Pages

Wednesday, 19 September 2012

Farewell Santiago Carrillo

Warning: totally offtopic (and politically biassed for some)

Coming back home from the office, I listen in my radio car the news that Santiago Carrillo has passed away this afternoon. Aged 97, a piece of  living history of modern Spain dies with him. And many of you probably wonder, who was this man? Well, he was  General Secretary of the Spanish Communist Party and one of its key leaders through a long exile following the defeat of the Spanish Republic in the Civil War 1936-1939.

Now, don't misunderstand me, I'm not or haven't been communist or voted communist since the Party was legalised again in 1977, not even a supporter.  Being  pursued for many years by the Spanish dictator and living in a forced exile, he returned to Spain after Franco's death, refounded the Party, broke with the dependance on Moscow well before the Perestroika  era and helped to provide the necessary stability for Spain to walk from a 40-years dictatorship regime to a full democracy, a period in Spain we know as the "Transición" (the Transition).


He drove the political left of Spain at that very early moment of the newborn democracy, and with the scars of the Civil War still intact, into the main political consensus agreements reached between 1976 and 1981, including our current national Constitution and a major economic restrucuturing plan (Pactos de la Moncloa) that introduced many marklet oriented measures and facilitated Spain joining the EU (then called the European Common Market) in 1985. 

That attitude cost the communists  the loss of many left wing supporters, who shifted loyalties mainly to the Socialist Party, and a gradual decay of the Party in the following general elections until it dissappeared in the maelstrom  of the Berlin wall and the Iron Curtain fall. Santiago Carrillo retired from the political life, although maintained a lively public activity, writing and participating in radio programs until literally July this year.

I'm sure that tomorrow many indecent voices  in some well known media will focus their comments on its participation in the Spanish Civil War and more specifically, on his involvement (never documented or proved) in a very obscure incident early in the war in Paracuellos, a small town near Madrid; there, several hundred people, right wing sympathizers locked in jail in July 1936 were shot and executed by irregular militia forces, a very disgraceful event of the war. But I said indecent because recently those same voices have actively opposed and fought against a movement to unbury the many thousands of Republican sympathizers shot (until the early 50s!)  and still lying in unidentified mass graves  all across Spain.

Santiago Carrillo died today at home, surrounded by his many years partner Carmen and family. He was of that political breed, from the left and the right (Suárez, Solé Tura, Fraga...so many)  brought up in the dramatic post-war times for Spain, but who were sesible enough to put aside differences in ideology, generous enough to sacrifice his own political ambitions to give our citizens a democratic future and honest enough not to ask anything in exchange, not even a public recognition. Anecdotical evidence of the latter? Try googling "Santiago Carrillo" and you'll see how few articles in English you'll find. I'm sure that a person like him in England would have been appointed  Knight of the Empire

Farewell Santiago, those of us here wonder even more in days like this where your breed went and only wish that our current political leaders stop for a moment, look back and  learn from you and from so many other leaders that steered Spain in the dark years.  
  

16 comments:

  1. Thanks for that little lesson in modern Spanish history, Anibal. If only there were more like him who were prepared to bridge the gap of ideology and party rigidity!

    Vale Santiago.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. ....to bypass the party rigidity/discipline ...and their own political (and financial) agendas

      Delete
  2. Thanks for such a fascinating article Anibal. As Rosbif said, if only there were more like him involved in modern politics (even over here in Australia!).
    Ben

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Australia!...we have a global virus affecting all politicians across the world

      Delete
  3. An excellent and well-written eulogy of a fascinating man of rare principles. Thank you for that.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, it's good when you write from the heart, even if it's to show your frustration

      Delete
  4. Replies
    1. Hombre, muy victorioso no fue, aunque supo manejar muy bien la situación en cada momento y fue capaz de dar un paso (él y unos cuantos más en los late 70s) que raramente veríamos en un político de la nueva hornada actual

      Delete
  5. Santiago Carrillo tuvo momentos oscuros y otros llenos de luz. Ahora, descanse en paz.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Si, obviamente, como muchos líderes públicos. DEP

      Delete
  6. Indecentes, así es. No te preocupes, tarde o temprano se morderán la lengua y se envenenarán.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Thank you for this post. I also wonder we're this breed of leaders have gone.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Disintegrated in the outer space... probably with all the money supplied to the different bank-rescue programs in Europe and the USA....

      Delete
  8. Buenas palabras benito, seguro que te ganas la enemistad de mas de uno. Yo creo que muchos pensamos como tu y teniendo ideologias distintas potenciamos lo que nos une y no lo que nos separa.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Pues sí. Si alguien se pica es que ajos come... ejerciendo mi libertad de expresión... que por cierto los comunistas no veían tan claro

      Delete