| "How
many lands have my feet trod and my eyes seen! What terrible
scenes of desolation of death I witnessed in those years of
continual war. Adverse circumstances had made us, anti-militarists,
the most battle hardened soldiers of the Allied armies"
(Murillo de la Cruz)
There are many myths and controversies
concerning the French Resistance during the Second World War. The
"official" line, from the point of view of the Gaullists,
ascribes great significance to the radio appeal broadcast by
Charles de Gaulle on June 18th 1940, calling on the French people
to continue the fight against the Germans. But for at least one
major component of the Resistance movement the armed struggle
against Fascism began not on June 18th 1940 but on July 17th 1936.
It is a little known fact that over 60,000 Spanish exiles fought
alongside the French Resistance, in addition to thousands of
others who served in the regular forces of the Free French army.
This article pays tribute to the forgotten heroes of the Spanish
Resistance and explores the wider origins and development of the
French Resistance.
Defeat, Exile & Internment
Fascist victories in Spain led to several
waves of refugees crossing the French border. By June 1938 some
40-45,000 refugees had crossed and an alarmed French government
ordered the border to be closed. However, with the fall of
Catalonia in January 1939 a human tide flowed northwards. Behind
them came the retreating Republican Army covered by a rearguard
composed of the 26th Division (Durruti Column) and elements of the
Army of the Ebro. The right wing press in France went into near
hysteria with banner headlines proclaiming, "Will the Army of
Riot Reorganise Itself in France?" and "Close our
Borders to the Armed Bands of the F.A.I. and the P.O.U.M.".
However, with the town of Figueras about to fall to Franco, the
French Left and humanitarian sensibilities prevailed and the
border was opened to admit hundreds of thousands of civilians and
combatants into France.
The population of the Pyrenees-Orientales
Department more than doubled due to the influx of Spaniards.
French troops in the area had already been reinforced and further
reinforcements were brought in as the 26th Division reached the
border. As one of its members, Antonio Herrero, recalled,
"...we were considered the most dangerous of the refugees".
Sections of the French establishment clearly feared that the
"Reds" and "Anarchists" would bring social
revolution to France.
Whilst the refugees were now safe from
Franco's army, they were by no means to be allowed their liberty.
Instead they were confined in concentration camps on the beaches
at Argeles-sur-mer, St.Cyprien and Barcares, penned in by stakes
and barbed wire. French police hunted for those who escaped
confinement. Inside the camps, shelter, supplies and medical care
were virtually non-existent. Strict military discipline prevailed,
with frequent roll calls, patrols and constant surveillance.
Distribution of left wing papers was forbidden (but not right wing
newspapers). Moreover, those identified as "criminals"
or "radicals" were taken to separate prison camps, such
as the fortress of Collioure and the camp at Le Vernet. Here,
Communists and Anarchists were held as prisoners under a regime of
hard labour. Those who experienced these camps later recalled that,
although they were not places of mass extermination, in many other
respects they were every bit as bad as the German concentration
camps.
The French government tried to encourage
repatriation, both voluntarily and by threats. But by December
1939 there were still at least 250,000 Spaniards in the camps.
Building work meant an improvement in conditions, though health,
sanitation and food supplies were still dismal. The Spaniards
organised themselves collectively as best they could through the
main political groupings.
Blitzkrieg & Vichy France
With a general European war looming and
recognising the vast pool of industrial and agricultural skills
confined on the beaches, the Spanish exiles were given the option
to leave the camps from April 1939. But this was on the condition
that they either obtained an individual work contract with local
farmers/ employers or enlisted in "workers companies" (labour
battalions), the Foreign Legion or the regular French Army.
Although the first option was the most desirable, around 15,000
joined the Foreign Legion, including elements of the 26th Division
(Durruti Column) who were offered a choice between this and forced
repatriation.
Thus many Spanish exiles found themselves at
the sharp end of Hitler's Blitzkrieg in 1940. Over 6,000 died in
battle before the Armistice and 14,000 were taken prisoner.
