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Title: Volunteers for Anarchy Author: Morris Brodie Date: November 17, 2020 Language: en Topics: Spanish Civil War, volunteers, history, anti-fascism Source: *Journal of Contemporary History*, (November 2020). DOI:10.1177/0022009420949926.
This article explores the twin phenomena of anti-fascism and
transnational war volunteering through a case study of the International
Group of the Durruti Column in the Spanish Civil War. This anarchist-led
unit comprised approximately 368 volunteers with a variety of political
views from at least 25 different countries. The article examines the
relationship between these foreign volunteers and their Spanish hosts
(both anarchist and non-anarchist), through, firstly, the militarization
of the militias in the winter of 1936, and, secondly, the groupâs role
in the May Days of 1937 and its aftermath. These episodes show the often
hostile attitude of Spaniards to foreigners within Spain and challenge
the characterization of the conflict as distinctively internationalist.
The lives of these volunteers also highlight the continuity of
anti-fascism between the interwar and wartime period, with Spain acting
as an âanti-fascist melting potâ where volunteers of different
backgrounds and political leanings came together in a common cause. This
commitment, however, was not unconditional, and was frequently
challenged due to circumstances within Spain. Through studying these
transnational fighters, we have a more comprehensive understanding of
the complex nature of twentieth century anti-fascism.
Column in the Spanish Civil War
The Spanish Civil War is famous partly for those who came to Spain to
fight fascism beyond their own countries. Approximately 35,000
volunteers travelled to Spain to defend the Republic from 1936 to 1939,
the vast majority of these serving in the International Brigades
organized by the Communist International (Comintern). A significant
number, however, fought in formations under the control of the Spanish
anarchist ConfederaciĂłn Nacional del Trabajo (National Confederation of
Labour, CNT) and Federación Anarquista Ibérica (Iberian Anarchist
Federation, FAI). Although there were similarities between service in
both detachments, there were also important differences, over
discipline, militarization, and the wider political focus of the
struggle. Contrary to the plethora of studies focusing on the
brigadistas, international volunteers in anarchist units have been
neglected by historians. Those few that have studied them have tended to
take either an individual (focusing on anarchist volunteers more
well-known for other endeavours such as Simone Weil or Carl Einstein) or
country-specific approach that, whilst valuable, ignores the
transnational and internationalist character of these units.[1]
Anti-fascism in the 1930s was not only an international, but
transnational phenomenon. Emphasizing the role of different national
groups within international units risks reinforcing the very national
boundaries these volunteers sought to challenge. It also shares
parallels with more explicitly nationalist histories of war
volunteering.[2]
This article seeks to address this by focusing on one of the most
significant foreign anarchist units: the International Group (Grupo
Internacional) of the Durruti Column (later the International Company of
the Popular Armyâs 26^(th) (Durruti) Division).[3] Through a case study
of this unit, comprising approximately 368 milicianos (militia members)
from at least 25 different countries, it traces the experience of
foreign anarchist volunteers in Spain. The International Group was, as
one contemporary publication noted, a âliving International,â comprising
anti-fascists from around the world.[4] Examining its workings
highlights the variety of problems facing foreigners in Spain during the
civil war and how they sought to overcome them. It helps us to
understand the conflicts within the Spanish Republican camp, the complex
nature of international anti-fascism during the interwar period and the
wider phenomenon of transnational war volunteering more generally.
After an overview of the place of international anarchist volunteers in
the wider historiography of the war, I will examine the background of
the volunteers, including their nationality, class, gender and political
affiliation. The next two sections contribute to the scholarship on
foreign war volunteers by investigating the relationship between the
International Group and its Spanish hosts, through, firstly, the
militarization of the militias in the winter of 1936, and, secondly, the
groupâs role in the May Days of 1937 and its aftermath. This includes
volunteersâ later service in the International Brigades, an important
comparison throughout. These episodes show the often hostile attitude of
Spaniards to foreigners within Spain and challenge the romantic, almost
mythical, picture of foreign service in Spain often presented in both
veteransâ and scholarsâ accounts.[5] The final section of the article
deals with volunteersâ trajectories after defeat, emphasizing the
continuity between interwar and wartime anti-fascism, whilst
acknowledging that transnational solidarity had its limits.
According to Mae N. Ngai, transnational history âfollows the movement or
reach of people, ideas, and/or things across national (or other defined)
borders.â[6] Transnational history is not simply a comparative study
spanning two or more countries; it recognizes the interconnections
between them, and how these shape developments in all the countries
under consideration. There has been a âtransnational turnâ in both
anti-fascist and anarchist studies in recent years, much of which
focuses on the 1930s and 1940s. Recent work by Michael Seidman and
upcoming projects by Helen Graham and Robert Gildea indicate a new
appreciation of the transnational nature of interwar anti-fascism.
Indeed, Hugo GarcĂa maintains that it âappears in many respects to be
the ideal type of a transnational movement.â[7] The Spanish Civil War in
particular lends itself to transnational study, given the international
context of the conflict and its reputation as a testing ground for the
Second World War. Jorge Marco, for example, has recently examined the
effect of transnational soldiers on the military tactics of both the
Spanish Republican and Allied armies, and Lisa A. Kirschenbaum has
produced a pioneering history of transnational communism during the
civil war period through the eyes of the Comintern. There is a need,
however, to disentangle the history of anti-fascism from that of the
communist movement.[8]
Anarchism, in view of its hostility to established organizations and
emphasis on individual freedom, fluidity and personal networks, seems
ideally suited to study through a transnational lens. Constance Bantman
and Bert Altena even suggest that âtransnationalism seems to be a
natural characteristic of anarchist movements.â[9] It is surprising,
then, that there has been comparatively little scholarly work on the
transnational nature of anarchism during the Spanish Civil War, with
most studies on anarchism during the period focusing on the CNT and
FAI.[10] Although Enrico Acciai has examined Italian anti-fascist
volunteers in the Ascaso Column during the conflict, international
anarchist milicianos more generally have escaped such attention. The
recent publication of the memoirs of Antoine Gimenez (pseudonym of Bruno
Salvadori, an Italian volunteer who fought with the International Group
during the war)âcomplete with extensive historical notesâis a possible
sign that this may be changing.[11]
As I have argued elsewhere, the Spanish Civil War had a profound effect
on the international anarchist movement. The apparently spontaneous
factory and land collectivisations seen across significant portions of
Republican territory, combined with the construction of
anti-hierarchical revolutionary militias to combat fascism, inspired
comrades across the world and injected life into an otherwise moribund
movement. Many international anarchists set up new groups and newspapers
in their own countries devoted to raising solidarity for those in Spain.
Others made the trip across the Atlantic or over the Pyrenees to work
for the CNT-FAI in Barcelona and other cities, document the social
revolution that was sweeping through areas of AragĂłn and Catalonia or to
join the militias at the front.[12] Their influence on the CNT-FAI has
been emphasized in recent works by James A. Baer and Martha A.
Ackelsberg, who examine the flow of both activists and ideas between
Spain and Latin America in the period before and during the civil war.
Their military contribution is more difficult to assess, however. Unlike
the International Brigades, whose introduction during the Battle of
Madrid has achieved legendary status and is often credited (rightly or
wrongly) with âsavingâ the capital, international anarchist milicianos
do not have a âdefining battleâ as such, and their service was much more
fragmented than that of the brigadistas.[13]
Calculating the number of foreign anarchists who fought in Spain remains
challenging. The Comandancia Militar de Milicias (Militia Military
Command) did not maintain lists of anarchist militias operating in
AragĂłn and the Levant (the main area of operations), and anarchists were
less meticulous in their record-keeping than their communist
counterparts. One article appearing in the Italian-American anarchist
newspaper Il Martello in February 1938 claimed that 2000 foreign
anarchists had served on the AragĂłn front since the warâs beginning.
Historian Dieter Nelles argues that between 1000 and 1500 foreign
anarchists came to Catalonia in the first weeks after July 1936, and
Augustin Souchy, who worked for the CNT-FAI Foreign Language Division
during the conflict, estimates a figure of 3000 in total.[14] Most
anarchists who did not join the International Brigades fought in
international groups attached to CNT and FAI militias. The CNT, with
between 500,000 and a million members in 1936, was the most powerful
anarchist organization in the world at the time. The more radical FAI,
with a pre-war peak membership of 5500 in 1933, also had a reputation
for ideological firmness and militancy. There were international groups
in the Ascaso Column, the Ortiz Column, and smaller units like the
BatallĂłn de la Muerte (Battalion of Death) and Muerte es Maestro (Death
is Master) militia.[15]
Anarchist columns varied in organization, but the primary unit was the
agrupaciĂłn (action group). These were composed of centurias (usually
five centurias to an agrupaciĂłn), themselves containing approximately
100 milicianos, as well as a medical team and a machine gun section.
Centurias were split once more into grupos (groups) comprising between
10 and 25 fighters. These grupos elected delegates to the centuria,
which in turn sent representatives to the agrupaciones, who then liaised
with the columnâs war committee. The nomenclature of the anarchist
militias reflects the hostility to which anarchists regarded military
units historically. This contrasted with units controlled by Marxists,
which were largely modelled on the Red Army.[16]
The International Group of the Durruti Column is perhaps the most famous
of the foreign anarchist militia units. According to anarchist historian
Abel Paz, around 400 fighters served in the group at some point, while
David Berry believes that the group reached a maximum of 240 members. My
own research has uncovered 368 individuals from 25 countries. I have
excluded those internacionales known to have served with the column but
not explicitly with the International Group. I have omitted, for
example, the Italian-American Carl Marzani, who was a member of the
Durruti Column but not the International Group (indeed,
heâincorrectlyâidentifies himself as the âonly non-Spaniardâ in the
column), as well as some militants mentioned by Berry.[17] The main
sources for volunteers are the records of the CNT and FAI held at the
International Institute of Social History (IISH) in Amsterdam, the
records of the Comintern within the Russian State Archive of Social and
Political History (RGASPI), as well as newspapers and the memoirs,
diaries and letters of participants.[18] Allowing for gaps in record
keeping, particularly during the months before the militarization of the
anarchist militias in early 1937 (discussed below), Pazâs estimate for
numbers seems sensible.
The International Group was initially formed on the AragĂłn front at the
end of July 1936 from an assortment of approximately 30 volunteers.
