(ANSA) - ROME, APR 23 - The descendants of a British soldier
this week met members of the Italian families that saved him
after he escaped from a prison camp during World War II.
Dennis Hutton Fox of the Coldstream Guards was brought to Italy
after being taken prisoner by Italian-German forces in Libya.
He fled from a prison camp at Sforzacosta, in the province of
Macerata, and after days of walking, arrived at Monte di Rosara,
near Ascoli Piceno.
There he was hidden and protected at great personal risk by
three Italian families between the autumn of 1943 and the summer
1944.
Hutton Fox's two daughters and his grandchildren and
great-grandchildren were in Ascoli on Sunday to meet the
descendants of the people who saved him and visit the places
where he took refuge, including the forests of Monte di Rosara
and the San Giorgio monastery.
They managed to make contact with each other via Facebook.
Among the people who showed the Hutton Fox group around were
siblings Emidio and Lianna Tassi, who are now in their 90s but
were children at the time and helped bring food and water to the
soldier.
"It was mostly us who brought him everything," they said.
"The reason is that the German's paid less attention to us.
"Our parents got us to take turns, when they were doing things
like taking the goats out to pasture, to go to the caves where
Dennis was hiding.
"We'd take him food like fried eggs and fruit, as well as water
and everything else he needed to survive".
Lianna Tassi added that, when things were quiet, "he would come
to the monastery and go up to our home.
"I was almost 10, he'd pick me up and sit me on the fireplace,"
she said.
"Then, with the other children, he'd teach us the numbers in
English.
"I learned to count up to 50!"
Hutton Fox's daughters, Margaret Last and Sheila Ableman, said
it was a "dream to be here".
"Three generations were born from him and, without the courage
of the families of Mattia Antonucci, Michele Tassi and Emidio
Tassi, probably none of us would be here today," they said
"We want to say thank you from the heart!". (ANSA).
British soldier's descendants meet families who saved him
Italian families hid, protected WWII prisoner of war Dennis Fox