Spaniards captured by the Nazis were not treated as prisoners of
war but sent straight to concentration camps, primarily Mauthausen.
Of 12,000 sent to that place of murder only 2,000 survived until
liberation. Other Spaniards in the French army found themselves
serving in Norway, as part of the expeditionary force to Narvik
and Trondheim. They distinguished themselves by their bravery, but
at a heavy price. Of 1,200 only 300 survived.
Following the German military triumph in
Paris, 14th June 1940, the country was split into occupied and
unoccupied zones. The latter, comprising central and southern
France and the Mediterranean coast, was governed directly by the
Vichy Government of Marshal Petain. At first many French people
saw Petain as a national saviour, rescuing the country from the
humiliation of total defeat. But the Vichy regime not only pursued
a policy of co-existence and collaboration with the Nazis but had
many of the trappings of a Fascist state itself. Petain's so-called
"National Revolution" operated under the slogan "Work,
Family, Fatherland" and pursued nationalist and authoritarian
policies.
In August 1940 all trade union organisations
were dissolved in favour of the "organic" corporate
structures of employers and employees favoured by Fascism. The
model for these policies could be easily seen in Italy, Spain
(cordial relations with Franco were quickly established) and
Portugal and, as in those countries, support for the National
Revolution came mostly from the upper and middle class, from small
industrialists and financiers, local business and landed property
and from high status professions. Such supporters were quickly
installed at every level of the administration. Peasant and family
life was idealised, as was the Catholic Church as a model of moral
life, communal values and obedience. Youth camps and Corps were
set up. And, of course, lists were drawn up of Communists,
Socialists etc. - some for immediate arrest, others to be arrested
at the first sign of any threat to public order.
The Vichy regime was to actively collaborate
in choosing hostages and recruiting labour for the Germans,
arresting resisters and deporting Jews. The SS and Gestapo swiftly
made contacts with French anti-Semites and Fascists, gathering
information on Jews and the Left. No single Fascist style party
ever emerged, partly because Hitler didn't want any basis for a
resurgent French nationalism. But members of the P.P.F. Fascist
party went to fight (and die) on the Russian front, and were also
used internally as paramilitary units against the Resistance.
But the most important formation was to be
the Milice - formed in January 1943 (from the veterans association
Legion des Anciens Combattants) by Joseph Darnard, Vichy minister
in charge of all internal forces of law and order. The Milice, a
paramilitary vanguard of the "National Revolution",
became a 150,000 strong force, acting as an auxiliary to the SS
and Gestapo and characterised by Vichy-style Fascism. By 1944 they
were the only French force the Germans could rely on. Most
surviving Miliciens were summarily executed by the Resistance just
before or just after liberation. They deserved it.
Resistance
Many French people awoke only slowly to the
real nature and ideology of the Nazi occupation and its Vichy
sidekicks. Apart from a demonstration in Paris, 11th November
1940, and an impressive Communist led miners strike in the North
East in May 1941, there was very little public confrontation with
the Germans in the first 2 years after defeat.
De Gaulle's famous radio broadcast was to be
only one of several starting points of resistance. In fact, until
1942 de Gaulle was by no means a major player. Although Churchill
backed him, the Americans seemed more interested in winning over
French Vichy commanders in Algeria. De Gaulle was not even
informed of Allied plans for Operation Torch, the landing in
Algeria. He had to shift some in order to consolidate his position.
To do this he sought increasing links with the internal Resistance
during 1942 and had to recognise both the diversity and
independence of resistance groups and the importance of the
Communists as established facts.
The French Communist Party had been stunned
by the non-aggression pact between Hitler and Stalin in August
1939, and was then declared illegal under the Vichy regime. This
meant that organisationally they played little role in the first
stirrings of the Resistance, although individual grass roots
militants were involved from the outset, as in the miners strike.
Only after the invasion of Russia was the C.P. able to regroup -
but it quickly became a main player in terms of the politics,
organisation and tactics of the Resistance.