According to Berry, it was the brainchild of French anarchists François
Charles Carpentier and Charles Ridel (AKA Louis Mercier Vega). Born in
Reims in 1904, Carpentier had been a corporal during the First World War
and joined the Saint-Denis group of the Union Anarchiste (Anarchist
Union, UA) in 1927. Ridel, in addition to being a UA member, had
attended the CNT congress in Zaragoza in May 1936, and as a result knew
Buenaventura Durruti (the columnâs commander) personally. The pair left
Paris in late July bound for Spain, eventually joining up with the
column at Fraga in Huesca province. They became the representatives of
the International Group, in addition to French anarchist Fernand Fortin,
Emile Cottin (the French anarchist famous for the attempted
assassination of Georges Clemenceau in 1919) and an unidentified
âCarles.â The internationals were known as gorros negros (black
bonnets), named after their unofficial uniform of a black beret. This
gave greater camouflage for night attacks, in which the International
Group often participated (see Table 1).[19]
[Table 1. Major battles of the International Group (includes those as
International Company of 26^(th) Division and IWMA Battalion).]
The first delegate (de facto leader) of the group was the Frenchman
Louis Berthomieu, who had been an artillery captain during the First
World War. Other volunteers selected for leadership roles leaders in the
group also had previous military experience, including the Italian
Pietro (Pablo) Vagliasindi, the Germans Christian Lamotte and Carl
Einstein and Frenchman Alexis Cardeur. This, coupled with the fact that
Berthomieu said he âknew nothingâ about political matters, suggests that
military experience, rather than ideological consistency, was the
overriding factor in electing leaders within the group.[20] This
contradicts the assertion of Charles Esdaile that militia leaders âowed
their position to nothing other than their posts in some party or
trade-union hierarchy.â[21]
According to Paz, the International Group was split into five sections,
each containing around 50 milicianos. In practice, though, there were
two rough groupings: a German-speaking and a French-speaking section.
Other nationalities were scattered across the group, with multilingual
volunteers acting as translators. French and German were the primary
languages used, but, according to the German anarchist exile newspaper
Die Soziale Revolution, âat least half a dozen different mother tongues
were spoken,â highlighting the improvisationalâand
transnationalâcharacter of the group.[22] Few of the early foreign
volunteers spoke Spanish (Berthomieu was an exceptionâanother possible
reason for his election to a leadership position). Nevertheless, like in
the International Brigades, there were shared Spanish phrases among
anarchist volunteers, which they used when travelling through villages:
ÂĄViva la ConfederaciĂłn! (Long live the Confederation!âthe CNT) and ÂĄViva
la revoluciĂłn social! (Long live the social revolution!). These
explicitly revolutionary slogans, as opposed to the defensive slogan of
ÂĄNo pasaran! (They shall not pass!) favoured in the brigades, are a
notable sign of the anarchist unitâs commitment to the radical
interpretation of the war, the repercussions of which are discussed
below.[23]
The French-speaking section, which included Italians and Belgians, was
known as the Sebastién Faure centuria, after the French anarchist of the
same name. This unit was on occasion seconded to the Ortiz Column, which
explains why it is listed distinctly in some of the CNT files. The
German-speaking section also contained Swiss and Swedish volunteers.
Some accounts assert that this was known as the Erich MĂŒhsam centuria,
but I could find no contemporary evidence of this, and it may be being
confused with a machine gun section of the same name in the Ascaso
Column. The remnants of this group transferred to the Durruti Column in
November 1936. Similarly, Kenyon Zimmer has dismissed claims by
historians that there was a Sacco and Vanzetti centuria composed of
Americans affiliated with the column.[24]
As Table 2 shows, the largest numbers of volunteers came from France and
Germany, followed by Spain, Italy and Switzerland. France supplied more
volunteers than any other country during the civil war (around 9,000
fought in the International Brigades), so the high number of French
anarchists is not surprising, especially considering the proximity of
France to Spain and relative strength of the French movement.
International volunteers for the militias were often processed by the
French anarchist movement, either in Paris or through the Section
Française (French Section) located in the border town of Puigcerdà .[25]
Germans were over-represented in the International Group in terms of the
strength of the German anarchist movement. This was partly because Spain
was the primary exile destination for German anarchists, with many
settling in Barcelona before 1936 due to the Spanish Republicâs liberal
asylum policy and employment laws. These exiles formed the Gruppe
Deutsche Anarcho-Syndikalisten im Ausland (Group of German
Anarcho-Syndicalists in Exile, DAS) in 1934, which would play an
important role in the civil war in Barcelona. In addition, as discussed
below, a significant proportion of Germans within the column were
members or former members of the Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands
(Communist Party of Germany, KPD).[26]
[Table 2. Nationalities of International Group volunteers.]
The large number of Spaniards suggests a certain looseness in the
definition of the International Group and mirrors the large numbers of
native fighters in the International Brigades during the closing stages
of the conflict. Details on these volunteers are slight (partly because
they are often referenced by their nicknames in survivorsâ accounts),
but it seems likely that Spanish milicianos were transferred from other
sections of the column to bulk up numbers at certain periods. Some,
certainly, were with the International Group from early on. As Berry
notes, they could also be exiles who followed their new-found comrades
into the International Group once they returned home.[27] Italian
anarchist volunteers in Spain were more numerous than most other
nationalities, but a large proportion of these fought with the Italian
Section of the Ascaso Column, hence the disproportionately low number in
the Durruti Column.[28] Four Swiss volunteers came to Spain to
participate in the Peopleâs Olympiad in Barcelona, the left-wing
alternative to the Nazi Olympics in Berlin, joining the militia after
this was cancelled.[29] The impressive array of nationalities within the
International Group highlights the durability of the anarchist movement
despite external pressures during the interwar period. The diversity of
volunteers also shows that political solidarity was not limited by
national political boundaries.
Occupations are known for 62 volunteers, with sailor being the most
common occupation (see Table 3). The maritime industry also made up a
large number of volunteers for the International Brigades; 500â600
American sailors and longshoremen (the largest single occupational
grouping among Americans) served in Spain.[30] Eleven German volunteers
in the International Group were members of the International Transport
Workersâ Federation (ITF) or the International Union of Seamen and
Harbour Workers (ISH). Swedish anarcho-syndicalist miliciano Nils LĂ€tt
claimed that as âa sailor and an Esperantistâ he frequently encountered
Spanish comrades and was âcompletely captured by their enthusiasm.â This
was an important factor in his decision to join the International
Group.[31] Sailors were also able to jump ship whilst docked in Spain in
order to join the militias; this was the case for at least two
volunteers: Jewish-American Ed Scheddin and German Franz Wiese.[32]
[Table 3. Occupations of International Group volunteers.]
Another notable grouping is those attached to the military. Three of
these were members of the French Foreign Legion. Willi Schroth, who
eventually joined the 13^(th) International Brigade, was described by
his Comintern superiors as âan undisciplined comradeâ and âpolitically
highly unreliable, a real foreign legion-type.â[33] Schroth might fit
the category of âmercenaryâ sometimes used to denigrate the
pro-Republican cause. Gimenez admitted that âmany among us had unsettled
matters with the police for things unrelated to social struggle,â but
most volunteers appear to have been workers of some category.[34]
Skilled workers were the second most common category, followed by
drivers or mechanics. Other trade unions represented include the French
Confédération Générale du Travail (CGT) and Confédération Générale du
Travail-Syndicaliste RĂ©volutionnaire (General Confederation of
Revolutionary Trade Unions, CGTSR), the CNT, the Sveriges Arbetares
Centralorganisation (Central Organization of the Workers of Sweden, SAC)
and the anarcho-syndicalist Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) and
Freie Arbeiter Union Deutschlands (Free Workersâ Union of Germany,
FAUD).[35]
At least 12 volunteers were women, including the French writer and
pacifist Simone Weil. Weil had a comparatively brief spell in Spain,
after injuring herself by stepping in a pot of boiling oil on the Ebro
front. She had initially wanted to cross into enemy territory in order
to locate the whereabouts of Partido Obrero de UnificaciĂłn Marxista
(Workersâ Party of Marxist Unification, POUM) general secretary JoaquĂn
MaurĂn, but this was vetoed by the party leadership.[36] As Lisa
Margaret Lines argues, the milicianas (female militia members) were âa
manifestation of the new gender roles and opportunities created by the
civil war and social revolution.â[37] They came to symbolize the
vitality of the Republican struggle, but, despite the striking images
printed in foreign newspapers, they still tended to perform gendered
roles within the militia. While on expedition in August 1936, Berthomieu
instructed Weil to stay inside a captured farmhouse and cook. Four women
were joined by their partners and three acted as nurses or served in the
kitchen. Women were also frequently the object of (often unwanted) male
miliciano attention, and many of the groupâs leaders sought to
discourage them from joining the militia. They did still fight, however,
and in fact the majority of milicianas in the International Group died
in battle. Gimenez recounts in his memoirs the horrific detail that two
of themâAugusta Marx and Georgette Kokoczinskiâwere disembowelled before
being killed, but this is difficult to verify. Only one, the Austrian
Leopoldine Kokes, survived long enough to be expelled from the column
following the order removing women from the front line in early
1937.[38] The fact that women were only active at the front for a few
months is indicative of how short-lived these changes in gender roles
were. It is also suggestive of the emphasis that both sides in the
conflict placed on the âmobilizing mythâ of masculinity under arms,
although, as James Matthews notes, the Republicans rejected some of the
âultra-masculineâ tendencies of the Nationalists.[39]
A rough sample of 114 volunteers suggests that most arrived in Spain in
1936, with at least 11 already living in the country before then (Figure
1). A more detailed sample of 83 volunteers indicates that, for those
who travelled to Spain after the warâs outbreak, the summer of 1936 was
the most popular period for arrival, with numbers tailing off towards
the start of 1937 (Figure 2). This is unsurprising, since volunteers
arriving from 1937 tended to join the International Brigades, which
first fought at Madrid in November 1936. The early months of the war
were also the period when the prestige of the Spanish anarchists was
arguably highest, so it seems logical that service in a CNT-FAI militia
would have been more popular then. The Durruti Column had a reputation
among foreigners as a âtough outfit,â and Durruti was well-known in
anarchist circles as a seasoned militant.[40]
[Figure 1. Arrival of International Group volunteers in Spain (by year).
This sample (and Figure 2) contains no Spanish volunteers.]
[Figure 2. Arrival of International Group volunteers in Spain (by month,
1936â7).]
Later volunteers were discouraged from joining the militias or
anarchist-dominated units; indeed, a government decree in June 1937
banned foreigners from service outside the International Brigades. It
should also be noted that the recruiting networks of the anarchist
movement were far less centralized and sophisticated than those of the
Comintern, and anarchists were not actively encouraged to travel. The
CNT-FAI was more concerned with arms than recruits, preferring comrades
to agitate for an end to non-intervention than come to Spain.[41] In
many ways, the informal nature of recruitment to the International Group
echoes the experience of other early volunteers who joined the
non-anarchist formations that later became incorporated into the
International Brigades, once the Comintern gained Stalinâs blessing for
more widespread mobilization. When the brigades became more
institutionalized, enlistment procedures became more rigorous.[42]
Also like the International Brigades, there was a pluralism of political
views within the International Group, with communists (both orthodox and
anti-Stalinist), socialists, anarchists and largely apolitical
volunteersâeven self-professed pacifistsâfighting alongside one another.
