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Title: Jaime Balius Mir
Author: Nick Heath
Date: September 20, 2004
Language: en
Topics: Friends of Durruti, biography, Spanish Civil War
Source: Retrieved on 26th September 2020 from https://libcom.org/history/balius-mir-jaime-1904-1980

Nick Heath

Jaime Balius Mir

Jaime Balius Mir was born into a bourgeois family in Barcelona in 1904.

He gained his baccalaureate and registered in medical faculty. However a

slowly advancing paralytic disease crippled him, and he was forced to

withdraw. He became Catalan nationalist and was attracted to the

insurrectionary nationalism of Colonel Macia. In 1922 he joined Accio

Catalana and took part in the Catalanist demonstrations of 1923. Two

years later he was one of the signatories of the Catalanist Manifesto of

Bandera Negra and was involved in the Garraf plot against Alfonso XIII

and in preparations for an secret Exercit Catala (Catalan Army). He was

imprisoned and then exiled. In France, he became disillusioned with

Macia and independentism . When the Republic was proclaimed he returned

to Barcelona. He joined the BOC (Bloc Obrer I Camperol) but was

disappointed by its centralist tendencies and its collaboration with the

nationalist petty bourgeoisie. Impressed by the Figols insurrection, he

became an anarchist.

He joined the Iberian Anarchist Federation (FAI) in 1932 and the

anarcho-syndicalist union the CNT from 1936 until his death. He was

sponsored by experienced militants like Pablo Ruiz, Bruno Llado,

Francisco Pellicer, Liberto Callejas, Alexander Gilabert and Eusebio

Carbo. From the time of his FAI membership, he began working as a

journalist for Ideas, Ruta, Superacion, and Tiempos Nuevos. His works

were gathered together in three volumes, where the insurrectionary line

is justified, and the performance of the CNT in the October 1934

Insurrection is defended, and nationalist ideology criticised. He was a

member of the FAI affinity group Renacer alongside Ruiz, Pellicer, and

Bruno Llado. On 19^(th) July 1936, the dawn of the workers’ response to

the generals’ coup which kick-started the Spanish Civil War and

Revolution, he wrote with Gilabert for Solidaridad Obrera (“Soli”) and

distributed it on the barricades. He defended proletarian hegemony in

its pages during that summer. He used this to support working class

independence and the revolution. At the beginning of the war and

revolution he was elected vice-president of the Union of Journalists and

entered Union Grup d’Escriptors Catalans. He wrote for Ideas, Ruta,

Despartar and Mas Lejos. Callejas was director of Soli. When he refused

to print collaborationist speeches — which preached joining the

Republican government — and when Callejas was replaced by Jacinto Toryho

who spoke for the CNT-FAI collaborators, Balius was offered an

honourable exit from Soli and took on the direction of La Noche (The

Night) an old Azanista paper taken over by its workers.

With Ruiz and Felix Martinez he was one of the founders of the Friends

of Durruti which struggled against the betrayals of the CNT-FAI

leadership and the attacks of the bourgeois Republicans and Stalinists.

From 19^(th) May 1937, he edited the Friends of Durruti paper El Amigo

del Pueblo (Friend of the People) made illegal after its first few

issues. He was dramatically involved in the May Days in Barcelona,

during which the Communists consolidated their grip on power in

Republican Spain.

After the May Days the Friends of Durruti centre was forcibly closed

down. Balius was arrested and put in the Modelo prison in Barcelona.. He

continued to write articles from prison. On release he had to go into

obscurity. He and Ruiz got jobs in the milk industry. He wrote his most

famous text Hacia una nueva revolucion (Towards a New Revolution) in

January 1938.

Then Balius and many other surviving Friends were forced to flee to

France in January 1939. There he set up the Grupo-Franco-Espanol de los

Amigos de Durruti with others. With the invasion of France by the Nazis,

Balius again had to flee taking the last boat of the Service of

Emigration of Spanish Republicans (SERE) to leave for Latin America in

1940. Landing in Santo Domingo, he then spent some time in Cuba before

ending up in Mexico where he stayed for the next 17 years. In 1961 he

traveled to Paris, meeting up with his old friend Ruiz. They attempted

to reorganise the Friends but this endeavour failed. He obtained a place

in the residential home Beau Sejour near Hyeres and became for a long

period editor of Combat Syndicaliste and Tierra Libre, papers of the CNT

in exile. With the transition in Spain he began to be visited at Beau

Sejour by students, historians and dissident anarchists.

In 1978 Paul Sharkey translated Hacia una nueva revolucion into English,

and Balius wrote a new introduction for it. He maintained his

revolutionary Ă©lan , but his physical deterioration became more

pronounced. He died on 13^(th) December 1980. Ruiz died 3 years later.

The last Friend still alive is Joaquin Perez Navarro, now 97 and living

quietly in London.