In its first roots the Resistance grew from
the bottom up. "Early resistance was almost entirely a matter
of secret initiatives by individuals and small groups...".
The first act of resistance was often graffiti, for example that
reversing the German declaration that 10 Frenchmen would be shot
for every German assassinated ("One Frenchman Murdered - Ten
Germans will Die!") or simply turning around or removing
signposts to confuse the enemy. Equally important, once a group
formed, was the production and circulation of clandestine
pamphlets and newspapers. This propaganda built up a solidarity of
attitude uniting the individual acts of resistance.
These small groups of like minded
individuals gradually evolved into the wider movements of sabotage
and armed struggle and the more diffuse networks which ran escape
routes and gathered intelligence on German dispositions. In the
North they suffered severe repression from the Gestapo, but in the
South the movements took on a more expansive character. This was
partly due to geographical factors and partly due to the zone not
being under direct German control prior to November 1942. However,
there was one other vital factor - the Spanish.
The Vichy regime wanted to make use of the
vast amount of Spanish labour available in the South, so they
established the Travailleurs Etrangers (T.E.) - basically forced
labour corps of between 2-5,000 men. By the end of 1940 over
220,000 Spaniards were engaged in forced labour for French and
German enterprises in France. But for the Vichy authorities the
revolutionary working class history of the Spaniards posed a
problem - the labour corps would provide a natural organisational
focus for those intent on rebuilding their movement. And they were
right - for the political organisations of the Spanish exiles were
soon consolidating their position within the T.E., despite
attempts by the Vichy police to identify and weed out Communists,
Anarchists and "anti-nationals".
The presence of this vast body of exiles,
many of them hardened anti-Fascist fighters, cannot be
underestimated. "Resistance was the natural state of the
Spanish exiles in France. For them the French dilemma over loyalty
to Petain was non-existent...". They were continuing a war
that had begun behind the barricades in Barcelona, had already
fought German and Italian troops in their own country, and were
now about to do the same in France. As much, if not more so, than
British agents of the Special Operations Executive it was the
Spaniards who instructed their French comrades in armed struggle.
As Serge Ravanel of the French Resistance in
the Toulouse area acknowledged: "During the War of Spain our
comrades had acquired the knowledge that we did not possess; they
knew how to make bombs; they knew how to set ambushes; they had a
profound knowledge of the technique of guerrilla war". In
addition to this expertise it was said of the Spaniards that their
bravery was unequalled in combat and that there was no question of
treason or desertion.
Within the Travailleurs Etrangers low level
sabotage, the universal symbol of working class defiance, rapidly
became the norm. In one incident 50 French mechanics suspected to
be engaged in monkey wrenching were replaced by Spaniards. The
level of inexplicable vehicle failure increased as the Spanish
pleaded ignorance of the rudiments of motor mechanics. AFA
comrades will be pleased to know that The Mechanic has such worthy
predecessors! Such incidents as this were part of a wider and
growing movement of sabotage, a movement that rapidly progressed
to dynamiting of industrial installations and railways; grenade
attacks on German military parades, canteens and barracks, not to
mention individual assassinations. In a typical progression,
Spanish Anarchists in the Massif Central organised resistance in
the T.E. corps working on a huge dam (Barage de la Aigle). From
sabotaging roads and tunnels the group eventually grew into an
armed resistance battalion 150-200 strong, named after the dam.
By 1942 the Resistance was firmly
established, as any final illusions about the Nazis disappeared -
with the SS increasingly in control in Paris; decrees demanding
workers for German factories; the beginning of the deportation of
Jews to the death camps and, in November, German military
occupation of the Vichy zone. These events strengthened the
motivation to resist and ensured a mood of protest and revolt
among the French working class as a whole.
By the end of the year the independent and
local Resistance movements had begun to co-ordinate more closely.
Previously the only movement covering both zones was the Communist
led Front National established in May 1941. Its armed wing was the
Francs-Tireurs et Partisans Francais. Other groups combined to
form Mouvements Unis de Las Resistance (M.U.R.), whose armed wing
was the Armee Secrete. The M.U.R. recognised de Gaulle as leader
but the Communists retained their independence. Both groups formed
part of the Comite National de la Resistance (CNR).