Many had already agitated or been imprisoned for their stance opposing
fascism in their own countries. According to LĂ€tt, many of the German
volunteers had been sent to concentration camps by the Nazis, or âhunted
like animals from one âdemocraticâ country to another.â[43] There were
at least 33 current or former Communist Party members in the
International Group (from parties in Germany, Belgium, Switzerland,
France, Estonia and the US), although the actual number is probably
higher. Graf and Nelles suggest that as many as 40 per cent of German
volunteers were members of the KPD. One group of 18 German volunteers
had initially joined the ThÀlmann Centuria (affiliated to the
communist-led Karl Marx Column) but left after Hans Beimler of the KPD
replaced their elected political commissar, Kurt Lehmann, with one of
Beimlerâs own choosing. Lehmann, who had been expelled from the KPD for
leading a breakaway group of ITF sailors in Antwerp (for which the party
labelled him a âTrotskyistâ and âGestapo agentâ) then led a similar
breakaway group to join the Durruti Column at the end of October
1936.[44]
The Communist Party were critical of the ârevolutionary proclivitiesâ
(to borrow E.H. Carrâs phrase) of the anarchists, preferring to wage a
conventional war to defeat fascism first as opposed to the more
widespread social struggle favoured by the CNT-FAI and the POUM.
Communist policy thus consisted of rebuilding the Republican state
apparatus that had crumbled in the chaotic first weeks following the
military rebellion. For this reason, Anglo-Italian anarchist Vernon
Richards later described the communists as the âspearhead of the
counter-revolution in Spain.â[45] A fractious relationship with the
party was not uncommon among the International Group; at least six
volunteers had either left or been expelled from the party. Two Russian
volunteers had fought against the Bolsheviks during the Russian Civil
War; one on the side of the Whites, another alongside the Ukrainian
anarchist Nestor Makhno. Two German volunteers, Heinrich Eichmann and
Georg Gernsheimer, allegedly transferred from the International Brigades
after being forcibly released from a communist prison by an FAI
commando.[46]
Four volunteers had joined the Socialist Party, one was a member of the
Sozialistische Arbeiterpartei Deutschlands (Socialist Workersâ Party of
Germany, SAPD), whilst several others allied with the POUM. Political
debate within the group was permitted, even encouraged, up to a point.
Edi GmĂŒr, a Swiss volunteer, claimed that: âNearly every day there are
discussions and arguments between the anarchists and us three
communists.â[47] The political delegate of the group, Rudolf âMichelâ
Michaelis, was particularly eager to propagandize within the group,
prompting several Marxist volunteers to join other units in February
1937 after constantly clashing with him over political matters.[48]
Despite these quarrels, the relatively high proportion of non-anarchist
volunteers within an ostensibly anarchist unit suggests that the
sectarian nature of the militias has been overstated somewhat.[49]
Anti-fascist unity was far from absolute, as discussed below, but
political differences in this anarchist unit, at least, were largely put
to one side when the fighting commenced.
Studies of foreign war volunteering (including those in Spain) have
focused overwhelmingly on the motivations of the volunteers and the
nature of their military service. The relationship between the host
state and their transnational fighters has been less well documented,
but this can act as a âunique litmus test to assess the rhetoric of
national causes.â[50] The Spanish Civil War was (and is) often presented
as a distinctively internationalist conflict, yet even those on the left
who were supposedly hostile to manifestations of nationalism frequently
defined the war in explicitly nationalist terms. In a speech to a rally
in Madrid in August 1936, for example, leading anarchist Federica
Montseny attacked the Nationalists as anti-Spanish, âbecause if they
were patriots, they would not have let loose on Spain the regulares
[Indigenous Regular Forces] and the Moors to impose the civilisation of
the Fascists, not as a Christian civilisation, but as a Moorish
civilisation.â[51] The International Group provides insights into how
Spaniards, both anarchist and non-anarchist, viewed foreign fighters in
Spain. The first of these insights can be gleaned through the
internacionalesâ views on militarization and, more importantly, the
response of their Spanish commanders to them.
The militias were unique among modern armies in their theoretical
rejection of military discipline. Instead, they followed what they
called ârevolutionary discipline.â Rather than simply giving an order, a
commander had to convince the troops of the necessity of a certain
action. If they disagreed, a vote was often taken, and if the motion
failed, the order was revoked. Milicianos also recalled unpopular or
incompetent delegates. As Michele Haapamaki notes, the militias were âa
means for the left to accept a warrior role in Spain without
simultaneously accepting the baggage of an outdated military ideal
discredited, in their minds, by the Great War.â[52] The inclusion of
women at the front was a further challenge to traditional patriarchal
military practice, albeit an ultimately fleeting one. The militias were
thus an uneasy attempt to juggle between ideological purity and military
necessity. Simone Weil witnessed the system first-hand the night before
an expedition across the Ebro River in August 1936. Berthomieu asked the
International Group for their opinions on the following dayâs battle
plan: âComplete silence. He insists that we say what we think. Another
silence. Then [Charles] Ridel: âWell, we all agree.â And thatâs
all.â[53] Clearly, not all decisions were hotly debated within the
group.
Even so, this haphazard structure horrified traditionalists, and
historians tend to view the militia system with extreme scepticism.[54]
As Ăngel Viñas notes, the Republicâs primary benefactors, the Soviets,
were also uncomfortable with providing military hardware to units
seemingly beyond the authority of either the central or regional Catalan
governments.[55] The Republican high commandâs preferred solution to
this problem was to bring the militias under the control of the central
governmentâas opposed to the various workersâ parties and unionsâand
introduce military hierarchy and discipline. The militarization drive
began in September and October 1936 with a series of decrees by Prime
Minister Francisco Largo Caballero that established, firstly, a unified
command and, eventually, the incorporation of the militias into the
regular army. This drive continued until the last of the militia units
succumbed to the new regime, the final one being the anarchist Columna
de Hierro (Iron Column) in March 1937.[56]
Like the wider anarchist movement, volunteers in the International Group
devoted much time to debating the merits and drawbacks of
militarization. For its defenders, the militia system maintained the
revolutionary integrity of the war. Art critic Carl Einstein, speaking
on Radio CNT-FAI to eulogize Durruti in November 1936, said that the
column was âneither military nor bureaucratically organised,â but had
âgrown organically from the syndicalist movement.â[57] As it liberated
territory from the Nationalists, the column encouraged (or forced,
depending on your point of view) peasants to collectivize their land,
striking a blow not only against the military but the capitalist enemy.
Caciques (large landowners), clergy and Francoist sympathizers were
shot, land registers burned, tools placed under common ownership and, in
many places such as Pina de Ebro, money abolished. JuliĂĄn Casanova
describes this process as âthe radical elimination of the symbols of
power, be they military, political, economic, cultural or
ecclesiastical.â[58] For Einstein, then, the militias were no less than
âthe exponents of the class-struggle.â[59] Artillery colonel Ricardo
Jiménez de Beraza, the military adviser to the Durruti Column, argued
that âMilitarily, itâs chaos, but itâs a chaos that works. Donât disturb
it!â[60]
Other volunteers were less convinced. Weil gave an assessment of the
arrangement in her diary: âOrganisation: elected delegates. Without
competence. Without authorityâŠPeasants complainâŠthat the sentries fall
asleep.â[61] Two milicianos were executed on the orders of the chairman
of the columnâs war committee, the Argentine Lucio Ruano, for retreating
and abandoning their weapons during a battle in December 1936.[62] After
a meeting on militarization later that month, the Swiss volunteer Edi
GmĂŒr wrote in his diary that he âhad difficulty grasping that they could
be arguing about something so urgently needed.â[63] German volunteer
Arthur Galanty criticized the âabsolute incompetence and
irresponsibility of the headquarters, the missing of officers that are
capable to lead the company, the lack of arms and the inadequate
instruction of the peopleâ manifested in the militias.[64]
Even those in favour of militarization, however, had reservations.
According to a letter sent from the German grouping (affiliated to the
DAS), many anarchists were unhappy with the top-down nature of
militarization, without any dialogue between the troops and those
creating the new military code. In their own suggestions, the DAS viewed
the symbolic gesture of saluting to officers as their number one
priority. This was hugely controversial to anarchists and seen as an
acceptance of authoritarian, regressive structures. In addition, the DAS
emphasized freedom of the press and freedom of discussion as important
guarantees in any new military code.[65] This was less of a symbolic
issue than saluting, but reflected a worry among anarchists that by
losing control of their militias they could find themselves subject to
repression, as well as emphasising the role of the militias as a vehicle
for political education.
