In Italy, there is a day when the air carries not only the promise of spring but something deeper: memory. On April 25, the country celebrates Liberation Day – Festa della Liberazione. Picture not a stiff military parade, but something far more alive. This day stands for life, for choices, for a freedom that was not won by generals but by ordinary people.
Italy shakes off fascism
It is not a "day the war ended" – the war was, in fact, still going on. It is the day Italy shook off fascism, the way one sheds a heavy coat after a long winter. In 1945, on April 25 specifically, the partisans rose up in Milan, Turin, and Genoa and declared: "Enough is enough!" For many, it was a point of no return. Freedom, at last. But who were these partisans? The resistance movement, known here as Resistenza, was no army in the traditional sense. It was a mosaic of people: farmers, teachers, students, grandmothers who sheltered those being hunted, young people who distributed leaflets , and even priests who secretly supplied resistance fighters. Many had never held a weapon, yet everyone did something, often at the risk of their own lives.

In Venice, April 25 also marks the feast of Saint Mark, the city's patron saint. And there is a wonderful tradition: men give their loved ones a red rose, called bòcolo. (Image: Open AI)
A day of remembrance and conviction
What do Italians do on April 25? They go out. Into the streets, the parks, to concerts. They recite poems, they sing Bella Ciao – the song that became the anthem of the resistance. They lay flowers, they embrace grandmotherswho still remember. It is a day of remembrance, but also a day of conviction: that every generation has its own "resistance," its own choices, its own battles to fight. For those currently in Italy, here are a few ideas on where to go:
- Rome: Free admission to the Colosseum, the Roman Forum, and the Palatine Hill; concerts on public squares.
- Milan: Commemorative march through the city center, concerts, open museums.
- Naples: Parade starting from Piazza Garibaldi, free admission to museums such as Capodimonte and Palazzo Reale.
- Venice: Here, April 25 also marks the feast of Saint Mark, the city's patron saint. And there is a wonderful tradition: men give their loved ones a red rose, called bòcolo. According to legend, a humble young man once fell in love with the daughter of a patrician. To prove his love, he went off to war and died. Before his death, he entrusted a friend with a blood-soaked red rose to bring to her. Ever since, Venetians have given red roses on April 25 as a symbol of love, fidelity, and courage.
- Florence, Lucca, Udine: concerts, festivals, readings – the spirit of freedom is felt everywhere.
Because freedom does not live in museums. It lives in voices that refuse to stay silent in the face of injustice . April 25 exists for exactly that. And a little bit for love, too.

