From 1936-1939, a civil war raged in Spain between
those loyal to the newly- established Republican
government
and those who favored a conservative, militaristic
system. The outcome of the Spanish Civil War altered
the balance of power in Europe, tested the military
power of Germany and Italy, and pushed ER "away
from the peace movement and into the ranks of
the anti-fascists"
fighting for democracy. (1)
In 1931, the Spanish monarchy fell and was replaced
by a democratically elected government dedicated
to
major social reforms. The newly elected government,
called the Second Republic, was largely middle class
and promoted policies that attacked the traditional
privileged structure of Spanish society. Their reforms
included the redistribution of large estate lands;
the separation of church and state; and an antiwar,
antimilitarist policy dedicated to undermining the
power of the aristocracy, the Catholic Church, and
the
armed forces. The right (landed aristocracy, the
Catholic Church, a large military clique, the monarchists,
and the new fascist party, the Falange) resented
this attack on their authority, and united and
rebelled against
the government reforms. Meanwhile, the government's
idealistic reforms failed to satisfy the left-wing
radicals or gain the support of workers, who increasingly
engaged in protest movements against it. The Second
Republic struggled to stay in power by forming a
series of weak coalition governments from the 1933
election until
1936, when the Popular Front swept them from office.
The 1936 electoral victory of the Popular Front
(a coalition of Liberals, Socialists, and Communists)
underscored both the hope for social reforms for those
neglected by the Second Republic and the fears reform
posed to the right. The Nationalists (the rightist
opponents of the Second Republic government) soon
took up arms against the Republicans (the antimonarchist
supporters of the Second Republic). In July1936, military
uprisings occurred throughout Spain and General Francisco
Franco led a revolt of Spanish troops in Spanish Morocco.
By September, Hitler agreed to aid the Nationalists,
Franco and his troops returned to Spain, France and
England decided to stay out of the war, and the first
International Brigade (a multinational group of volunteers
largely organized by France and consisting of many
Communists and American liberals) arrived to bolster
the strength of defenders of the Second Republic.
Throughout the autumn, the Nationalists won major
battles, consolidated their power, and appointed
Franco
commander-in-chief and head of state. Germany and
Italy quickly recognized the new Nationalist government
and provided Franco's troops with planes, tanks,
and other materiel. Unable to match the Nationalist
war
machine, the Spanish republic sought outside support
and turned to the Soviet Union for military supplies.
The Soviet aid increased internal divisions between
Communist and non-Communist supporters of the republic
and the anti-Nationalists began to splinter into
factions tied to differing political goals.
In 1937, the United States forbade exports of weapons
to Spain, Germany conducted large-scale aerial bombings
on undefended civilian targets (the most famous of
which was Guernica, immortalized by a painting by
Pablo Picasso), and the Nationalists conquered the
last Republican center in the north. In a series of
attacks from March to June 1938, the Nationalists
drove to the Mediterranean and cut the Republican
territory in two. Late in 1938, Franco mounted a major
offensive against the anti-Nationalist stronghold
of Catalonia, and after months of fighting, Barcelona
finally fell in January 1939.
The Nationalist capture of Catalonia sealed the
republic's defeat. Republican efforts for a negotiated
peace failed in early 1939. Great Britain and France
recognized the Franco regime in February and international
recognition quickly followed. Finally, on April 1,
1939, the victorious Nationalists entered the final
Republican stronghold of Madrid and received the
unconditional surrender of the conquered Republican
army in Madrid.
The Spanish Civil War had a strong impact on ER.
Her close friend, journalist Martha Gellhorn, covered
the war and kept ER appraised of events. She arranged
for ER to see The Spanish Earth, a documentary
detailing the horrors of the German attacks on
civilian
populations and the vast imbalance of wealth in Spain.
She hoped that FDR could find a way to lift the
embargo
against equipment and goods for Spain, arranged for
those supporting the Republican government to lobby
FDR, and criticized
the state department for being "not very anxious
to do much for the Loyalists." (2)
As she later wrote to a critic, " I am not neutral
in feeling, as I believe in Democracy and the right
of a people to choose their own government without
having it forced on them by Hitler and Mussolini."
(3)
Notes:
- Joseph Lash.Eleanor
and Franklin. (New York: W.W. Norton & Company,
1971), 737.
- Ibid., 740.
- Ibid., 741.
Sources:
Carr, Raymond. Oxford History of Modern Europe:
Spain, 1808-1975. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1982.
Lash, Joseph. Eleanor and Franklin. New
York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1971, 737-742.
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