The reaction of some Spanish anarchists to the concerns of their
international comrades was unhelpful. The International Group, in
accordance with previous agreements, had the right to appoint a delegate
to represent them after militarization was complete. The new general
delegate of the column, José Manzana, however, informed the
internacionales that general headquarters no longer recognized their
delegate. The group then published a manifesto on 10 January 1937
calling for autonomy for delegates to act on matters directly concerning
them and requested accreditation to take the manifesto to the regional
committee of the CNT in Barcelona. Manzana denied the request, replying
âBarcelona, soy yoâ (âI am Barcelonaâ). He then banned any more meetings
on the subject and informed the group that they could either submit to
the new regime or be discharged. Consequently, 49 (mainly French)
milicianos left the front. Following the acceptance of militarization in
January 1937, the International Group became known as the International
Company of the 26^(th) (Durruti) Division.[66]
This episode highlights the often ambivalent attitude of the Spanish
movement to international anarchists within Spain. Helmut RĂŒdiger, who
served as assistant secretary of the International Workingmenâs
Association (IWMA) for Spanish affairs during the war, characterized the
CNT (affiliated to the IWMA) as a ânational socialist movementâ that had
only the âterminology of the common programâ of the international
anarchist movement.[67] Certainly, some Spanish anarchists were
unimpressed by the International Groupâs requests for a level of
independence from wider (national) structures, regardless of their
contribution to the anti-fascist cause. Transnational units were
ultimately subservient to the Spanish organization (the CNT) under whose
banner they fought. This was also true of the International Brigades,
even if some volunteers claimed that as foreigners they were not under
the jurisdiction of the Spanish Republican Army.[68] Manzanaâs reaction
is even more surprising when we consider that in his own correspondence
to CNT headquarters, he identified the tactless imposition of
militarization as the primary reason behind a drop in morale within the
column.[69] He was clearly aware of the adverse effects of the issue on
Spanish anarchists but seems ambivalent to these same concerns when
voiced by foreigners. Ultimately, the process of militarization was one
of centralization, but it was also one of nationalizationâone which
sought (among other things) to âdiluteâ the importance of foreign
volunteers.[70]
The simmering tensions between the different wings (broadly speaking,
statist and anti-statist) of the anti-fascist camp, of which
militarization was a key part, came to a head in the infamous âMay Daysâ
of 1937. During this outburst of fratricidal conflict, anarchists and
their allies fought against supporters of the Republican government
(including the communists) throughout Catalonia. The International Group
was on leave in Barcelona when the fighting began on the 3^(rd) of May
and became embroiled in subsequent events. One volunteer, Francisco
Ferrer (using the pseudonym Jean Ferrand), the grandson of the famous
anarchist educator of the same name, was murdered on the street for
refusing to relinquish his rifle. Camillo Berneri, who had organized the
Sezione Italiana of the Ascaso Column, was assassinated (most likely by
communists) alongside his comrade Francesco Barbieri, causing widespread
shock among the international anarchist community. After a week of
fighting and repeated appeals from the leadership of both sides to cease
hostilities, 218 people lay dead, with hundreds more injured.[71]
In the subsequent roundup, international anarchists became the target of
the Republican authorities. In June 1937, a contingent of 50 police
officers twice raided the Casa International de Voluntarios, the
headquarters of foreign anarchist volunteers in Barcelona. Martin Gudell
of the CNT-FAI Foreign Language Division believed that the officers were
searching for weapons, but did not find any.[72] Several foreign
volunteers were arrested for their activities during the May Days;
indeed, what is striking about the International Group is how many of
them were subsequently arrested by Republican authorities: at least 31
volunteers (over 8 per cent). They included FAUD member Helmut Kirschey,
who the Comintern accused of shooting communists during the fighting and
described as a âcounter-revolutionary element ready for all political
crimes.â[73] Swiss socialist Jacop Aeppli was arrested in July 1937 and
subsequently âdisappearedââhis wife was told in December that he had
died in an âunknown manner.â[74] Also in July 1937, the International
Group (which by now had been reorganized as the IWMA Battalion) refused
to mount an attack on Quinto without adequate air or artillery support,
as did four Spanish battalions. Headquarters (âbeside themselves with
anger,â according to GmĂŒr) then made the decision to disband the IWMA
Battalion, marking the end of (semi)independent foreign anarchist
participation in the war.[75]
Following the collapse of the International Group and the decree
outlawing foreign service in Spanish units, many volunteers transferred
to the International Brigades. At least one International Group member,
Rudolf Michaelis, obtained Spanish citizenship so that he could continue
to serve in an anarchist unit.[76] Some volunteers found the change
relatively seamless: Emanuel Fischer, a KPD member since 1931, appears
to have been unaware of the anarchist nature of the Durruti Column when
he joined in August 1936. He later transferred to the International
Brigades, where he was promoted to sergeant.[77] Another volunteer,
Norbert Rauschenberger, joined the brigades in August 1937 and
eventually became lieutenant and company commander.[78] The fact that so
many International Group volunteers later joined the brigades suggests
that many rank-and-file militants made little distinction between the
anti-fascism of the Comintern-led unit and the ârevolutionaryâ
anti-fascism of the militias. Indeed, around half of the anarchists who
came to Spain from the United States, Britain and Ireland during the
course of the war served in the brigades, many without prior service in
anarchist units.[79] This fluidity in self-identification did not mean,
however, that they received the same treatment from their superiors as
other volunteers. Military setbacks within the brigades were frequently
seen as a result of political failings: a report for the 15^(th) Brigade
complained that military questions were not given âpolitical answers,â
and senior Comintern agents viewed a lack of political consciousness as
a key reason for the Republican reversal at Brunete in July 1937.[80]
Military reliability went hand in hand with political orthodoxy.
As a result of this perception (combined with the fact that they had not
been previously âvettedâ through official channels), anarchist
volunteers were kept under close watch by the brigade authorities, with
several imprisoned for indiscipline, political subversion, even treason.
Oskar Heinz was sentenced to two and a half months in prison for causing
âdissentâ and making anarchist propaganda within the brigades. Johann
Schwarz was sent to a punishment battalion for indiscipline and
allegedly recruiting deserters. Some of the assertions in the Comintern
files verge on the fantastic. Fritz Vogt, for example, was arrested on
suspicion of counter-revolutionary activities because he often ate in
restaurants with those under police surveillance. Five volunteers were
accused of being Gestapo agents, with scant evidence. Some Comintern
agents assumed that any connection with the POUM meant collusion with
German intelligence; this was the reason for poumista Hermann Gierthâs
arrest after joining the brigades in 1937.[81] Paul Preston argues that
the internationalist nature of the POUMâwhich supposedly made them more
susceptible to infiltration by foreign agentsâplaced them under
suspicion from the authorities. Yet at the same time we must
acknowledge, as Tom Buchanan does, that for many in the Communist Party,
anti-Trotskyism was a key part of their anti-fascism, with all the ugly
consequences this entailed.[82] Foreign anarchists similarly fell under
the suspicion of heterodoxy, and although many volunteers were able to
remain inconspicuous, others were less lucky.
The mass arrests and resultant disarming of the rearguard after May 1937
was, as James Yeoman notes, the final act in the âreassertion of âsocial
orderâ over ârevolutionary orderâ in Republican Spain.â[83] The
existence of both the revolutionary militias and the land and factory
collectivisations of earlier in the war (enabled in many places by those
same militias) were anathema to those wishing to fight a conventional
military conflict. The targeting of foreign anarchists shows how, like
their Spanish comrades, they too were viewed as âuncontrollableâ by the
Republican government. In this case, the dividing lines between rival
factions of the anti-fascist camp also cut across national lines.
Post-conflict trajectories of foreign volunteers have been of âsecondary
concernâ in many studies of transnational fighters.[84] This is
unfortunate, since it isolates the experience of war volunteering from
the wider societal context in which the volunteers found themselves.
This can tell us more about how states deal with demobilized
transnational fighters, but also the potentially radicalizing and/or
demoralizing impact of foreign military service. In general, the story
of the International Group volunteers at the warâs end is a sombre one.
The attitude of states both democratic and authoritarian towards
combatants from Spain ranged from suspicion to outright hostility. This
was largely irrespective of their political background; even the Soviet
Union effectively abandoned its communist cadres after 1939.[85] Foreign
volunteers in Spain (particularly exiles) were what Nir Arielli calls
âsubstitute-conflict volunteers, who see service in a conflict abroad as
a precursor to fighting the regime in their home state.â This meant
thatâto other statesâthey were potentially troublesome, and the
intricacies of Republican war policy mattered little.[86]
Like thousands of other Spanish refugees and foreigners, International
Group volunteers who survived the end of the war were often held in
concentration camps in southern France or North Africa. Somewhat
remarkably, seven German volunteers ended up in the same camp in Gurs in
1940.[87] At least 20 volunteers spent time in the camps, including the
only Portuguese volunteer, Julio Mescareuhas (described by the
authorities as a âbitter enemyâ of the Communist Party).[88] Most of
them were held in southern France, but one, Alfred Berger, was captured
by the Nationalists and taken to the infamous San Pedro de Cardeña
prisoner of war camp.[89] Carl Einsteinâs story is perhaps the most
tragic. Having been imprisoned briefly in the south of France for his
role as a civil war combatant, he came to Paris, but after the start of
the Second World War he was interned as an enemy alien in a camp near
Bordeaux. He managed to escape, but following the fall of France, he was
now subject to persecution as a Jew. He fled to the south again, but,
having given up all hope of escaping across the Pyrenees, he drowned
himself in a river flowing through the village of
Lestelle-BĂ©tharram.[90]
Following the defeat of the Republican cause, several volunteersâ
anti-fascist pasts came back to haunt them. Former KPD member Helmuth
Bruhns was handed over to the Gestapo by the Vichy Regime in 1941 and
sentenced to 15 years imprisonment. Kurt Lehmann, who before 1936 had
helped to smuggle Jews from Germany to Britain and the US, soon found
himself under intense scrutiny. Having returned to Belgium with his
brother Werner (also an International Group member) in 1937, the pair
were arrested and expelled from the country in 1938. After several more
arrests in France and an unsuccessful attempt to enter Britain, the
brothers were delivered to the Nazis. Wernerâs arteries were cut and he
bled to death (it is unclear whether this was a suicide or an
execution), whilst Kurt survived Gestapo torture and was sent to various
prisons in Germany before being liberated by the US Army on his way to
Dachau concentration camp. He became disillusioned with postwar West
Germany and declared that it was ânot worth fighting for these peopleâ
towards the end of his life.[91]
Other volunteers were able to continue their fight against fascism.
Belgian communist Mathieu Corman joined the French Resistance, launching
sabotage operations in southern France until his capture whilst in
Barcelona in 1942. He was later released and returned to Belgium. French
communist AimĂ© Turrel, after supporting his partyâs endorsement of the
Nazi-Soviet Pact, also eventually joined the French Resistance.[92]
Fritz Benner enrolled in the Norwegian Resistance and was arrested for
espionage by the Swedish authorities in April 1940, alongside fellow
International Group volunteers Hans Vesper and Karl Löshaus. Olov
Jansson worked with the Swedish Resistance, co-founding the
Swedish-Norwegian Press Bureau in Stockholm alongside SAPD member and
future Chancellor of West Germany Willy Brandt (who had also spent time
in Spain). Jansson later moved to Britain and became a journalist with
the BBC.[93] French Algerian volunteer SaĂŻl Mohamed, who at one point
led the International Group before being wounded, produced counterfeit
papers for Algerian workers during the German occupation of France, and
after 1945 agitated against French colonialism through the UA and its
successor, the Fédération Anarchiste.[94] It is clear, then, that for
these volunteers their experience in Spain did not dampen their
enthusiasm for the cause. There was a continuity between interwar and
wartime anti-fascism; it may be more useful for many volunteers, even,
to characterize the entire period from 1933 to 1945 as one of
transnational anti-fascist resistance.[95]
As a military unit, the International Group of the Durruti Column was
relatively insignificant. It survived less than a year (under six months
as part of an âunmilitarizedâ column), and probably contained no more
than a hundred individuals at any given time. Service was short; few
volunteers served from its inception in August 1936 all the way through
until its dissolution in July 1937. Nevertheless, the group is a
microcosm of anti-fascist activity during the interwar period. It was a
moment of activism for many volunteers, but this activism extended both
before and after the Spanish Civil War. Most German volunteers had a
history of anti-Nazism well before Spain, and others continued their
activism well into the Second World War and beyond. The decision to come
to Spain, in most cases, was not exceptional, but a logical extension of
a wider political commitment. As the co-founder of the International
Group Charles Ridel later wrote:
To many of the revolutionaries who rushed to a Spain in flames and in
battle, it was not an aspiration but the ultimate sacrifice relished as
a gauntlet thrown down to a complicated world that made no sense, as the
tragic outworking of a society wherein human dignity is trampled
underfoot day in and day out.[96]
This fight crossed and re-crossed national boundaries, showing that
anti-fascism in the 1930s was not only an international, but
transnational phenomenon. The fluidity of national borders encapsulated
in the group is mirrored by a diversity of political views, from
anarchists, communists and socialists to generic anti-fascists. In a
sense, then, the Spanish Civil War acted as an âanti-fascist melting
pot,â where anti-fascists of different stripes came together. For many
volunteers, this experience reinforced their own anti-fascist identity,
whilst for others Spain was the peak of their anti-fascist
commitment.[97]
Unlike most of those who fought with the International Brigades,
milicianos in the International Group witnessed first-hand the debates
over militarization, women at the front and arguably the most
controversial episode of the civil war: the May Days and subsequent
repression. The difference in views over militarization between members
of the group is an antidote to the idea that all rank-and-file
anarchists were hostile to the process, even if many were unhappy with
its execution. The reaction of the CNT to the International Groupâs
concerns also helps us to gauge the overall treatment of non-Spaniards
by Spaniards during the civil war period, and questions the
characterization of the conflict as distinctively internationalist.
