The entire effectiveness of the Leftist Government has been in the series of compromises making it possible for a mixed salad of political parties to work in some sort of harmony. Immediately behind last week’s Cabinet crisis was the brief Anarchist revolt in Barcelona of fortnight ago (TIME. May 17). Premier Largo Caballero and President Luis Companys of Catalonia are both secretly determined to put the Anarchists, most hot-headed of Leftist groups, in their places, but the Anarchists are politically potent.
Etiqueta: Segunda República Española
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Companys deniega permiso a los anarquistas para conmemorar el aniversario del inicio de la Guerra Civil
Catalonian anarchists supporting the Leftist Government of Premier Dr. Juan Negrin asked leave to stage anti-Fascist rallies and parades on the first birthday of Spain’s civil war last week, but were sternly repressed. Catalonia’s President Luis Companys cared to risk no street riots among his Communist, Anarchist, Socialist and Republican supporters, and anyhow Leftist Spain was grimly straining every resource in its first large offensive of the war.
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52 muertos en bombardeos aéreos
52 muertos en bombardeos aéreos, de los cuales 48 identificados y 4 no.
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Llegan 10 aviones de Stalin
Thrifty Joseph Stalin belatedly bet another blue chip on the Spanish Loyalists last week in the form of ten splendid Soviet warplanes. Tons of other Soviet war paraphernalia have reached the Leftists in the past month via France. Amid wild cheering in recently bombed Barcelona, Soviet war birds in mass formation darkened the sky and last week the Leftist Cabinet reorganized itself for a last-minute effort to crawl between the jaws of defeat and wrench out the tonsils of victory.
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Azaña propone «paz, piedad y perdón»
La guerra civil está agotada en sus móviles porque ha dado exactamente todo lo contrario de lo que se proponían sacar de ella, y ya a nadie le puede caber duda de que la guerra actual no es una guerra contra el Gobierno, ni una guerra contra los gobiernos republicanos, ni siquiera una guerra contra un sistema político: es una guerra contra la nación española entera, incluso contra los propios fascistas, en cuanto españoles, porque será la nación entera quien la sufra en su cuerpo y en su alma.
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Cómo Gran Bretaña puede aprender de los bombardeos de Barcelona
To drive home how enormously more horrible the next World War will be than its predecessor, Professor Haldane cited cold figures: «Between January 1917 and November 1918, German aeroplanes dropped 71 tons of bombs on England. These killed 837 people. . . . On March 16-19, 1938, 41 tons of bombs were dropped on Barcelona by German and Italian aeroplanes. They killed about 1,300 people.»
Thus, had the bombing of Barcelona continued at this maximum intensity for even one full week, both the total weight of bombs dropped and the total casualties in this city would have considerably exceeded what all England suffered in its worst 95 weeks of actual war. Measured thus coldly, the «horrors of bombing» have increased in 20 years nearly 10,000%.
[…]
«The first air raids may not be on Central London at all but on the traffic jams around it,» warns Professor Haldane. «In Spain, at any rate, the German airmen seem to prefer to attack concentrated traffic, whether on wheel or on foot, rather than to bomb buildings, when they have the choice. … In Barcelona one dives for the nearest shelter, leaving one’s car in the street with the ignition key in place, so that it may be used by officials if necessary. … I would far rather be in Central London during a big air raid than in a traffic jam on the Barnet Bye-Pass or the Great West Road.»
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Ultimo desfile de las Brigadas Internacionales en Barcelona
Herbert Matthews, sobre la última parada de los hombres demacrados, enfermos y desharrapados de las Brigadas Internacionales en Barcelona el 28 de octubre de 1938:
They were not clad in spic-and-span uniforms; their garb was nondescript; they had no arms, and they could not seem to keep in step or in line. But every one who saw them–and above all those who fought with them–knew that these were true soldiers.
