SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) — Louise Rosealma never intended to become the face of a movement, but by Monday she had.

Rosealma traveled to Berkeley with her boyfriend and two other friends – all members of the Antifa anti-facist collective — from Southern California on Saturday to take part in a counter demonstration at a Patriot’s Day event organized by alt right and neo-nazi groups including the Proud Boys.

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By the end of the afternoon, the video of Rosealma being punched by Nathan Damigo – a known white supremacist who attends California State University, Stanislaus – would go viral.

Efforts by KPIX 5 to reach Damigo for comment have gone unanswered, but Rosealma did talk Monday about the incident.

While she said she came to Berkeley to photograph the demonstration, Rosealma did help crank up the pre-demonstration rhetoric by authoring a Facebook that said she hoped to gather the scalps of 100 neo-nazis at the protest.

“I wasn’t looking for a fight,” she said. “I know there was the Facebook post that I posted of 100 nazi scalps, but I guess no has seen Quentin Tarantino movies. I thought that was going to be obvious, but I guess not.”

In the World War II movie ‘Inglorious Basterds” Tarantino’s character utters the line — “Each and every man under my command owes me one hundred Nazi scalps. And I want my scalps!”

Rosealma said she came to Berkeley expecting violence.

“We knew that there was probably going to be violence,” she said. “We were hoping for the best, but expecting the worst… (We wanted) to show that neo-nazis just can’t walk into the street and march and like spieling out this violent genocidal rhetoric… and get away with it without anything happening to them.”

Rosealma and her friends arrived at the protest after it had already been underway for several hours.

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“We got there around 1 p.m.,” she told KPIX 5. “We went to show our support and be bodies present in counter protest.”

By the time Rosealma and her friends got to the park, tensions were already boiling.

“You could hear the commotion…Things got very intense, very quickly,” she said.

Rosealma and her friends were not in the park long before they found themselves rushed by a group of counter demonstrators.

“A smoke bomb went off in the area where the white nationalists and neo-nazis were…Everyone was confused,” said Rosealma. “It (the smoke) filled the whole intersection. They started rushing and started attacking people.”

Chaos ensued. Rosealma found herself in the midst of an angry mob.

“Me and my friends were fleeing. As we were running away I lost my friends,” she said. “I was trying to follow my boyfriend, but he just disappeared…I was just trying to block myself away from different people who were just pushing me and attacking other people.”

Rosealma found herself backed up near a wall and garden.

“I was just trying to get out of where I was because I was in a cornered spot,” she said. “The next thing I remember is turning around and from the corner of my eye I saw this fist coming at me … I put my arms up to try and push him away as much as I could. He just threw himself into me.”

Cameras caught what happened next.

“He punched me on the bridge of my nose. It cut it a little bit,” Rosealma said. “I got thrown down and I’m pretty sure he just ran (away). I got right back up. I was punched twice more by two other people. People kept trying to throw me down to hit my head on the rocks that were in the planter. I was just trying to not get my skull cracked open.”

The last attacker kneed her in the head several times before he also fled.

Eventually, the attack stopped the 5-foot-1, 95-pound Rosealma said. She looked around and found her boyfriend nearby covered in blood.

“There was no time for emotion,” she said. “I was just terrified. I didn’t have time to process what was happening to me. All I knew was I was trying to find my boyfriend and not get hit…When it was happening I realized they were trying to crack my skull on the curb and on the rocks in the planter.”

During the entire attack, Rosealma said she never saw any Berkeley police officers. She also said the attack was unprovoked.

“I didn’t exchange words with anyone,” she said. “I was just standing there.”

Fortunately, Rosealma was just battered and bruised and not seriously injured. However, the attacks have continued on social media with memes and threats.

“They are trying to make me into this trophy – the victory of the alt right and neo-nazis,” she said. “It’s petty and pathetic… That they knocked over a 95-pound person… It (the harassment) has been non-stop… Requests on Instagram. Facebook, Youtube…They just are trying to get to me.”

Berkeley officials once again — to their chagrin — found their city playing host to a bat-wielding, brick tossing, pepper-spray fueled confrontation.

City of Berkeley spokesman Chakko Matthai said authorities would be looking to prosecute assailants who attacked others during the protest.

“There is a lot of video out there,” said Matthai. “We will be working with the community to identify those people who were committing those acts.”

When asked if he thought Saturday’s event was a political rally or a rumble, Berkeley Mayor Jessie Arreguin replied, “I would probably say it was both.”

He continued: “It’s challenging. They had helmets. They had shields, they had weapons and this is something we really haven’t seen before.”

The Berkeley police have yet to say what they are investigating in light of the violence. A similar protest and violent outbreak on March 4th has led to charges against several suspects.

The authorities did make 20 arrests at Saturday’s protest.

Rosealma says all she wants now is to return to her normal life. But she does vow that Saturday’s attack will not end her activism.

“I don’t think people understand what’s at stake here,” she said. “These people are serious. They are here to hurt and kill. They are here to create and sustain a culture where women are oppressed. Where people of color are systematically oppressed.”