Militarization was a centralizing, but also a nationalizing (and
masculinizing) process, something which became more explicit when
non-Spaniards were banned from serving in Spanish units. The heightened
repression of foreigners after the May Days was, similarly, a political
attempt by state forces to counter the revolutionary internationalism of
anarchist volunteers. It would be facile to assert that Spaniards did
not appreciate the efforts of these international milicianos. There was,
nevertheless, an underlying tension between Spaniards and non-Spaniards
throughout the course of the war, symptomatic of a tendency of the
former to characterize the war in national terms.[98]
Although differences between foreign service in the Durruti Column and
the International Brigades have been highlighted, we should also
recognize their similarities. Initial mobilizations shared several
features, although these diverged as the Comintern took greater control
over recruitment. Many volunteers fought in both formations, and at the
warâs end, many faced similar perils. Like foreign volunteers in other
conflicts, they may have become caught up in political intrigues during
the war, but there was a shared commitment to the cause regardless of
the tensions caused by differing ideological viewpoints.[99] Equally,
though, this shared commitment had its limits: for many anarchists,
militarization marked the end of their foreign service, whilst for
others, being ordered to fight under unacceptable combat conditions at
Quinto was the final straw. The International Brigades had problems
maintaining morale too, particularly after bloody reverses like at
Jarama in February 1937.[100] The propensity to characterize the Spanish
Civil War as a romantic conflictâsymbolic of a transnational commitment
to defeat fascism during a period of profound societal uncertaintyâcan
seem irresistible, but service for foreign volunteers was significantly
less rosy than is frequently depicted. Internationalist anti-fascist
rhetoric was often curtailed by nationalist practice. Through studying
these transnational fighters, we have a more comprehensive understanding
of the complex nature of twentieth century anti-fascism.
The author wishes to thank Fern Towers for her comments on an earlier
draft of the manuscript and the Belfast Anarchist Bookfair for hosting a
talk based on the paper in 2019.
Morris Brodie https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6638-2465
Morris Brodie is a historian at Queenâs University Belfast. He achieved
a BA in History and Politics (First Class Honours) from the University
of Strathclyde in 2013 before completing his MSc in History (with
Distinction) at the University of Glasgow in 2014. He received his PhD
at Queenâs in 2018. He specialises in the history of international
anarchism during the interwar period and has published his research in
several journals, including Radical Americas, Anarchist Studies and the
Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth. His first book,
Transatlantic Anarchism during the Spanish Civil War and Revolution,
1936â1939: Fury Over Spain, is available now as part of Routledgeâs
Studies in Modern European History series. He is currently researching
Spanish anarchist exiles in Britain after the civil war.
[1] For the International Brigades, see R. Baxell, British Volunteers in
the Spanish Civil War: The British Battalion in the International
Brigades, 1936â1939 (London 2004); A. Castells, Las brigadas
internacionales en la guerra de España (Barcelona 1974); P. N. Carroll,
The Odyssey of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade: Americans in the Spanish
Civil War (Stanford, CA 1994); M. Jackson, Fallen Sparrows: The
International Brigades in the Spanish Civil War (Philadelphia, PA 1994);
B. Mugnai, Foreign Volunteers and International Brigades in the Spanish
Civil War (1936â39) (Zanica 2019); R. D. Richardson, Comintern Army: The
International Brigades and the Spanish Civil War (Lexington, KN 1982).
For foreign anarchists, see D. Berry, âFrench Anarchists in Spain,
1936â1939,â French History, 3, 4 (December 1989), 427â65; D. Nelles,
âDeutsche Anarchosyndikalisten und Freiwillige in anarchistischen
Milizen im Spanischen BĂŒrgerkrieg,â Internationale Wissenshaftlich
Korrespondenz zur Geschichte der deutschen Arbeiterbewegung, 4 (1997),
500â19; A. Graf and D. Nelles, âWiderstand und Exil deutscher
Anarchisten und Anarchosyndikalisten (1933â1945),â in R. Berner (ed.),
Die unsichtbare Front: Bericht ĂŒber die illegale Arbeit in Deutschland
(1937) (Berlin and Cologne 1997), 50â152; K. Zimmer, âThe Other
Volunteers: American Anarchists and the Spanish Civil War, 1936â1939,â
Journal for the Study of Radicalism, 10, 2 (Fall 2016), 19â51; T. R.
Nevin, Simone Weil: Portrait of a Self-Exiled Jew (Chapel Hill, NC
1991); S. Zeidler, Form as Revolt: Carl Einstein and the Ground of
Modern Art (Ithaca, NY 2015).
[2]
N. Arielli and B. Collins, âIntroduction: Transnational Military
Service since the Eighteenth Century,â in N. Arielli and B. Collins
(eds), Transnational Soldiers: Foreign Military Enlistment in the
Modern Era (Basingstoke 2013), 5.
[3] For simplicityâs sake I refer to the company as the âInternational
Groupâ throughout.
[4] Anonymous, âDie Internationale Gruppe,â Die Soziale Revolution (1
January 1937).
[5] See N. Arielli, âForeign Fighters and War Volunteers: Between Myth
and Reality,â European Review of History, 27, 1â2 (March 2020), 54â64.
[6]
M. N. Ngae, âPromises and Perils of Transnational History,â
Perspectives on History, 50, 9 (December 2012). Available online
at:
https://www.historians.org/publications-and-directories/perspectives-on-history/december-2012/the-future-of-the-discipline/promises-and-perils-of-transnational-history
(accessed 17 June 2015).
[7]
H. GarcĂa, âTransnational History: A New Paradigm for Anti-Fascist
Studies,â Contemporary European History, 25, 4 (November 2016), 566.
See M. Seidman, Transatlantic Antifascisms: From the Spanish Civil
War to the End of World War II (Cambridge 2017); H. Graham, Lives at
the limit: Dealing with Defeat in the Dark Twentieth Century
(provisional title, in preparation as of 2020). The Leverhulme
Trust-funded international research network entitled âTransnational
Resistance, 1936â1948â is headed by Gildea and comprises academics
from seven institutions across Europe. See also K. Braskén, N.
Copsey and J. A. Lundin (eds), Anti-fascism in the Nordic Countries:
New Perspectives, Comparisons and Transnational Connections (London
2019).
[8]
J. Marco, âTransnational Soldiers and Guerrilla Warfare from the
Spanish Civil War to the Second World War,â War in History, 27, 3
(July 2020), 387â407; L. A. Kirschenbaum, International Communism
and the Spanish Civil War: Solidarity and Suspicion (Cambridge
2015). See also N. Arielli and E. Acciai, âTrajectories of
Transnational Antifascist Volunteers from the Spanish Civil War to
the Second World War,â War in History, 27, 3 (July 2020), 341â5 and
the remainder of this special issue. On the prevalence of communists
in the anti-fascist narrative, see H. GarcĂa, M. Yusta, X. Tabet
and C. ClĂmaco, âBeyond Revisionism: Rethinking Antifascism in the
Twenty-First Century,â in H. GarcĂa, M. Yusta, X. Tabet and C.
ClĂmaco (eds), Rethinking Antifascism: History, Memory and Politics,
1922 to the Present (New York 2016), 3â5; N. Copsey and A.
Olechnowicz (eds), Varieties of Anti-Fascism: Britain in the
Interwar Period (Basingstoke 2010), particularly the preface.
[9]
C. Bantman and B. Altena, âIntroduction: Problematizing Scales of
Analysis in Network-Based Social Movements,â in C. Bantman and B.
Altena (eds), Reassessing the Transnational Turn: Scales of Analysis
in Anarchist and Syndicalist Studies (New York 2015), 7.
[10] See, for example, J. Casanova, Anarchism, the Republic and Civil
War in Spain: 1931â1939 (London 2005) and De la calle al frente: El
anarcosindicalismo en España (1931â1939) (Barcelona 2010); C. Ealham,
Class, Culture and Conflict in Barcelona, 1898â1937 (London 2005); D.
Evans, Revolution and the State: Anarchism in the Spanish Civil War,
1936â1939 (London 2018); F. Godicheau, La Guerre dâEspagne: RĂ©publique
et revolution en Catalogne (1936â1939) (Paris 2004); D. MarĂn Silvestre,
Ministros anarquistas. La CNT en el gobierno de la 11a RepĂșblica
(1936â1939) (Barcelona 2005); J. Peirats, La CNT en la revoluciĂłn
española, 3 Vols (Toulouse 1951â3).
[11]
E. Acciai, Antifascismo, volontariato e guerra civile in Spagna. La
Sezione Italiana della Colonna Ascaso (Milan 2016); The Giménologues
(eds), The Sons of Night: Antoine Gimenezâs Memories of the War in
Spain (Edinburgh 2019).
[12] See M. Brodie, âCrying in the Wilderness? The British Anarchist
Movement during the Spanish Civil War, 1936â1939,â Anarchist Studies,
27, 2 (Autumn 2019), 21â40. Further information can be found in C.
Dolan, An Anarchistâs Story: The Life of Ethel MacDonald (Edinburgh
2009); M. Feu, Fighting Fascist Spain: Worker Protest from the Printing
Press (Urbana, IL 2019); D. Porter, Vision on Fire: Emma Goldman on the
Spanish Revolution (Edinburgh 2006).
