***On The 77th
Anniversary Of The Start Of The Spanish Civil War- All Honor to Those
Who Fought On The Republican Side- In Honor Of The Working Class Militants In
The Spanish Civil War- An Anniversary, Of Sorts
***On The 77th Anniversary Of The Start Of The Spanish Civil War- All Honor to Those Who Fought On The Republican Side- In Honor Of The Working Class Militants In The Spanish Civil War- An Anniversary, Of Sorts
In Honor Of The Working Class
Militants In The Spanish Civil War- An Anniversary, Of Sorts
I have noted in other posts that
some of our working class anniversaries like the Paris Commune, the Bolshevik
Russian Revolution of 1917, and the establishment of the Communist
International are worthy of yearly commemoration. So, let us say, the 94th
anniversary of the Russian revolution while awkward as a milestone is
nevertheless, because of its world-historic importance (both in its
establishment and its demise), an appropriate yearly commemoration. Others,
like the Russian Revolution of 1905 are worthy of the more traditional five,
ten and multiples observations. I have also noted previously my dismay
(although that may be too strong a word) at the rise of odd-ball year
anniversaries (30th, for example) and rise in the number of mundane occasions
for such celebrations although I am not immune to that fever myself. Here, as
the headline notes, I am observing a traditional milestone. However, the event
itself, that I am observing has far less historic importance (actually far, far
less importance) than as an occasion to make some point about the Spanish Civil
War. The 50th anniversary designation is to commemorate the first time that I
seriously studied the “lessons” of the Spanish Civil War. And the form that
that study took was as the subject my very first high school term paper in 9th
grade Civics class. I can hear the air being let out of the tires now. But hear
me out on this one.
I make no pretense that I can zero
in on when I first became interested in the subject of the Spanish Civil War but
I was driven by two things in that direction- the general hatred of fascism as
transmitted by family and others, the other, and this one is less precise as to
origin, was a devotion to the fighters in the American-led Abraham Lincoln
battalion of the 15th Brigade of the International Brigades. I believe it may
have been hearing Pete Seeger doing a version of Viva La Quince Brigada but I
am just not sure. In any case by the spring of 1961 I was knee-deep in studying
the subject, including time after school up at the North Adamsville branch of
the town’s Thomas Crane Public Library. My first stop, I remember, was looking
through the Encyclopedia Americana for the entry on the Spanish Civil War for
sources and then turning to the card catalogue. For those not familiar with
those ancient forms of research the Encyclopedia was like the online Wikipedia
today (except no collective editing, for good or evil, at a touch) and the card
catalogue was just a paper version on, well, 3X5 cards, of the computerized
systems in most libraries today. But enough of this history of research back in
the Dark Ages because what this entry is about is the lessons of that event.
I have noted before, although here
too I cannot remember all the details of the genesis of the notion, that on the
subject of the Spanish Civil War I have been “haunted” (and still am) by the
fact of the lost by the Republican side when in July and August of 1936 (and
for about a year later as well) victory against Franco’s brutal
counter-revolutionary forces seemed assured. In a sense Spain, and the various
stages of my interpretation of events there, represents kind of a foundation
stone for my political perspectives as I gained more understanding of the
possibilities. I have, more recently, characterized 1930s Spain as the last
serious chance to create a companion to the original Bolshevik Revolution of
1917 in Russia and so we had best look at its lesson closely, very closely.
Of course as a 9th grade political
neophyte I was not even close to making that kind of observation just
mentioned. I distinctly recall, and it was reflected in my liberal politics at
that time, that the center of my argument on that term paper was the perfidy of
the Western democracies in not coming to the aid of the Spanish republicans and
further in not allowing the republicans to get arms from them or other sources,
other than the Soviet Union. Mainly I was incensed that the British and French
did not do more except cave in to Hitler when he called a tune. Now that was
pretty raw stuff, pretty raw analysis, although probably not bad coming from
that perspective. But depending on outside forces to save your bacon (or
revolution) is always tricky and so as I moved leftward in my own political
perspective I spent more time looking at the internal political dynamics
driving the revolution. For an extremely long time I was under the spell (the
proto-Stalinist derived spell) as articulated by the majority of the
pro-republican organizations.- it was first necessary to win the war against Franco
and then the revolution, presumably socialist, would be pursued under which all
manner of good things like workers control of production, land to the tiller,
some justice on the various national questions (Catalonia, Basque country)
could take place, co-operative and collective government established, etc.
As I moved further leftward,
leftward not just politically but also organizationally away from left-liberal
and social democratic operations, and began to study more closely radical and
revolutionary movements for social change I began to chaff under that
war-revolution dichotomy and look more closely as the policies of the various
organization within the republican camp. That was rather more eye-opening than
not. The gist of it was that all the major organizations were working at cross
purposes but most importantly they were putting brakes on the continuation of a
revolutionary thrust in Spain. An so in the final analysis, although this was
hardest to finally see in the cases of the CGT-FAI and POUM organizations and
some individual militants, it was the failure to seek revolutionary solutions
that would have galvanized the masses (or could have, rather than after 1937
left them indifferent, mainly, to the republican cause).
What was lacking? Obviously since even opponents agree there
was a revolutionary situation in that period a party willing to go right to the
end to achieve its goals, a Bolshevik-style party. Such things, as we are now
painfully aware of, make all the different. And it is that little pearl of
wisdom that makes this anniversary entry worth thinking about for the future.
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