, emigrated from Cittanova (now Novigrad, Croatia) to the the United States in 1957. Her family settled down in Cleveland, Ohio after years of ethnic persecution under Tito’s Marxist regime. Lida’s family suffered greatly from the Yugoslavians. When she was just a little girl, her 24 year old cousin (much like Norma Cossetto) was brutally slain by the communists. Lida’s cousin was also a teacher and taught in Italian, even though it was something that would cause issues with the communist partisans.
The communists were furious at her cousin’s defiance of teaching in her native tongue, so they decided to kidnap her, and took her to one of the foibe. But she was not captured alone, as there were many others with her. The communists placed Lida’s cousin in front of the dark seemingly endless cavern, and they raped her mercilessly in front of the other captives. When they had their way with her, they had stolen her innocence, and had defiled her body, they proceeded to tie her up and connect the rope to ten other innocent people.
All ten people were connected to her in a line. As Lida’s cousin kneeled before the gates of Hell, asking for the Lord’s grace, a communist stood to her side with his gun drawn, and aimed at her head. The monster pulled the trigger and the bullet ended her life. Though her fate had ended before falling into the foibe, the other victims were not spared the horror of what was about to happen next.
As Lida’s cousin’s lifeless body fell forward from the aftermath of her murder, those still living and traumatized innocents watched as one by one they were pulled into the foibe by the weight of her lifeless body. 11 innocent people killed in a matter of moments. All because of a Jewish ideology which seeks to enslave you.
Now here is Lida’s story in her own words:
Memories of Istria, My Beloved Land
I wrote this memory in 2005 in name of my parents, Gisella and Giorgio.
I am Lida Tamaro Urbaz, born in Cittanova, in Istria, therefore I am a true Istrian.
Cittanova, was for us a corner of Terrestrial Paradise, kissed by water and blue sky, in a prosperous land, with a patrimony of simple and sage culture, passed on to us by our ancestors, based on work.
Unfortunately, our land began its sad and long odyssey in 1945, at the end of the Second World War. That which we all believed remained a free zone, administered by its people, on the contrary passed first to the administration of the Allied Military Government of Occupied Territories (AMGOT), and in 1947 became part of the Republic of Yugoslavia, a communist regime, with an insatiable thirst for power and revenge.
The new regime of Tito began with the deprivation of our freedom, our culture, our material goods, and eventually even depriving us of our last name, many that became balkanized (meaning that names were changed from Italian to sound more Yugoslavian).
Private property became common property meant to be shared with “compatriots”; our ideas of liberty, inspired by Christian teachings, were considered a penalty by the new repressive regime, and not being able to change our thoughts with their propaganda, the regime adopted the penalty of imprisonment. Even my father was subjected to that sad experience, when he refused to act as a spy. Fortunately, he managed to escape to Trieste, where we rejoined him after four years. The situation continued to worsen day by day; imprisonments escalated to executions, and as time went on the Tito regime was ever more consumed by vendetta.
The most atrocious infamy of that period of history were the “Foibe”; 100,000 innocent people, with the only fault of being Istrian, were thrown into these enormous craters that became their tombs. Unfortunately, the free world exhibited a sad behavior of cowardice by ignoring the massacres of the Foibe.
Reaching this extreme of barbarism, without hope of a return to civility, the exodus began of circa 350,000 Istrians, that left their homes, their material goods and above all their beloved land.14
Political Contention and Recent Vandalism
The Foibe Massacres have been remembered as a national time of mourning every February since 2004. The annual commemoration has drawn comparisons between the ethnic cleansing of Italians by Marxist Jewish ideologues and the supposed Holocaust.
However, this year’s commemoration was marred by acts of vandalism. After the Foibe memorial in Basovizza, near the city of Trieste, the memorial site was sprayed with graffiti that read:
“Trieste is ours”
“Death to fascism”
“Freedom to the people”
“It’s only a well”
Reminding everyone that it’s okay to belittle the victims of Aryan ethnic cleansing, but it’s not okay to question the Holocaust.
This act of vandalism soon caught the ears of the Italian Prime Minister, Giorgia Meloni, who said:
“To insult Basovizza with repugnant writings that recall dramatic pages of our history not only tramples on the memory of the martyrs of the Foibe but offends the entire nation,” adding that the site is “a sacred place, a national monument, to be honored with silence and prayer.”
The vandalism also appeared just before the presidents of Italy and Slovenia were to meet to inaugurate the European Capital of Culture project shared between the towns of Gorizia, Italy, and Nova Gorica, Slovenia.
Up until 1947 Nova Gorica was part of Gorizia, but the communists split the city in half along, and took most of its vital transportation and historical landmarks. This has been an issue of contention since then.15
Free Yourself of Chains
We are constantly told about the Holocaust and the supposed atrocities. But why were we never told about the horrors committed against our own Aryan race? Communism/Marxism is a Jewish ideology created and promulgated by Jews, but we can’t talk about that. When we do try to mourn we are subjected to harassment and threats of violence. When we ask the Jews to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide that they started, they refuse. When we ask them to stop the genocide in Palestine, they refuse.
The point I am trying to make is that no matter what we do, we will always be cattle to them. We always be relegated as property or tools for their agenda. And no matter how much we try to live amongst them, they will always seek to destroy us. We’re superior and thus they hate us. And this has been the fight since they crucified the Son of God. They can’t stand that we are the chosen people that will bring about the prosperity that is given through Christ.
At every turn they will try to defile our women and children, take their innocence, and as we have just seen from the Trump administration; protect themselves from the justice they so rightfully deserve. There cannot be an optics change in this country to placate the suffering of our people. Because at the end of the day, they will do whatever they can to keep the wool over our eyes.
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Oliva, Gianni (2003). Foibe. Le stragi negate degli italiani della Venezia Giulia e dell’Istria [Foibe. The denied massacres of the Italians of Venezia Giulia and Istria] (in Italian). Oscar Mondadori. pp. 4–25–36–71–72–148.
ibīdem
Frediano Sessi, Red foibe. Life of Norma Cossetto killed in Istria in ’43, The mirrors of Marsilio, 2007, p. 63
Arrigo Petacco, L’esodo. La tragedia negata degli italiani d’Istria, Dalmazia e Venezia Giulia, Milano, Mondadori, 1999
Sessi, 18
Giacomo Scotti, Scream from the Foibe. 2008
Petacco, 61.
Sessi, 19.
Petacco, 61.
ibīdem
Petacco, Arrigo (January 1, 2005). A Tragedy Revealed: The Story of the Italian Population of Istria, Dalmatia, and Venezia Giulia, 1943-1956