[13]
J. A. Baer, Anarchist Immigrants in Spain and Argentina (Urbana, IL
2015); M. A. Ackelsberg, âIt Takes More than a Village!:
Transnational Travels of Spanish Anarchism in Argentina and
Cuba,â International Journal of Iberian Studies, 29, 3
(September 2016), 205â23; F. Borkenau, The Spanish Cockpit
(London 1937), 273; P. Preston, The Spanish Civil War: Reaction,
Revolution and Revenge (London 2006), 170â1.
[14]
M. Alpert, âThe Popular Army of the Spanish Republic, 1936â39,â
in W. H. Bowen and J. E. Alvarez (eds), A Military History of Modern
Spain: From the Napoleonic Era to the International War on Terror
(Westport, CT 2007), 97â8; M. White, âWobblies in the Spanish Civil
War,â Anarcho-Syndicalist Review, 42/3 (Winter 2006), 42; Anonymous,
âUn vecchio milite della colonna Ascaso,â Il Martello (21 February
1938); D. Nelles, The Foreign Legion of the Revolution: German
Anarcho-syndicalist and Volunteers in Anarchist Militias during the
Spanish Civil War (2008), available online at:
https://libcom.org/library/the-foreign-legion-revolution (accessed
24 January 2020); A. Souchy, Nacht ĂŒber Spanien:
Anarcho-Syndikalisten in Revolution und BĂŒrgerkrieg 1936â1939
(Grafenau 1986), 181. It should be noted that anarchist sources were
inclined to inflate their own numbers: Casanova, Anarchism, the
Republic and Civil War in Spain, 109.
[15]
P. BrouĂ© and Ă. Temime, The Revolution and the Civil War in Spain
(London 1970), 67; J. Peirats, The CNT in the Spanish Revolution,
Vol. 1 (Hastings 2001), 97; S. Christie, We, the Anarchists! A Study
of the Iberian Anarchist Federation (FAI), 1927â1937 (Hastings
2000), 78; A. Paz, Durruti in the Spanish Revolution (Oakland, CA
2006), 759; âSalvo Conductoâ for Sylvan Oziol, 10 February 1937
(Archivo General de la Guerra Civil Española, Salamanca,
PolĂtico-Social Madrid, Carpeta 321, Legajo 2954); B. Belcher,
Shipwreck on Middleton Reef: The Story of a Tasman survivor
(Auckland 1979), 18; J. Albrighton, âSpain Diaries,â 5 October 1936
(Marx Memorial Library, London, Spanish Collection, Box 50, File
Al/12).
[16]
J. Mira, Los Guerrilleros Confederales: Un hombre: Durruti (Barcelona
1938), 102â3; Paz, Durruti in the Spanish Revolution, 473;
Richardson, Comintern Army, 22. For more on the militias, see G.
Berger, Les milĂcies antifeixistes de Catalunya. Voluntaris per la
llibertat (Vic 2018); R. Brusco, Les milĂcies antifeixistes i
lâexĂšrcit popular a Catalunya (LĂ©rida 2003); E. Romero GarcĂa, El
ejemplo de la columna Durruti: De milicianos libertarios a soldados
del ejĂ©rcito popular de la RepĂșblica (Bilbao 2017).
[17] Paz, Durruti in the Spanish Revolution, 486; Berry, âFrench
Anarchists in Spain,â 445; C. Marzani, The Education of a Reluctant
Radical, Book 3: Spain, Munich, and Dying Empires (New York 1994), 20.
[18] In particular: List of comrades in International Group of Durruti
Column, n.d. (IISH, Archivo de la Propaganda Exterior CNT-FAI (FAIPE),
1C.3b); âErmittelungen ueber die von der Gruppe DAS controlierten
Kameraden in der Miliz,â 20 January 1937 (IISH, FAIPE, 1B.2); âListe del
Miliciens Français,â n.d. (IISH, FAIPE, 20.3c). Memoirs and first-hand
accounts include: The GimĂ©nologues, The Sons of Night; E. GmĂŒr, Spanish
Diary: A Swiss âMilicianoâsâ War Diary of the AragĂłn Front and
Barcelonaâs âMay Days,â trans. Paul Sharkey (Hastings 2015); N. LĂ€tt,
Som Milisman och Kollektivbonde i Spanien (Stockholm 1938); Mira, Los
Guerrilleros Confederales; P. and C. Thalmann, Combats pour la liberté
(QuimperlĂ© 1997); S. Weil, Le Journal dâEspagne de Simone Weil [Bonnes
Feuilles], 18 August 1936 [2018], available online at:
https://lundi.am/Le-journal-d-Espagne-de-Simone-Weil-Bonnes-feuilles
(accessed 24 January 2020). I have also incorporated studies that
mention individual volunteers but which do little to assess the
International Group in its broader context.
[19] Berry, âFrench Anarchists in Spain,â 445â6, 461â2; Anonymous, âDie
Internationale Gruppe,â Die Soziale Revolution (1 January 1937); Paz,
Durruti in the Spanish Revolution, 488; The Giménologues, The Sons of
Night, 69. Foreign milicianos were frequently used as shock troops,
which often led to heavy casualties (the Battle of Perdiguera in October
1936 was particularly bloody). This has parallels with the International
Brigades, which suffered higher casualty rates than both local troops
and foreigners serving under Franco (and, indeed, Allied losses in both
World Wars): N. Arielli, From Byron to bin Laden: A History of Foreign
War Volunteers (Cambridge, MA 2017), 157.
[20] Paz, Durruti in the Spanish Revolution, 486â8; The GimĂ©nologues,
The Sons of Night, 107; D. Nelles, Widerstand und internationale
SolidaritÀt: Die Internationale Transportarbeiter-Föderation (ITF) im
Widerstand gegen den Nationalsozialismus (Essen 2001), 196; Zeidler,
Form as Revolt, 6â7; GmĂŒr, Spanish Diary, 2 March 1937.
[21]
C. J. Esdaile, The Spanish Civil War: A Military History (London
2019), 103. Indeed, there is some evidence to suggest that
Lamotte was in fact a communist spy, although seemingly not a
very good one. According to his Comintern file, he was sent to
the column on the orders of the German Communist Party but was
subsequently reassigned to the 27^(th) (formerly Karl Marx)
Division in 1937. Although brave and disciplined, he had a
drinking problem, and his membership was not transferred to the
Spanish Communist Party. In hindsight, the election of Cardeur
also seems ill-judged; in July 1937, he was imprisoned for
siphoning money from the columnâs payroll: Lists with
characteristics, biographies of German volunteers (KâQ), 14
February 1940 (RGASPI 545/6/352/59); GmĂŒr, Spanish Diary, 2
March, 15â16 July 1937.
[22] Paz, Durruti in the Spanish Revolution, 473, 486â8; Weil, Le
Journal dâEspagne de Simone Weil, 18 August 1936; Anonymous, âDie
Internationale Gruppe,â Die Soziale Revolution (1 January 1937); The
Giménologues, The Sons of Night, 51. French was also the lingua franca
of many early volunteers who joined the International Brigades: J. Marco
and M. Thomas, ââMucho malo for fascistiâ: Languages and Transnational
Soldiers in the Spanish Civil War,â War & Society, 38, 2 (May 2019),
143.
[23] 23 The Giménologues, The Sons of Night, 51; LÀtt, Som Milisman och
Kollektivbonde i Spanien, 13; Marco and Thomas, âMucho malo for
fascisti,â 158â60.
[24] Berry, âFrench Anarchists in Spain,â 433; The GimĂ©nologues, The
Sons of Night, 238, 336; âListe del Miliciens Français,â n.d. (IISH,
FAIPE, 20.3c); LĂ€tt, Som Milisman och Kollektivbonde i Spanien, 8; A.
Beevor, The Battle for Spain: The Spanish Civil War 1936â1939 (London
2006), 141; Anonymous, âDie Internationale Gruppe,â Die Soziale
Revolution (1 January 1937); Zimmer, âThe Other Volunteers,â 30, 47.
[25]
R. Skoutelsky, LâEspoir guidait leurs pas: Les volontaires français
dans les Brigades internationales, 1936â1939 (Paris 1998), 330;
Nelles, Widerstand und internationale SolidaritÀt, 197. Although
much smaller in number than that of Spain, the French anarchist
movement was probably the second most powerful in Europe at the
time. Alexandre Skirda calls France the âhomeland of anarchyâ and
Paris was a popular location for anarchist exiles escaping
repression in other countries such as the Soviet Union: A. Skirda,
Facing the Enemy: A History of Anarchist Organization from Proudhon
to May 1968 (Edinburgh 2002), 144, 118â22. See also D. Berry, A
History of the French Anarchist Movement, 1917â1945 (Westport, CT
2002).
[26]
J. McLellan, Antifascism and Memory in East Germany: Remembering the
International Brigades 1945â1989 (Oxford 2004), 18â9; Nelles, The
Foreign Legion of the Revolution. The German anarchist movement had
been relatively influential in the early twentieth century, with
several anarchists involved in the short-lived Bavarian Soviet
Republic in 1919. The FAUD had a membership of 150,000 at its peak
but was suppressed following the Nazi seizure of power in 1933.
After this, most German anarchists were either arrested, went
underground or fled the country: see G. Kuhn (ed.), All Power to the
Councils! A Documentary History of the German Revolution of
1918â1919 (Oakland, CA 2012), 167â263; H. M. Bock,
âAnarchosyndicalism in the German Labour Movement: A Rediscovered
Minority Tradition,â in M. van der Linden and W. Thorpe (eds),
Revolutionary Syndicalism: An International Perspective (Aldershot
1990), 59â80; A. Graf, Anarchisten gegen Hitler: Anarchisten,
Anarcho-Syndikalisten, RĂ€tekommunisten in Widerstand und Exil
(Berlin 2001).
[27]
A. Searle, âThe German Military Contribution to the Spanish Civil War,
1936â1939,â in G. Johnson (ed.), The International Context of the
Spanish Civil War (Newcastle-upon-Tyne 2009), 136â7; Jackson, Fallen
Sparrows, 105; The GimĂ©nologues, The Sons of Night, 96â9; Berry,
âFrench Anarchists in Spain,â 432.
[28] The Sezione Italiana was formed on the initiative of socialist
anti-fascist Carlo Rosselli and the anarchist Camillo Berneri, who also
published the journal Guerra di Classe: R. Alexander, The Anarchists in
the Spanish Civil War, Vol. 2 (London 1999), 1135â6; The GimĂ©nologues,
The Sons of Night, 236â7; E. Acciai, âLâesperienza della Rivista «Spain
and the World». La guerra civile spagnola, lâantifascismo europeo e
lâanarchismo,â in C. De Maria (ed.), Maria Luisa Berneri e lâanarchismo
ingles (Reggio Emilia 2013), 76.
