In September 1943 the
Allied invasion of Italy,
Operation Avalanche, took place. The main invasion force landed around
Salerno on the western coast and its primary objectives was to seize the port of
Naples to ensure resupply. The pathway from Salerno to
Naples was the road, currently named "Strada statale 18 Tirrena Inferiore", which passes into the valley of Cava. Because of the relatively rapid advance of the Anglo-American forces toward Naples, hundreds of unburied bodies of the dead were left abandoned on the battlefields around
Cava de' Tirreni. Apicella was a religious woman and felt it her Christian duty to bury the remains of the German soldiers. After attending the scene where some children were kicking the skull of a soldier, and after dreaming of eight German soldiers begging her to hand over their bodies to their mothers, Apicella worked to find the remains of the fallen soldiers and put them back together in
coffins of zinc. Her goal was to return the bodies to their mothers or, at least, to facilitate finding them. During this work she risked injury or death from
unexploded bombs and projectiles that were still present on the battlefields. She found more than 700 corpses, mostly of German but even sometimes of Italian and Allied soldiers. The boxes of zinc, in which the remains of the soldiers were laid, were transported to the
Catholic Church of
Santa Maria della Pietà. It is the oldest church in the village Scacciaventi of Cava, where Apicella went to pray every morning until 1980, when, due to the
1980 Irpinia earthquake, the church was declared unfit for use. She died in 1982, aged 94. ==Order of Merit ==