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Ricardo del Río: la escenificación de la victoria
La mañana del día 26 como presagiando lo que poco después del mediodía había de producirse. Pocas personas en las calles. Gestos tristes en los que habían visto cómo sus familiares habían abandonado Barcelona para no se sabía cuánto tiempo y otros con semblante alegre, ya que ansiaban el final que se avecinaba para dar rienda suelta a su alegría.
Un breve cañoneo a las diez de la mañana cayendo los proyectiles en la Plaza de España, altos de Montjuich y algunas calles de la barriada de Sans y más tarde se realiza el asalto al famoso monte vigía del puerto de Barcelona. Defendiéndole unos cuantos soldados de Infantería que en cuanto vieron aparecer la primeras fuerzas enemigas arrojaban sus armas. No fueron hechos prisioneros, sino que desembarazdos del arma que les habían dado en el Ejército republicano, les fue entregado un fusil del Ejército nacionalista y colocados en vanguardia. Esta operación se realizó simultáneamente en Vallvidrera y Tibidabo, deteniéndose un momento el avance para sacar a los presos que había en el famoso castillo y en la prisión establecida en lo que había sido Pueblo Español de la Exposición de Barcelona, entre los que se encontraba el Teniente Coronel Domingo Rey d’Harcourt encargado de la defensa de Teruel cuando fue tomado por la República y que todavía no había sido juzgado.
A la una de la tarde acuerdan realizar la entrada de la ciudad catalana, y dos columnas, una que baja de Montjuich hacia la Plaza España, siguiendo la calle de Cortes a las Ramblas y otras que descendiendo del Tibidabo toma la calle de Muntaner hasta la Diagonal, siguiendo esta Avenida hasta el Paseo de Gracia. No entraron fuerzas extranjeras. Estas se quedaron en retaguardia. Soldados navarros, que habían llevado el peso de las operaciones, unidades gallegas y algunas banderas del Tercio, fueron los primeros en cruzar las calles vacías de Barcelona. Más tarde llegaron moros y los generales Yagüe y Eliseo Álvarez Arenas, y después el General Jefe del Ejército del Norte.
No quisieron evitar la salida de Barcelona de cuantos quisieran marcharse. Si hubieran deseado lo contrario, retrasan unas horas la entrada, desciende[n] por la ladera izquierda del Tibidabo y dirigiéndose al la carretera de Granollers hubieran cortado toda salida de Barcelona. De la forma en que se llevó a cabo fue posible que numerosas personas que no habían creído, llevadas de un optimismo ignorante, en la segura y próxima caída de la capital catalana, evacuasen la ciudad. Asíe se presenciaron espectáculos dignos de relatar en los que unos a otros y mientras en rápida carrera se dirigían a la carretera de salida, se fuesen avisando con estas voces: ¡Los facciosos están esquina la calle de Aribau! ¡Ya bajan por el Paseo de Gracia! Todo esto fue presenciado por muchos de los que habían salido de Barcelona hacía 48 horas y que habían podido regresar por la razón antedicha a realizar alguna función de su empleo o a recoger a algún familiar. Se supo de este modo rápidamente hasta el menor detalle de la toma de Barcelona.
Un detalle de la ignorancia en que se encontraron los ciudadanos de Barcelona del momento culminante de la entrada de los soldados de Franco, debido a la casi nula lucha, es que las emisoras de Barcelona seguían funcionando con el personal antiguo y cumpliendo su programa normal como si continuase el Gobierno de la República, haciéndose cargo dos horas después de estar la ciudad en su poder de las emisoras un Teniente de Transmisiones, cuando el «speaker» de Radio Barcelona continuaba su labor como si nada hubiese ocurrido.
Pasados los primeros momentos los elementos facciosos de la ciudad hicieron aparición y se hizo salir a la gente a la calle para que se animase el espectáculo de la Conquista de Barcelona. Más tarde un discurso del General Álvarez Arenas y unas órdenes del General Dávila fueron el botón final a las primeras fases de la entrada en Barcelona. Todo este relato se ajusta en un todo a la realida, ya que de la mayor parte de lo relatado fue testigo el que esto escribe y otros detalles han sido contados por personas de absoluta seriedad que tuvieron ocasión de presenciarlos.