[29] The GimĂ©nologues, The Sons of Night, 11â2, 387. See also P. Huber
and N. Ulmi, Les Combatants suisses en Espagne rĂ©publicaine, 1936â1939
(Lausanne 2001).
[30]
J. Byrne, âFrom Brooklyn to Belchite: New Yorkers in the Abraham
Lincoln Brigade,â in P. N. Carroll and J. D. Fernandez (eds), Facing
Fascism: New York and the Spanish Civil War (New York 2007), 75.
[31] LĂ€tt, Som Milisman och Kollektivbonde i Spanien, 3â7.
[32] Notebook of Volunteers, 1936â1937 (IISH, FAIPE, 15A.2); Carroll,
The Odyssey of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, 61; Nelles, Widerstand und
internationale SolidaritĂ€t, 196â7.
[33] Lists with characteristics, biographies of German volunteers (RâS),
28 February 1940 (RGASPI 545/6/353/99).
[34] The Giménologues, The Sons of Night, 135. For example: Anonymous,
âBritons Lured to Red Front,â Daily Mail (18 February 1937). See
Kirschenbaum, International Communism and the Spanish Civil War, 106.
[35] The CGTSR was a split from the reformist CGT and had a membership
of around 4,000 during the late 1930s. Its organ, Le Combat
Syndicaliste, had approximately 5,300 subscribers: Berry, âFrench
Anarchists in Spain,â 428â34; W. Thorpe, Anarchosyndicalism in Inter-war
France: The Vision of Pierre Besnard (2011), available online at:
https://libcom.org/library/anarchosyndicalism-inter-war-france-vision-pierre-besnard-%E2%80%93-wayne-thorpe
(accessed 24 January 2020). For the SAC and IWW, see L. K. Persson,
âRevolutionary Syndicalism in Sweden before the Second World War,â in
van der Linden and Thorpe, Revolutionary Syndicalism, 81â99; P. Cole, D.
Struthers and K. Zimmer (eds), Wobblies of the World: A Global History
of the IWW (London 2017).
[36]
J. Cabaud, Simone Weil: A Fellowship in Love (London 1964), 139; Nevin,
Simone Weil, 104.
[37]
L. M. Lines, Milicianas: Women in Combat in the Spanish Civil War
(Lanham, MD 2012), 43. See also M. Nash, ââMilicianasâ and
Homefront Heroines: Images of Women in Revolutionary Spain
(1936â1939),â History of European Ideas, 11 (1990), 235â44; A.
MartĂnez Rus, Milicianas. Mujeres republicanas combatientes
(Madrid 2018).
[38] Weil, Le journal dâEspagne de Simone Weil, 18 August 1936; R.
Lugshitz, SpanienkÀmpferinnen: AuslÀndische Frauen im Spanischen
BĂŒrgerkrieg, 1936â1939 (Vienna 2012), 40â1; Lines, Milicianas, 81, 137;
P. Sharkey, âAnarchist Lives: Georgette Kokoczinski (la mimosa),â
Bulletin of the Kate Sharpley Library, 73 (February 2013), 6; The
GimĂ©nologues, The Sons of Night, 85â6, 94, 97, 239â41, 304â11.
[39]
J. Matthews, Reluctant Warriors: Republican Popular Army and
Nationalist Army Conscripts in the Spanish Civil War, 1936â1939
(Oxford 2012), 94.
[40] Richardson, Comintern Army, 48â9; Marzani, The Education of a
Reluctant Radical, 16; Berry, âFrench Anarchists in Spain,â 432. See
Paz, Durruti in the Spanish Revolution, first part. The closing of the
French frontier in February 1937 also undoubtedly played a role.
[41]
R. D. Richardson, âForeign Fighters in Spanish Militias: The Spanish
Civil War 1936â1939,â Military Affairs, 40, 1 (February 1976),
10; A. Prudhommeaux (Barcelona) to G. Aldred (Glasgow), 14
September 1936 (Mitchell Library, Glasgow, Guy Aldred
Collection, 107); P. Avrich, Anarchist Voices: An Oral History
of Anarchism in America (Oakland, CA 2005), 458; Nelles,
Widerstand und internationale SolidaritÀt, 197.
[42]
D. Kowalsky, âThe Soviet Union and the International Brigades,
1936â1939,â Journal of Slavic Military Studies, 19, 4 (December
2006), 687â8; D. Malet, âWorkers of the World, Unite! Communist
Foreign Fighters, 1917â91,â European Review of History, 27, 1â2
(March 2020), 38â9.
[43] LĂ€tt, Som Milisman och Kollektivbonde i Spanien, 8.
[44] Graf and Nelles, âWiderstand und Exil,â 122; Nelles, Widerstand und
internationale SolidaritÀt, 158, 196.
[45]
E. H. Carr, The Comintern and the Spanish Civil War (London 1984),
33; V. Richards, Lessons of the Spanish Revolution (London
1972), 112. A detailed analysis of the tension between defenders
and opponents of this process can be found in J. Antoni Pozo,
Poder legal y poder real en la Cataluña revolucionaria de 1936
(Seville 2012). For a critique of the âwar versus revolutionâ
paradigm, see Preston, The Spanish Civil War, 237â9.
[46] The GimĂ©nologues, The Sons of Night, 79, 146â7, 355â6; P. von zur
MĂŒhlen, Spanien war ihre Hoffnung: Die deutsche Linke im spanischen
BĂŒrgerkrieg, 1936 bis 1939 (Bonn 1983), excerpts available at:
https://www.anarchismus.at/texte-zur-spanischen-revolution-1936/spanienkaempfer-innen/7722-patrik-von-zur-muehlen-deutsche-anarchosyndikalisten-in-spanien
(accessed 24 January 2020); GmĂŒr, Spanish Diary, 26 December 1936.
[47] GmĂŒr, Spanish Diary, 18 January 1937.
[48] Von zur MĂŒhlen, Spanien war ihre Hoffnung; Thalmann, Combats pour
la libertĂ©, 141â3.
[49] Matthews, Reluctant Warriors, 21â2.
[50]
N. Arielli and D. Rodogno, âTransnational Encounters: Hosting and
Remembering Twentieth-Century Foreign War VolunteersâIntroduction,â
Journal of Modern European History, 14, 3 (August 2016), 319. See
also S. OâConnor and G. Piketty, âIntroductionâForeign Fighters and
Multinational Armies: From Civil Conflicts to Coalition Wars,
1848â2015,â European Review of History, 27, 1â2 (March 2020), 1â11.
[51] Anonymous, âFederica Montseny habla en Madrid ante el micrĂłfono de
UniĂłn Radio,â Solidaridad Obrera (2 September 1936). See also X. M.
NĂșñez and J. M. Faraldo, âThe First Great Patriotic War: Spanish
Communists and Nationalism, 1936â1939,â Nationalities Papers, 37, 4
(July 2009), 401â24; M. Baxmeyer, ââMother Spain, We Love You!â
Nationalism and Racism in Anarchist Literature during the Spanish Civil
War (1936â1939),â in Bantman and Altena, Reassessing the Transnational
Turn, 193â209.
[52] Alexander, The Anarchists in the Spanish Civil War, Vol. 2, 255; M.
Haapamaki, âWriters in Arms and the Just War: The Spanish Civil War,
Literary Activism, and Leftist Masculinity,â Left History, 10, 2 (Fall
2005), 39â40.
[53] Weil, Le Journal dâEspagne de Simone Weil, 18 August 1936.
[54] Michael Alpert claims that the consequences of the âmilitia epochâ
were âindiscipline,â âdisorganizationâ and âpolitical infighting,â while
R. Dan Richardson argues that whilst the militias were useful when
defending stationary positions in a village or town, out on the field,
most battles consisted of âsporadic tenacious defense by the militia, an
outflanking movement by the Nationalists, and panic and retreat by the
militiaâ: Alpert, âThe Popular Army of the Spanish Republic,â 97;
Richardson, âForeign fighters in Spanish militias,â 8. See also
Matthews, Reluctant Warriors, 19â23, although he notes that the militias
fared better when offered natural cover.
[55] Ă. Viñas, El escudo de la RepĂșblica. El oro de España, la apuesta
soviética y los hechos de mayo de 1937 (Barcelona 2010), 174.
[56]
M. Alpert, The Republican Army in the Spanish Civil War, 1936â1939
(Cambridge 2013), 66â8; A. Paz, The Story of the Iron Column:
Militant Anarchism in the Spanish Civil War (Oakland, CA 2011), 177.
[57] CNT-FAI, Buenaventura Durruti (Barcelona 1936), 25â6. Einstein must
surely be the only person to have given eulogies to both Durruti and
Rosa Luxemburg (at her funeral): Zeidler, Form as Revolt, 3.
[58] Casanova, Anarchism, the Republic and Civil War in Spain, 107. See
also V. Alba, Los colectivizadores (Barcelona 2001); W. L. Bernecker,
Colectividades y RevoluciĂłn Social: El anarquismo en la guerra civil
española, 1936â1939 (Barcelona 1982); F. Borkenau, The Spanish Cockpit:
An Eye-Witness Account of the Political and Economic Conflicts of the
Spanish Civil War (Ann Arbor, MI 1963), 98, 103; S. Dolgoff (ed.), The
Anarchist Collectives: Workersâ Self-Management in the Spanish
Revolution, 1936â1939 (MontrĂ©al 1974); S. JuliĂĄ DĂaz, âVĂctimas del
terror y de la represiĂłn,â in E. Fuentes Quintana and F. ComĂn (eds),
EconomĂa y economistas españoles durante la Guerra Civil, Vol. 2 (Madrid
2008), 385â410; F. Mintz, Anarchism and Workersâ Self-Management in
Revolutionary Spain (Oakland, CA 2013); P. Preston, The Spanish
Holocaust: Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain
(London 2012), 242â50; M. Seidman, âAgrarian Collectives during the
Spanish Revolution and Civil War,â European History Quarterly, 30, 2
(April 2000), 209â35.
[59] CNT-FAI, Buenaventura Durruti, 25â6.
[60] Paz, Durruti in the Spanish Revolution, 470.
[61] Weil, Le Journal dâEspagne de Simone Weil, 16 August 1936.
[62] The GimĂ©nologues, The Sons of Night, 52â4.
[63] GmĂŒr, Spanish Diary, 31 December 1936.
[64] Nelles, The Foreign Legion of the Revolution.
[65] Resolution of DAS in Durruti International Group, Velille, 22
December 1936 (IISH, FAIPE, 1B.3).
