Abstract

https://doi.org/10.31952/amha.19.2.2 The Second World War created a caesura in various spheres of life, including medical care. Many doctors and nurses in Slovenia joined the Partisan movement and helped organise medical care. The first activities were undertaken in 1942, followed a year later by the development of the first rudimentary, clandestine partisan medical stations acting as hospitals. Nearly 15 000 patients with injuries and illnesses were treated in such partisan medical facilities. The staff included 244 doctors and dentists, 260 medical students, 38 nurses and more than 3 000 ad hoc trained medics. This article presents the "Celje" partisan hospital from the Upper Savinja Valley, focusing on the testimonies of Partisan doctors and other witnesses who provided first-hand accounts about everyday life in this and other Partisan medical facilities. The main source of information was the notes of surgeon Dr Robert Kukovec, which date from the final year of the war. Dr Kukovec was among the few individuals who left behind a written account of the wartime events they had witnessed, offering an insight into the tragedy of war. His account also depicts many sombre moments but also rare bright ones, in particular the yearning for the freedom that destiny prevented Dr Kukovec from experiencing, given that he was killed less than a month before the end of the war.

Highlights

  • Slovenian territory saw a rise in the number of new health centres, hygiene and social care establishments, following the state policy according to which the population was to be provided with the best possible health care (Zupanič Slavec, 2005, p. 55)

  • The region of Styria came under the control of the Germans, who reorganized the health service in compliance with their rules (Počivavšek, 2018, p. 158)

  • Even though we had patients with severe injuries, I can safely say that the mortality rate was extremely low.” (Defar, 1972) Medical care in the Upper Savinja Valley, part of the 4th Operative Zone, the supreme Partisan military command for northern Slovenia, was organised by Dr Peter Držaj

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Summary

Pia Žižek*

SUMMARY The Second World War created a caesura in various spheres of life, including medical care. This article presents the “Celje” partisan hospital from the Upper Savinja Valley, focusing on the testimonies of Partisan doctors and other witnesses who provided first-hand accounts about everyday life in this and other Partisan medical facilities. Dr Kukovec was among the few individuals who left behind a written account of the wartime events they had witnessed, offering an insight into the tragedy of war. His account depicts many sombre moments and rare bright ones, in particular the yearning for the freedom that destiny prevented Dr Kukovec from experiencing, given that he was killed less than a month before the end of the war.

Introduction
Partisan medical care
Partisan medical care in the Upper Savinja Valley
Partisan doctor Robert Kukovec and his notes
Translated by Simon Zupan
Literature
Full Text
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