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Title: “Spain! Why?”
Author: Ole Birk Laursen
Date: May 7, 2017
Language: en
Topics: Spanish Civil War, India, anti-imperialism, Anti-fascism
Source: Retrieved on 31st March 2021 from https://olebirklaursen.wordpress.com/2017/05/07/spain-why-indian-anti-imperialism-anti-fascism-and-the-spanish-civil-war/

Ole Birk Laursen

“Spain! Why?”

80 years on from the Spanish Civil War, and with popular fascism on the

rise again across Europe, the United States, and India, we have to bear

in mind the ways in which socialists and anarchists came together to

fight European fascism. As the British, French and American governments

stood aside to allow Franco, with the aid of Hitler and Mussolini, to

defeat the republic, the history of such non-governmental resistances

are even more pertinent and provide a deeper understanding of the power

of extra-parliamentary political organisations.

In the face of British non-intervention, it became clear that fascism

easily colluded with colonialism. Moreover, despite attempts to compare

and combine anti-fascism and anti-imperialism by Indian nationalists

such as Jawaharlal Nehru and V. Krishna Menon, those struggles were

largely seen as separate issues by European socialists. Paradoxically,

such intersectional struggles have often been overlooked, and the

Spanish Civil War remains principally a Euro-American affair in existing

historiography, denying the true international character of the

International Brigades.

Two months after the Spanish Civil War broke out on 17 July 1936, the

Communist International set up the International Brigades to assist the

Spanish Republican cause against Franco’s fascist regime. At the same

time, the September 1936 Non-Interventionist Agreement signed by 27

countries, including Britain, France and Germany, effectively banned

entry of British nationals into Spain. However, in January 1937 British

socialists established the British Battalion of the International

Brigades, officially named the Saklatvala Battalion, after the Indian

Communist MP for Battersea, Shapurji Saklatvala, who died in January

1936.

While this moniker never caught on among the volunteers, Saklatvala’s

daughter, Sehri, continued to be involved in the fight against fascism

and with the Spain-India Committee organised a ‘For Spain, Indian

Evening’ on 12 March 1937. As an example of what Maria Framke calls

‘political humanitarianism’, the Spain-India Committee also donated an

ambulance to the war effort and agitated widely among the British left.

Menon, Nehru and Spain

The India League, led by V. K. Krishna Menon, realised that Indian

freedom was inextricably linked to other international conflicts such as

the Spanish Civil War. At a meeting in late January 1938, Menon noted

that “the freedom of the Indian people was synonymous with the freedom

of the peoples of the world, and that imperialism and exploitation must

come to an end”. To celebrate Indian Independence Day on 26 January –

declared by the Indian National Congress in January 1930 – the India

League organised a National Independence Demonstration at Trafalgar

Square on 30 January 1938 in “solidarity with the Indian, Chinese and

Spanish people”. As around 1,200 people marched from Mornington

Crescent, “four bands accompanied the processionists. Flags of the

Spanish Republic, Irish Republic, Indian National Congress and Sama

Samaja Party, and banners with portraits of Subhas Chandra Bose,

Jawaharlal Nehru, Gandhi, Rabindranath Tagore, the Emperor of Abyssinia,

Chiang Kai-Shek, and ‘La Passionaria’ (the Spanish woman communist

leader), were carried”. At Trafalgar Square, the following resolution

was read aloud:

“We recognise that the fight against imperialism in India, Burma,

Ceylon, in Africa and the rest of the Colonial Empire, is part of our

own common struggle for democracy and against fascism and war, and we,

therefore, call upon all democratic and peace-loving men and women in

this country to consciously ally themselves with and to actively support

these struggles against the common foe”.

Alongside the India League, Menon’s friend Jawaharlal Nehru was among

the most vocal agitators in the Indian campaign against fascism in

Spain. At first he failed to attract any substantial attention in India,

but after his tour of Europe in 1938, which included a trip to Spain

with Menon, he managed to rally more support. In his pamphlet ‘Spain!

Why?’ (1938), he remarked that, “by giving our food-stuffs to the

Spanish people, we compel the world’s attention to our view-point”.

Internationalising Indian Nationalism

Despite the relatively few Indians in the International Brigades,

Nehru’s campaign against fascism was not lost on all. Gopal Mukund

Huddar, one of the few Indians fighting in Spain, joined the

International Brigades under the name ‘John Smith’ in October 1937. In

early February 1938 he went to Tarazona but, in early April 1938, he was

captured by Franco’s army in the battle of Gandesa. Relating his

experiences upon return to India, Huddar wrote that, “for another few

days we held the hills behind Gandesa. Here we had our artillery,

Anti-Tank, Anti-air guns. We held that place in face of artillery

shelling for seven hours every day. However in the end we were

encircled”.

Signalling the international compositition of the International

Brigades, his fellow prisoner Carl Geiser later wrote about Huddar that

he “reported on the struggle for independence from Britain of the people

of India under the leadership of Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru”.

Released from prison in late November 1938, a few receptions were held

in London in honour of Huddar, before he returned to Bombay in

mid-December 1938. A committed nationalist, the experiences in Spain

made Huddar an internationalist. “Spain gave me an opportunity to know

Germans, Austrians, Americans, French, English, Czechs, Canadians etc”,

he wrote upon return to India. “It is possible now to think

internationally and to create international centres for Indian

propaganda”.

For an Indian volunteer in Spain to think internationally is to

acknowledge the deep links between anti-imperialism and anti-fascism. As

we mark 80 years since the Spanish Civil War, it is clear that to learn

from history demands a greater understanding of international

solidarities in the face of fascism. And, while it took another decade

for India to gain independence from Britain, the Spanish Civil War

nevertheless marked a significant entry onto world politics and

important steps towards freedom for Menon and Nehru.