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Una «operación policial» sustituye a la guerra civil
Early this week Loyalist resistance in northern Catalonia collapsed, and in a swift advance northward from Gerona the Rebel Armies of Generalissimo Francisco Franco occupied Figueras, for eleven days the fourth capital of Loyalist Spain. As last as their transport could keep up with them, they bore down on the frontier towns of Port-Bou, La Junquera and Puigcerda. It was only a matter of hours before the Generalissimo would wipe out the only remaining Loyalist territory in northern Spain and be master of the Spanish side of the French-Spanish frontier from the Bay of Biscay to the Mediterranean. A Republican official told correspondents the Rebels’ offensive was no longer a military operation, it was «a police job.»
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Ejecutado José Aranguren, general de la Guardia Civil fiel a la Segunda República, e inspiración de Malraux
Died. José Aranguren, onetime Republican Commander of Barcelona’s Civil Guard, the brave Colonel Ximenes of André Malraux’ novel, Man’s Hope; before one of Franco’s firing squads; in Barcelona.
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Proceso de Alphonse Laurencic, interiorista de cabarets y chekas espantosamente vanguardistas
Yugoslav faces death sentence for thirteenth time in Spain. Accused of torturing Nationalist prisoners during war. Decorated weird cells which drove inmates to insanity.
Barcelona, June 13 (AP) A Yugoslav architect, 12 times sentenced to death by Spanish Republicans, faced possible execution by strangulation tonight by Nationalists who charged he built and decorated weird cells in which prisoners were tortured to blindness and insanity.
The military prosecutor concluded the trial of Alfonso Laurent Cik, 33, in a crowded court room of the Palace of Justice with a demand for his death by garroting. The court withheld sentence pending approval from Burgos, General Franco’s capital.
The prosecutor declared it had been conclusively proven Cik directed the construction of little [odd?]-shaped concrete cells four feet high and «decorated» them with diagonal yellow lines, red-white-blue-yellow spots and black and white cubes in such a way that the figures changed shape before the stares of prisoners dazed by high-powered rays from multi-colored lamps.
«Never in the history of Spain has there ever been such refined devices of the most horrible tortures,» declared Colonel Jose Ungria, chief of the Nationalist secret services, who estimated that at least 2,000 had been held in such cells in a few months before Barcelona was captured.
The prisoners were stripped of their clothing and flogged, and steel rings were placed in their eyes to keep them open, Nationalist witnesses said.
Others told of raised cement blocks placed in cell floors so the prisoners could not walk about, and of cement chairs and beds built at a slant so the prisoners could not sit or lie down with comfort.
There was one cell built like a drum, it was declared, so that prisoners’ steps echoed as they were forced to walk in circles for hours.
In an impassioned 90-minute plea for his life, Cik declared, «I am innocent. I ask only justice.»
«I had no participation whatsoever in the construction of the torture cells,» he told the tribunal.
The defendant testified that he came to Spain in 1933 [?] from America and sought work as an architect in Barcelona cabarets. He later became a lieutenant in the Spanish Republican army.
While serving as an agent of the counter-espionage service of General Franco, he related, he was arrested by the Republicans in May of 1937, was sent to a concentration camp and sentenced to death.
He escaped, however, and then joined the Syndicalists.Altogether, Cik testified, he was sentenced to death on 12 occasions under the Republican regime.
The Syndicalists then forced him to paint the fantastic designs upon the walls of the little concrete cells which the prosecution charges caused many Nationalist prisoners, tortured to extract military information, to go blind and insane.
The architect’s attorney asked that the court give him a 30-year sentence on the ground that his client «only aided a rebellion.»
Cik said he was arrested by the Republicans before he could carry out a plan to «blow up» Republican Checa (secret police) headquarters.
