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A people caught between two fires

The Civil War book Between Two Fires by David Baird is exactly the kind of thing you would hope to find when you are aimlessly looking through the shelves in a bookshop

The first-hand accounts are vivid and illuminating

Fo­cus­ing mainly on the area around his adopted home town of Frig­iliana, David Baird has used im­mac­u­late re­search to write in com­pelling de­tail about the “peo­ple of the sierra” –those who took to the moun­tains, some to es­cape, some be­cause they had lit­tle choice and some be­cause they had strong po­lit­i­cal opin­ions that could then only be ex­pressed in a way that led them to be tagged by Franco's cronies as “ban­dits.”

Here, we find a Spain that is al­most im­pos­si­ble to recog­nise in the mod­ern ver­sion of this coun­try. As Baird points out, at the start of the 20th cen­tury, the av­er­age per­son there lived not much longer than 30 years. It was an al­most feu­dal land where even sub­sis­tence farm­ing was only for the lucky ones. There was no pub­lic hos­pi­tals or pub­lic trans­port and mules and don­keys were the only way of get­ting any dis­tance with­out walk­ing in bare feet or sim­ple shoes. It was a time of smug­glers, trav­el­ling re­pair­men, mass il­lit­er­acy and child labour (often start­ing at six years of age). Progress took the form of a sin­gle 30-watt bulb being in­stalled in a house. After Franco's vic­tory, this part of the coun­try also be­came the land of night-time cur­fews where any­one found in the streets after dark was au­to­mat­i­cally ar­rested.

It is un­sur­pris­ing then that there was a sig­nif­i­cant level of sup­port for the men who fought against au­thor­ity. While some towns­peo­ple were kid­napped for ran­som by the rebels it was the civil guard who were more hated but both sides were feared, and for good rea­son. To help the guer­ril­las, such as pro­vid­ing them food or clothes, was enough to be thrown in prison but to not help them at times meant to the out­laws that you were col­lab­o­rat­ing with their enemy and could then be a tar­get for re­crim­i­na­tions. It is in this sense that or­di­nary peo­ple were caught “be­tween two fires.” Apart from the clar­ity of Baird's writ­ing and his even-handed ap­proach (which is a rel­a­tively rare thing in the highly-politi­cised arena of Span­ish his­tory) half of the book is given over to those who were in­ti­mately in­volved in the events of the time to sim­ply tell their own ver­sions. Their first-hand ac­counts are vivid, il­lu­mi­nat­ing and often poignant.

In short, this book plays a cru­cial part in mak­ing sure that this war is not a for­got­ten one, at least to Eng­lish lan­guage read­ers.

Between two fires
Publisher:
Maroma Press
Author:
David Baird
Price:
20 euros
What really occurred in Spain's Forgotten War? This book sheds light on the desperate anti-Franco guerrilla conflict.
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