It was through the C.N.R. and M.U.R. that de
Gaulle was able to cement his position inside France. Arms
supplies from London and Algiers went to groups which recognised
his leadership and accepted a degree of tactical control from the
British S.O.E. The guerrillas of the F.T.P.F.were left to arm
themselves with weapons captured from the Germans or by
intercepting Allied supply drops intended for the Armee Secrete.
Alongside political differences, there was a difference over
tactics. The Armee Secrete argued that the Resistance should hold
itself in readiness to support an Allied landing. The FTPF argued
for an immediate campaign of harassment, sabotage and ambush of
German troops. They also wanted to assassinate individual German
officers, a tactic de Gaulle rejected.
The Spaniards, primarily active in the South
& South-East, organised themselves, although some individuals
fought in French units. Spanish formations were recognised as an
independent but integral part of the French Resistance within the
C.N.R. The main grouping was the Communist led Union Nacional
Espanola (U.N.E.) formed in November 1942. In 1944 its name
changed to Agrupacion Guerrillera Espanola. A second organisation,
the Alianza Democratica Espanola, rejecting Communist control, was
formed by the Anarchists (CNT / FAI); Socialists (UGT / PSOE);
Left & Independent republicans and Basque & Catalan
nationalists.
The Maquis
The critical moment of expansion for the
Resistance came in 1943 with an influx of new recruits fleeing
forced labour. In June 1942 a decree had been issued requiring
French workers for German factories. This was extended in February
1943 with the setting up of the Service du Travail Obligatoire (S.T.O.)
to meet the ever increasing numbers demanded by the German labour
ministry. The S.T.O. was resisted by individual evasion, strikes
and even angry crowds freeing arrested workers from the French
police. It also proved the vital ingredient in the formation of
armed groups in the countryside, the Maquis.
Between April and December 1943, 150,000
workers were on the run from the S.T.O., and by June 1944 this had
swelled to more than 300,000. The Resistance movement encouraged
non compliance and supplied shelter, supplies and arms to the
evaders who took to the hills and countryside. The Maquis were
supported by the rural population - alienated by constant
requisitions of produce and the imposition of the S.T.O. on
agricultural labourers. This swelling of guerrilla strength in the
countryside throughout 1943 inaugurated a new and more ferocious
phase of armed struggle, which in the conflict between the Milice
and the Maquis increasingly took the form of a civil war.
Whilst the long term plan was to prepare a
national insurrection in support of the expected Allied landings,
there was disagreement over the best tactics to employ in the
meantime. Some favoured massing in large formations, in effect
local insurrections. Others argued for small mobile units of 20-30
men as the only viable tactic. The latter was undoubtedly the
right policy. On three occasions when the Resistance in the South
did mass for conventional warfare, on the Plateau of Glieres; at
Vercors and at Mont Mouchet they were both heavily outnumbered and
outgunned by the Germans. Spaniards participated in these actions,
but had warned against them - knowing full well from the war
against Franco that lightly armed troops could not engage in
conventional warfare without armour, artillery and air support.
Despite these setbacks resistance in the 18
months before D-Day inflicted massive damage on infrastructure and
tied down German troops across France. The Resistance could far
more easily neutralise railways, industrial sites and power
stations than Allied air power, and their intelligence networks,
at first lightly regarded by the British, were of decisive
importance. Between June 1943 and May 1944 nearly 2,000
locomotives were destroyed. In October 1943 alone, over 3,000
attacks were recorded on the railways, 427 resulting in heavy
damage, with 132 trains derailed. In the South West such sabotage
was so effective that by June 6th 1944 it took 3 days to travel
from Paris to Toulouse!
Whilst the guerrillas were less numerous in
the North, between April and September 1943 some 500 resistance
efforts were recorded, 278 against railways and other
infrastructure, killing 950 Germans and injuring 1,890. In
Normandy and Brittany, Spaniards blew up electrical transformers,
a railway station and switching yard and part of an airfield.