He had built a subterranean mine and placed 300 pounds of dynamite in it, intending to ignite the explosive under cover of one of the aerial bombardments of Barcelona, he claimed.
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Los líderes republicanos escapan del hambre, los campos, las ejecuciones
SPAIN: Outside, Inside
When Miguel Primo de Rivera was dictator of Spain from 1923 to 1930 many Spanish Leftist leaders cooperated with the dictatorship even though they fundamentally opposed it. Last week those opposed to Generalissimo Francisco Franco’s regime felt safest outside the country.
Former Republican Premier Dr. Juan Negrin, Foreign Minister Julio Alvarez del Vayo, onetime Defense Minister Indalecio Prieto, General Jose Miaja and a whole host of lesser fry were in Mexico arranging for transfers of refugees. Communist Deputy Dolores Ibarruri («La Pasionaria») and Colonel Juan Modesto were in the Soviet Union. Famed Colonel Enrique Lister, onetime stonemason, leader of Madrid’s famed Communist Fifth Regiment, was thought to be in hiding in France; openly there were President Manuel Azana, onetime Premier Jose Giral, General Vicente Rojo, onetime Premier Francisco Largo Caballero, Catalonian President Luis Companys, Basque President Jose Antonio de Aguirre.
Whittling
Also in France still were 350,000 ordinary Spanish refugees encamped en the beaches in southern France. About 90,000 of the original 500,000 refugees who crossed over the border last February have returned to Spain, and last week about 400 daily were going back to their homes. Some 9,000 former soldiers of the Spanish Republican Army have joined the French Foreign Legion and have been sent to Morocco; aviators, antiaircraft gunners, mechanics, technicians and chauffeurs are being taken into French military organizations. French arms factories have been examining daily about 250 Spanish munitions workers, and giving employment to an average of 75. Two shiploads of 1,000 refugees apiece have gone from France to Mexico, and a third ship carrying several thousand is scheduled to leave this week. Mexico expects to take about 20,000 Spanish refugees this summer. The Basques have also chartered a ship to take their refugees to Mexico, Colombia and Chile.Little by little the number of refugees was being whittled down, but not fast enough to suit the French Government, which last week announced that it had spent $20,000,000 so far on the care and feeding of the Spanish refugees. In that expense lies, incidentally, the reason why France has been reluctant to return to Generalissimo Franco the $200,000,000 in gold which the former Republican Government left in French banks. The French have let it be known that they expect the Spanish refugee problem to be solved by September in one way or another.
Justice
While France made every effort to persuade the former Loyalists to go back home, much of the news that filtered through the tightly censored French-Spanish frontier was not calculated to encourage mass reentry. Eighteen permanent tribunals were said to be working in Madrid trying Loyalists; there were said to be 500 arrests in Barcelona and Madrid daily; 2,000 awaited trials in Madrid alone; 688 have been executed; 20,000 were in a concentration camp near Alicante. Although there were accusations still outstanding against 1,000,000 persons in former Loyalist territory, the police appealed to the public for more denunciations of those guilty of crimes against Rightists. It was calculated it would take another year before the dockets were cleared and Spain could do without her military tribunals.Relief
A greater tale of woe was brought back from Spain to the U. S. last week by Alfred Cope, regional director in southeastern Spain of the American Friends Service Committee, the Quaker relief organization. Mr. Cope believed that some 500,000 Loyalist supporters were in concentration camps; he thought that at least 70,000 Italian troops remained in Spain, despite stories of withdrawals; he told one story of 20,000 Loyalist troops imprisoned in a bullring in Ciudad Real for 20 days with little food and not much water.More serious and more detailed were Mr. Cope’s charges that the Franco regime had seized six or seven shiploads of food that the Quakers sent to Spain for 100,000 half-starved children. As far as he could find out, the food went to the Army. In Murcia, he said, he turned over to the Spanish Social Auxiliary, the official Spanish relief organization, enough food to last the 1,000 children they were feeding there a month and three days. It was all gone in ten days.
