Anthropologist Ian Cosh on his new book on Ortona veterans
STORY BY ALEX BOWERS
It was 1998 when anthropologist Ian Cosh embarked on the trip of a lifetime. The researcher had learned that a reunion of Canadian Second World War veterans, old soldiers of Italian battlefields, would soon meet former enemies at the revered site of Ortona.
It was there in December 1943 that an immense struggle had transformed a once-sleepy, largely unknown town into a sea of rubble, a devastating urban battle long etched into the minds of many aging attendees. Fifty-five years later, the veterans were returning to a scene of lingering wounds.
Cosh would be there to witness it. No stranger to Italy himself, having spent several formative years discovering the country, Cosh quietly observed. He saw the reconciliatory nature of the proceedings, sensed the inner reflections of those who had long ago traversed Ortona’s streets. But he also wondered if there could be something else beneath the surface.
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