Spanish resistance fighters in Paris assassinated General von
Schaumberg, commandant of Greater Paris and General von Ritter who
was responsible for the recruitment of forced labour.
Liberation!
The effectiveness of the guerrilla campaign
was to lead Eisenhower to comment that the Resistance effort
around D-Day was worth a full 15 regular army divisions. Likewise
Maquis support of the northern drive of the American 7th army was
estimated as worth 4 or 5 divisions of regular troops. It should
also be remembered that Allied troops never entered the South of
the country. The whole area west of the Rhone and South of the
Loire rivers was liberated by the national insurrection of the
Maquis, as also was Brittany, save for the Atlantic ports with
their strong German garrisons.
In the Department of L'Ariege the 14th
Spanish Corps of Guerrillas (reformed April 1942) played a key
role in evicting the Germans. Between June 6th and August 1944
they attacked German convoys and liberated several villages before
taking Foix, the Nazi HQ in the area. A strong German column
attempted a counter attack but were caught in an ambush. Despite
their logistical superiority they were pinned down by machine gun
fire and 1,200 surrendered. A key role was played by a solitary
machine gunner who held his post raking the Germans with bullets.
One resistance fighter recollects this man, "..firing like a
crazy one", and adds, as if by way of explanation, "...but
he was a Spaniard, a guerillero". Allied observers of the
engagement commented that the Spaniards were "uniquely
perfect guerrillas".
Other examples of the Spanish contribution
include the Anarchist Libertad battalion which liberated Cahors
and other towns and the participation of 6,000 Spanish guerrillas
in the liberation of Toulouse. One notable encounter occurred as
the Germans attempted to withdraw through the Gard area, following
the fall of Marseilles. A group of 32 Spaniards and 4 Frenchmen
tackled a German column (consisting of 1,300 men in 60 lorries,
with 6 tanks and 2 self propelled guns), at La Madeiline, on
August 22nd 1944. The Maquis blew up the road and rail bridges and
positioned themselves on surrounding hills with machine guns. The
battle raged from 3.00pm till noon the next day. 3 Maquis were
wounded, 110 Germans killed, 200 wounded and the rest surrendered.
The German commander committed suicide!
Over 4,000 Spaniards took part in the Maquis
uprising in Paris that began on August 21st 1944. Photographs show
them armed and crouched behind barricades in scenes one could
easily mistake for the street fighting in Barcelona in July 1936.
Before long they were supported by regular troops from the
Normandy beach-heads. The first units to enter Paris and reach the
Hotel de Ville were from the 9th Tank Company of the French 2nd
Armoured Division. But the lead half tracks bore the names of
Spanish battlefields - "Guadalajara";
"Teruel"; "Madrid" and "Ebro". They
were manned by Spaniards, of whom there were 3,200 serving in the
2nd Armoured. Many of these were veterans of the 26th Division (Durruti
Column) who had entered the French army from the prison camps in
1939 and gone on to fight in North Africa.
Captain Raymond Dronne, commander of the 9th
Company, remembers that the Spanish Anarchists were "both
difficult and easy to command". In accordance with their
libertarian principles "...it was necessary that they accept
for themselves the authority of their officers ... They wished to
understand the reason for that which was asked of them".
However, "...when they granted their confidence it was total
and complete". "They were almost all anti-militarists,
but they were magnificent soldiers, valiant and experienced. If
they had embraced our cause spontaneously and voluntarily it was [because]
it was the cause of liberty. Truly they were fighters for liberty".
The 9th Company featured prominently in the
victory parade through Paris with its tanks drawn up at the Arc de
Triomphe. They went on to see action on the Moselle and were the
first to enter Strasbourg, supported by American infantry. Their
campaign ended in Germany at Berchtesgaden, Hitler's "Eagles
Nest". Having fought from the streets of Barcelona, across
the battlefields of Spain, North Africa and France they stood as
victors in the final bolt hole of the Nazi scum.