[66] Durruti International Group to CNT regional committee (Barcelona),
13 January 1937 (IISH, CNT, 94E.1); Nelles, Widerstand und
internationale SolidaritÀt, 196.
[67] Nelles, The Foreign Legion of the Revolution.
[68] Carroll, The Odyssey of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, 184.
[69] Report by J. Manzana submitted to the CNT regional committee
(Barcelona), 21 December 1936 (IISH, CNT, 94E).
[70] Arielli, From Byron to bin Laden, 177.
[71]
U. Marzocchi, Remembering Spain: Italian Anarchist Volunteers in the
Spanish Civil War (London 2005), 36; GmĂŒr, Spanish Diary, 7 May
1937; M. Aguilera Povedano, âLos hechos de mayo de 1937: efectivos y
bajas de cada bando,â Hispania, 73, 245 (September-December 2013),
799; B. Bolloten, The Spanish Civil War: Revolution and
Counter-Revolution (Chapel Hill, NC 1991), 875â7. For more on the
May Days, see H. Graham, ââAgainst the Stateâ: A Genealogy of the
Barcelona May Days (1937),â European History Quarterly, 29, 4
(October 1999), 485â542; Viñas, El escudo de la RepĂșblica, 487â548.
[72] Casa International de Voluntarios (Barcelona) to CNT national
committee (Valencia), 21 June 1937 (IISH, FAIPE, 40A.1a); M. Gudell
(Barcelona) to CNT national committee (Valencia), 21 June 1937 (IISH,
FAIPE, 40A.1a). For more on the subsequent repression, see F. Godicheau,
âLos Hechos de Mayo de 1937 y los presos antifascistas: identificaciĂłn
de un fenĂłmeno represivo,â Historia Social, 44 (2002), 38â63; Viñas, El
escudo de la RepĂșblica, 575â604.
[73]
N. Heath, (2004) Kirschey, Helmut, 1913â2003, available at:
https://libcom.org/history/kirschey-helmut-1913-2003 (accessed 24
January 2020); Lists with characteristics, biographies of German
volunteers (KâQ), 13 February 1940 (RGASPI 545/6/352/18).
[74] The Giménologues, The Sons of Night, 508.
[75] GmĂŒr, Spanish Diary, 22â4 July 1937; A. Aguzzi, âItalian Anarchist
Volunteers in Barcelona,â in Kate Sharpley Library (ed.), Pages from
Italian Anarchist History (London 1995); Nelles, Widerstand und
internationale SolidaritÀt, 198.
[76] Von zur MĂŒhlen, Spanien war ihre Hoffnung.
[77] Lists with characteristics, biographies of German volunteers (FâJ),
7 February 1940 (RGASPI 545/6/351/13).
[78] Rauschenberger does, however, hold the dubious honour of being the
only member of the International Group to have been formally executed by
the brigade authorities after disobeying orders by retreating during the
Battle of Batea in March 1938. This does not seem to have been related
to his earlier service in the Durruti Column; his personnel file calls
him a âgood, disciplined soldier.â It is possible he was used as a
scapegoat for wider divisional incompetence: Lists with characteristics,
biographies of German volunteers (RâS), 23 February 1940 (RGASPI
545/6/353/10).
[79]
M. Brodie, Transatlantic Anarchism during the Spanish Civil War and
Revolution, 1936â1939: Fury Over Spain (London 2020), 34.
[80] Report on the Political Development of the XV International
Brigade,â 1 January 1939 (RGASPI, 545/6/21/1â26); R. Stradling,
âEnglish-speaking Units of the International Brigades: War, Politics and
Discipline,â Journal of Contemporary History, 45, 4 (November 2010),
751â2.
[81] Lists with characteristics, biographies of German volunteers (FâJ),
10 February 1940 (RGASPI 545/6/351/92); Lists with characteristics,
biographies of German volunteers (RâS), 29 February 1940 (RGASPI
545/6/353/105â6); Lists with characteristics, biographies of German
volunteers (TâZ), 4 March 1940 (RGASPI 545/6/354/24); Lists with
characteristics, biographies of German volunteers (FâJ), 8 February 1940
(RGASPI 545/6/351/40).
[82] Preston, The Spanish Holocaust, 402; T. Buchanan, ââBeyond Cable
Streetâ: New Approaches to the Historiography of Antifascism in Britain
in the 1930s,â in GarcĂa et al., Rethinking Antifascism, 66â7.
[83]
J. Yeoman, âThe Spanish Civil War,â in C. Levy and M. S. Adams (eds),
The Palgrave Handbook of Anarchism (Cham 2019), 438.
[84]
F. Raeburn, âThe âPremature Anti-fascistsâ? International Brigade
Veteransâ Participation in the British War Effort, 1939â45,â War in
History, 27, 3 (July 2020), 408â32. Notable exceptions include
Seidman, Transatlantic Antifascisms; E. Acciai, âTraditions of Armed
Volunteering and Radical Politics in Southern Europe: A Biographical
Approach to Garibaldinism,â European History Quarterly, 49, 1
(January 2019), 50â72; T. Buchanan, âIdeology, Idealism, and
Adventure: Narratives of the British Volunteers in the International
Brigades,â Labour History Review, 81, 2 (July 2016), 123â40.
[85] Kowalsky, âThe Soviet Union and the International Brigades,â 700.
[86] Arielli defines four categories of volunteer-state relations:
âself-appointed ambassadors, who see themselves as fulfilling a task
that should have been carried out by their own government; diaspora
volunteers, whose willingness to enlist is tied to a military crisis in
their country of heritage; cross-border volunteers, who share national
or ethnic ties with a neighboring group engaged in conflict; and
substitute-conflict volunteersâ: Arielli, From Byron to bin Laden, 95,
119.
[87] Karl Brauner, who also fought with the BatallĂłn de la Muerte, was
held alongside Rudolf Honecker, Waldemar Krafft, August Wienhold, Georg
Gernsheimer, Oskar Heinz and Otto Toewe: McLellan, Antifascism and
Memory in East Germany, 186; âCamp de ConcentrationâEx-Combattants
dâEspagne; Section: Brigades Internationales, Groupe 2. (allemands,
autrichiens, etcâŠ),â c. 1940 (RGASPI/6/59/99â115); Nelles, The Foreign
Legion of the Revolution. Hermann Gierth was held in Gurs, Saint-Cyprien
and ArgelĂšs-sur-mer in France, then Djelfa in Algeria, before being
handed over to the Gestapo and transferred to Dachau then Auschwitz: The
Giménologues, The Sons of Night, 503.
[88] Lists with characteristics of Portuguese volunteers in Spain, c.
1939 (RGASPI 545/6/816/7). For more on the camps, see F. Cate-Arries,
Spanish Culture behind Barbed Wire: Memory and Representation of the
French Concentration Camps, 1939â1945 (Cranbury, NJ 2010).
[89] Lists with biographies and characteristics of German volunteers, c.
1940 (RGASPI 545/6/349/41). See D. Convery, âAt Their Most Vulnerable:
The Memory of British and Irish Prisoners of War in San Pedro de
Cardeña,â in A. Raychaudhuri (ed.), The Spanish Civil War: Exhuming a
Buried Past (Cardiff 2013), 51â63.
[90] Zeidler, Form as Revolt, 7.
[91] Nelles, Widerstand und internationale SolidaritĂ€t, 192, 318â51,
388.
[92]
P. Aron, âSalud Camarada! Un reportage sur la guerre dâEspagne par
Mathieu Corman,â Revue italienne dâĂ©tudes françaises, 1 (2011), 2;
The GimĂ©nologues, The Sons of Night, 283â4.
[93] Nelles, Widerstand und internationale SolidaritÀt, 324, 365;
Anonymous, âJansson, Olov,â available online at:
https://www.willy-brandt-biography.com/contemporaries/h-k/jansson-olov/
(accessed 24 January 2020).
[94]
S. Mohamed, âRĂ©ponse a Terre Libre,â Terre Libre (25 February 1938); D.
Porter, Eyes to the South: French Anarchists and Algeria (Oakland,
CA 2011), 20â1.
[95] Several German volunteers swallowed their anti-communism and
settled in East Germany after the Second World War. Rudolf Michaelis,
the political delegate of the International Group who had obtained
Spanish citizenship to avoid serving under communists, even joined the
communist ruling party. His anarchist past could not be hidden, however,
and he was expelled for former membership of the FAUD and
âanarcho-syndicalist tendenciesâ in 1951. He then worked as a teacher
(but was barred from teaching older children for political reasons),
later publishing his memories of the war under a false name. Michaelis
was among seven volunteers who were awarded the Hans Beimler Medal given
to SpanienkÀmpfer (Spanish Civil War veterans).The irony could not have
been lost on those familiar with Beimlerâs role in prompting the
transfer of volunteers from the ThÀlmann Centuria to the Durruti Column
in October 1936: McLellan, Antifascism and Memory in East Germany,
186â7; H. Bronnen [Rudolf Michaelis], Mit der âCenturia Erich MĂŒhsamâ
vor Huesca. Erinnerungen eines SpanienkĂ€mpfers, anlĂ€Ălich des 100.
Geburtstages von Erich MĂŒhsam (Berlin 1996).
[96]
L. M. Vega, âRejecting the Legendâ (1956), trans. Paul Sharkey, KSL:
Bulletin of the Kate Sharpley Library, 91â2 (October 2017),
available online at: https://www.katesharpleylibrary.net/573p98
(accessed 6 February 2020).
[97] GarcĂa notes that âAntifascism probably succeeded in Spain thanks
to its conceptual vagueness, its ability to explain the 1930s in terms
familiar to very different people, as well as its obvious political
advantagesâŠâ: H. GarcĂa, âWas there an Antifascist Culture in Spain
during the 1930s?, in GarcĂa et al., Rethinking Antifascism, 102. The
notion of an anti-fascist melting pot is inspired by Michael Goebelâs
âanti-imperial metropolisâ in Paris during the interwar period: M.
Goebel, Anti-Imperial Metropolis: Interwar Paris and the Seeds of Third
World Nationalism (Cambridge 2015), 9â10.
[98] Several scholars have noted how Spaniards were resentful of the
perceived overemphasis that propagandists placed on foreign units like
the International Brigades: Kirschenbaum, International Communism and
the Spanish Civil War, 86; Stradling, âEnglish-speaking Units of the
International Brigades,â 748.
[99] Arielli, From Byron to bin Laden, 186â7.
[100] The desertion rate amongst Dutch volunteers in the brigades, for
example, was as high as 25 per cent in late 1937: S. Kruizinga, âFear
and Loathing in Spain. Dutch Foreign Fighters in the Spanish Civil War,â
European Review of History, 27, 1â2 (March 2020), 142.