Archivist Ramon Alberch discusses the International Brigades.
In the civil war, there’s an important phenomenon that are the international brigades. Why does this happen? The international brigade has a double reason. It’s that ‘Proletarians of the world join’, help us fight against fascism. People from the United States, from Cuba, from Germany, from England, from very different countries come here to give support to the republic. One of the reasons is ideologic. They see that Franco’s movement is in line with fascism and Nazism, and that a radical right-wing movement needs to be confronted, in that sense they are a bit visionary. There’s a part of adventurers. There’s also the strong reaction when the allies declare that they won’t intervene in the Spanish civil war. People say, “if our countries won’t intervene, we will go there”. Here comes fantastic people like George Orwell who, besides having written 1984, writes a fantastic book that not many know called “Homage to Catalonia”, and it’s his experience there. Here also comes Ernest Hemmingway to fire some bullets. Here comes too a character as sinister and strange as a Cuban named Rolando Masferrer, who ends up being a mobster that is murdered in Miami with a bomb. Many kind of people come, but the great majority, besides some adventure seekers, are people who believe in a universal cause of justice and equality and think that we are fooling ourselves if we think that the fascist and Nazi issue is a Spanish thing. They see, I think with great foresight, that this is an international issue and needs to be faced. Many of them, of these international brigades, come also from Yugoslavia, Russia, many countries. There are still association of this kind. For example, regarding the Lincoln column, I think that the archive is in New York. Some of them generate, it’s thousands of people who come here to the civil war. Some of them are writers that, maybe aren’t in the front line as much as Orwell and Hemmingway, but they leave written some very memorable pages about the war. Many young fighters, acknowledged photographers. Bobby Cappa runs around here taking photographs too. There’s an extraordinary mixture with a common element, a great conviction that there’s an universal fight against fascism and there’s also the ideologic feeling of universal fraternity. It’s an interesting phenomenon, there’s much written about the international brigades. The problem is that, many of them weren’t military, they didn’t know how to fight. They had great losses, it’s cannon fodder that goes to the front line without the needed preparation. But it was an important support, if you want even real besides the symbolic, to the cause of the republic.