Epilogue
Liberation saw a brief period of euphoria,
with the Resistance bridging the vacuum of power in the South -
dealing with collaborators and remnants of the Milice; setting up
local committees to administer supplies and re-establishing
communities on a more equal footing. Ordinary men and women were
momentarily in charge of their own history. But this was not to
last. De Gaulle and his allies had no desire to see Southern
France controlled by revolutionary elements. The Maquisards
represented a threat because "an army of guerrillas is always
a revolutionary army". De Gaulle feared for revolution in
Toulouse where 6,000 Spanish guerrillas were "...still imbued
with the revolutionary spirit they had brought from beyond the
Pyrenees" . To deal with this explosive situation the Maquis
were offered the choice of disarming or joining the regular French
forces for the attack on German garrisons in the Atlantic ports.
This would show America that there was a regular national army and
no need for Allied occupation, and it would also remove the armed
bands whilst a smooth transference to Gaullist power took place.
This was easily achieved because de Gaulle had cemented his
position in key sections of the Resistance by control of the arms
supply.
In all 25,000 Spaniards had died in the
camps or fighting in armed units. With the German surrender in
1945 the Spaniards believed, understandably, that the Allies would
turn their attention to Franco and that, without German and
Italian support, he would be swiftly crushed. In fact many had
been fighting all along in anticipation of returning to Spain for
some unfinished business. Anti-fascist guerrilla activity had
continued in Spain throughout the war. Meanwhile, exiles in
Algeria and France had been preparing for a return - stockpiling
arms "borrowed" from American depots. Likewise, as the
French 2nd Armoured Division advanced north from Paris, its 9th
Company was secretly joined by six members of the Durruti Column
who had been with the Resistance in Paris. Whilst fighting
alongside their old comrades in the 9th Company they hid arms and
ammunition from the battlefields in secret caches. These were
later collected and taken to Spain.
1945 saw Franco very much alone, condemned
by Britain, Russia and the USA and excluded from the United
Nations. The British Labour government, prior to their election in
1945, had promised a quick resolution to the Spanish question. But
sadly history proved that the British were not to be trusted. The
Labour government, despite its promises, used delaying tactics in
the United Nations to stop effective action, arguing that it was
purely an internal matter of the Spanish people and that they had
no wish to "permit or encourage civil war in that
country". Economic blockade and international isolation would
have finished Franco off within months - but Britain and US would
not support this; despite protestations from other countries who
favoured, if necessary, armed intervention. For the British and
Americans, as in 1936-1939, the real problem was not Franco but
the possibility of a "Red" revolution of the Spanish
working class. This attitude solidified as the Cold War developed.
A gradual rehabilitation of Franco took place, ending in full
recognition and incorporation into the United Nations in 1955.
Fascist Spain took its place at the table of the not so new world
order.
Even in 1945, whilst some continued to
believe that diplomacy would restore the Republican government,
many militants opted to renew the armed struggle. Between 1944 and
1950 approximately 15,000 guerrillas fought in Spain, bringing
half the country into a state of war. But, despite strikes in
Barcelona and the Basque areas, involving over 250,000 people, the
population as a whole, wearied by war and repression, were not
prepared to rise, or had placed their faith in the diplomacy of
Western "democracies". The guerrillas were left to fight
alone and inadequately armed against Franco's impressive police
and military apparatus, which was always well supplied with
intelligence on guerrilla movements from the other side of the
French border. It was an unequal struggle. As Juan Molina lamented:
"The prisons consumed a generation of fighters, defeated this
time irremediably ... All strength in life has its limits and this
limit was amply exceeded by the Resistance, in almost inhuman
endurance. But it had to succumb".
These working class militants, who bore
arms for ten or even twenty years against Fascism and Capitalism,
deserve far more than just remembrance, though even that has been
denied them. The struggle for which they gave their lives has not
ended - it falls to us to continue that struggle and keep alight
the flame of their resistance.
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