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appalachiablue

(41,132 posts)
Thu Jul 22, 2021, 04:43 PM Jul 2021

Spain: Unease Over Planned Statue Honoring Elite Troops In Military Dictator Franco's Fascist Mvmt.



- The bronze Legionnaire statue.
_________

'Soldier statue reignites Spanish row over fascism,' By James Badcock, BBC News, July 21, 2021.

There is unease in Spain over plans for a Madrid statue honouring soldiers who spearheaded Franco's fascist movement. This week marks the centenary of what is often described as the most shocking defeat in the history of the Spanish military - the annihilation of a colonial force at the Battle of Annual, in what is now northern Morocco. The rise of the Legión (Spanish Legion), an elite regiment, was a response to that.

It is no ordinary force, but was born of the anger over Spanish defeats - seen as humiliations - at the hands of anti-colonial rebels. The Legión became almost a symbol of Spanish virility and was the idea of Gen José Millán Astray, who would later be a leading element of the fascist cause in civil war Spain, with his war cry Viva la Muerte! (Long live death!) Formed in 1920, it was modelled on the French Foreign Legion, designed to attract volunteers and so reduce the need for conscripts, who were struggling in the harsh conditions. For some, it is a colourful element of the Spanish military.

But for others it is shocking that Spain continues to have a force linked to Francisco Franco - apparently at odds with Spain's historical memory law, which bans tributes to the late dictator. The statue initiative has divided opinion, echoing the disputes over colonial-era statues in other countries, such as the attacks on symbols of slavery. While Black Lives Matter and other movements have focused on which old statues to pull down, Spain is immersed in a battle over which figures to erect and what parts of its past to commemorate - or to consign to history's dustbin.

Military historian Luis Gonzalo Segura said: "The Legión does not deserve any kind of homage, not in Madrid or anywhere else. Its acts should be scrutinised and then it should disappear."

A Berber army killed as many as 20,000 Spanish soldiers at the Battle of Annual on 22 July, 1921. The Legión led the response. Military historians say it used extreme violence - torturing, mutilating and raping Berber villagers - and soldiers revelled in their own barbarism by keeping trophies from victims' bodies. Before becoming Spain's military dictator, Francisco Franco headed the Legión in North Africa. Under him it brutally put down a revolutionary uprising led by miners in the northern Spanish region of Asturias in 1934...

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-57902023



- The legionnaires have a distinctive marching style.
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Spain: Unease Over Planned Statue Honoring Elite Troops In Military Dictator Franco's Fascist Mvmt. (Original Post) appalachiablue Jul 2021 OP
Who sponsored the Nazi statue ? magicarpet Jul 2021 #1
Franco's fascist supporters still exist, report- appalachiablue Jul 2021 #3
Thanks For Putting This Up, Ma'am The Magistrate Jul 2021 #2
Interesting, I just looked up the Riff conflict. appalachiablue Jul 2021 #4

appalachiablue

(41,132 posts)
3. Franco's fascist supporters still exist, report-
Thu Jul 22, 2021, 05:16 PM
Jul 2021


- 2019 Protest: Franco supporters make a far-right salute outside the Mingorrubio cemetery, where the former dictator is being reburied at a family vault 32 miles from the Valley of the Fallen.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7608441/Body-former-dictator-General-Franco-exhumed-state-mausoleum-today.html

The Magistrate

(95,247 posts)
2. Thanks For Putting This Up, Ma'am
Thu Jul 22, 2021, 05:08 PM
Jul 2021

Not much mention of Annual and Abd 'el Krim's rebellion in the Riff to be seen nowadays. It's worth looking into, it was ended by one of the few fellows whose claim to be a benevolent dictator, Gen. Primo de la Rivera, is not a complete crock, and went a good ways towards ending the monarchy and ushering in the Republic.

I express no opinion on the statuary, but would offer this addition to the sheer weirdness of the unit. Their most popular song was 'The Betrothed of Death', with verses describing how, unknown to one another, a father and son both served in the legion, and were found dead on the battlefield each with a picture of the same woman in his pocket, who it should be needless to say was not a wife and mother.

appalachiablue

(41,132 posts)
4. Interesting, I just looked up the Riff conflict.
Thu Jul 22, 2021, 05:38 PM
Jul 2021

I appreciate Spanish art, enjoyed visiting So. America but never made it to the old country or studied the colonial period in N. Africa.

Wild story, 'Betrothed of Death' the ultimate in devotion and romanticism. You have to imagine the mystery lady as one very charming and ravishing woman, or maybe not. Complex are matters of the heart..

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