«While the food lasted, moreover, the official orders in the clinic were that the children had to sing the Franco Nationalist songs before they were fed,» said Mr. Cope. «We never asked them to sing Loyalist songs when the Loyalists held that territory, and we do not now like to ask them to sing Nationalist songs in thanksgiving for our food.»
Upshot of the difficulties in Spain, Mr. Cope announced, was that the Quakers were pulling out. «It would simply be dishonest to continue in Spain to spend the money being collected abroad for this children’s relief,» he said. «Franco has assured us he would like to have us continue the work until we are ready to retire, but it is evident that he wants the food, not us. There is no way of being sure where the food is likely to go.»
Oath
Meanwhile, in Burgos, Generalissimo Franco moved to set up a «corporate state» on the model of Fascist Italy. A $70,000,000 subsidy was set aside to build up a merchant fleet to «display New Spain’s prestige in America and the Far East.» Curtailment of imports of gasoline, motor cars, machinery, motion picture films was announced. Syndical labor laws were ordered written, with labor unions being organized on the approved Fascist model. Strikes will be outlawed, the unions will be controlled by the Government. New contracts will be written for tenant farming, and the Spanish Phalanx’s program for redistribution of some large estates will be carried out.That the state will be a strictly authoritarian one could not be doubted after the oath which was sprung last week on the members of the Grand Council of the Falange Espanola Tradicionalista, the new Fascist substitute for Parliament. Raimundo Fernandez Cuesta, secretary general of Spain’s only party, demanded «blind obedience» to Generalissimo Franco, ended by proposing an oath: «We proclaim our inflexible will to obey unconditionally the orders of our Caudillo. As proof of that sacred promise, let the Councillors of the Falange swear with me before God always to obey the Caudillo and those who receive from him the power of commandment.» The Councillors swore.
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Lluís Companys detenido por la Gestapo en Bretaña
La Baule (la Bretanya): la Gestapo deté el president de la Generalitat de Catalunya, Lluís Companys.
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Ejecutado Justo Bueno, «asesino de los hermanos Badia»
Cumplimiento de sentencias
[Hoy] á primera hora de la mañana, sé cumplieron, en el Campo de la Bota, las sentencias dictadas por los Consejos de Guerra celebrados en Barcelona contra José Guía Cruceta y Feliciano Blaya Junta, autores de robos a mano armada, y contra Miguel Arenas Pons, Justo Bueno Pérez y Alfonso Palau Font, autores de varios delitos de sangre durante la dominación marxistá. -
Novelistas barceloneses en castellano (González Ledesma) y catalán (Gifreda) ganan segundos premios en el primer Premio Internacional de Janés
Premio Internacional de Primera Novela
El Jurado, presidido por Somerset Maugham, emite fallo en Madrid
En un típico restaurante de esta capital, y en un ambiente de gran expectación, se han reunido a cenar esta noche los componentes del Jurado formado para conceder el Premio Internacional de Primera Novela, 1947, instituido por el editor barcelonés, José Janés. El Jurado, presidido por el escritor inglés Somerset Maugham, lo formaban los señores Eugenio d’Ors, José María de Cossío, Walter Starkie y Fernando Gutiérrez, que actuaba como secretario.
Por unanimidad ha emitido fallo, concediendo los siguientes premios:
Primer premio de 25.000 pesetas, a la novela «Turris Eburnea», de Rodolfo L. Fonseca, de Montevideo.
Dos segundos premios de 10.000 pesetas cada uno, a las novelas «Sombras Viejas», de F. González Ledesma, y «Sis o set sirenas» [sic], de Mario Gifreda.
También ha recomendado la compra y edición de las siguientes novelas: «This other Eden», de Katherin Gaskin; «La Tierra brava», de Leocadio Antonio Zuinaga Uribe; «Adorable loca», de Pedro Boltes, y «El pont Levadís», de Ramón Planas.