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Monday, March 25, 2019
Guernica Survivor Who Fought Franco's Fascists Dead at 102
Reprinted from Apple News
Luis Ortiz Alfau, who fought Gen. Francisco Franco and his fascist allies during the Spanish Civil War of the 1930s, was one of the last survivors of the carpet-bombing of the Basque town of Guernica on April 26, 1937, an event immortalized by Pablo Picasso’s monumental antiwar oil painting “Guernica.”
Mr. Ortiz, who died March 8 at 102, was a Basque, from Bilbao on the Bay of Biscay, and was working at a food warehouse there when civil war broke out in 1936.
Until then, Spain had been run by an elected moderate liberal coalition of Republicans, a government known as the Second Republic. But in July 1936, Nationalists staged a military coup that resulted in the civil war, with Franco eventually leading the Nationalist side. He had the support of Nazi Germany and fascist Italy, while the leftists were backed by the Soviet Union and Mexico.
Other countries, including the United States and Great Britain, continued to recognize the Republican government but declined to intervene. Tens of thousands of anti-Nazi and anti-fascist sympathizers from those countries flowed into Spain to back the Republicans as part of what became known as the International Brigades.
Mr. Ortiz, compelled to join the fight, recalled his dismay upon discovering his side’s meager supplies. “As the son of a Republican, I had to join because they would surely call me up, and I wanted to defend freedom and the legal Popular Front government,” he recalled eight decades later to the French news agency Agence France-Presse. “We would practice with brooms. . . . We didn’t have rifles or any war material.”
He said he never fired a shot during three years of conflict and that he instead served as a “living phone,” delivering messages between the trenches and battalion command. “The messages would ask for weapons,” he told AFP. “They would say, ‘We can’t hold on,’ or ‘We have had many casualties.’ ”
Speaking of the one-day bombing of Guernica, in which hundreds of civilians, perhaps up to 1,600, died — the exact number has been disputed — Mr. Ortiz told AFP in 2017: “Around 4 p.m., three planes started arriving every 15 minutes; they were German and Italian planes. They dropped explosive bombs, then incendiary bombs, and the town started to burn.”
It later emerged that the attackers were from Adolf Hitler’s Condor Legion and Hitler’s Italian ally, Benito Mussolini. Hitler used the bombing to test his new tactic of blitzkrieg, or lightning war, which he adopted, with horrifying success, over London in World War II.
“We had to go out and collect the dead and wounded,” Mr. Ortiz told AFP. “Everything was burning and full of smoke. I had never seen so much blood.”
Mr. Ortiz later survived three concentration camps, as most historians describe them — two in Spain and one in southern France, all used to imprison communists and other “undesirables.”
In the camp at Gurs, in southern France, he shared cattle sheds with many Jewish inmates awaiting deportation to camps in Germany and German-occupied Poland. He later endured two years as a forced laborer under the new regime of Franco, who remained Spain’s dictator until his death in 1975.
In the face of world criticism, Franco attributed the destruction of Guernica to the Republican left — “Red vandalism,” he called it. Mr. Ortiz’s mother learned her son was still alive only three years later, after he got a message out of an internment camp in the University of Deusto at Bilbao, taken over by Franco’s forces.
Deusto was one of more than 120 concentration camps set up by Franco to corral his opponents and where many Spanish leftists were executed or died of hunger or disease.
Luis Ortiz Alfau was born in Bilbao on Oct. 13, 1916. His father ran a fabrics factory and was well known throughout Basque country as a fervent Republican, socialist and anti-monarchist.
By April 1939, the Nationalists had won the civil war. The death toll was estimated at several hundred thousand Spaniards and 900 American, 500 British and several thousand other foreign volunteers.
Facing the inevitability of defeat, Mr. Ortiz boarded a boat to southern France in February 1939, only to be detained by the French authorities and sent to the Gurs detention camp.
When France entered World War II that September by declaring war against Germany, Mr. Ortiz and thousands of other Spaniards were freed and tried to return to Spain. But he was arrested by Franco’s forces at the border.
Mr. Ortiz said his skills as a typist helped save his life when the Nationalist guards began using him as a scribe. He recalled less fortunate inmates being forced to build roads through the foothills of the Pyrenees. “Some weighed just 38-40 kilos,” or 83 to 88 pounds, he recalled to AFP. “They would eat vegetable peelings that were thrown to the pigs, even raw lizards.”
When he returned home to Bilbao in 1943 to be reunited with his family and fiancee, Mr. Ortiz quickly found that jobs were, in his words, open only to “those who had fought with Franco.”
He eventually got a job by bribing a Spanish civil servant to delete his record as a Republican fighter. Rarely seen without his Basque beret, he worked until retirement as a senior administrator in Bilbao for the Uralita group of construction materials companies.
In retirement, he volunteered at the Basque Food Bank and was a regular guest on TV programs about the Spanish Civil War and on Basque identity.
His wife died in 2009. A complete list of survivors was not immediately available. Mr. Ortiz’s death, in Bilbao of undisclosed causes, was confirmed by family friends to the Spanish media.
Picasso, not a Basque but an Andalusian from Malaga, in southern Spain, was living in his adopted Paris when he heard and read about the destruction of Guernica. A few days later, he started on his painting of that name — using only black, white and gray — depicting the ravages of war through images of deformed, agonized humans, bulls, horses and a wounded dove. After years in exile, including at New York’s Museum of Modern Art, the painting eventually found its way back to Spain at Picasso’s request.
“Guernica” now attracts millions of visitors a year to the Reina Sofia museum in Madrid. During World War II, Picasso, living in Nazi-occupied Paris, recalled a German officer popping into his studio to see his work and pointing to a large photograph of the Guernica painting. Did you do that, the officer asked.
“No, you did,” replied the maestro.
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1 comment:
inspiring; a real survivor. presente!!! hats off. and the closing remark from Picasso is a gem.
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