Through the investigation of primary and secondary sources, students in this lesson will identify, understand and be able to explain the story of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, including how and why the brigade formed, its experiences in Spain during the civil war, and how these soldiers were treated when they returned home.
US History
World History
European History
Albacete, Spain
July 6, 1937My Dear Friend,
I’m sure that by this time you are still waiting for a detailed explanation of what has this international struggle to do with my being here. Since this is a war between whites who for centuries have held us in slavery, and have heaped every kind of insult and abuse upon us, segregated and jim-crowed us; why I, a Negro who have fought through these years for the rights of my people, am here in Spain today?
Because we are no longer an isolated minority group fighting hopelessly against an immense giant. Because, my dear, we have joined with, and become an active part of, a great progressive force on whose shoulders rests the responsibility of saving human civilization from the planned destruction of a small group of degenerates gone mad in their lust for power. Because if we crush Fascism here we’ll save our people in America, and in other parts of the world from the vicious persecution, wholesale imprisonment, and slaughter which the Jewish people suffered and are suffering under Hitler’s Fascist heels. All we have to do is to think of the lynching of our people. We can but look back at the pages of American history stained with the blood of Negroes; stink with the burning bodies of our people hanging from trees; bitter with the groans of our tortured loved ones from whose living bodies ears, fingers, toes have been cut for souvenirs, living bodies into which red-hot pokers have been thrust. All because of a hate created in the minds of men and women by their masters who keep us all under their heels while they suck our blood, while they live in their bed of ease by exploiting us…
…We will crush them. We will build us a new society – a society of peace and plenty. There will be no color line, no jim-crow trains, no lynching. That is why, my dear, I’m here in Spain.
On the battlefields of Spain we fight for the preservation of democracy. Here, we’re laying the foundation for world peace, and for the liberation of my people, and of the human race. Here, where we’re engaged in one of the most bitter struggles of human history, there is no color line, no discrimination, no race hatred. There’s only one hate, and that is the hate for Fascism. We know why our enemies are. The Spanish people are very sympathetic towards us. They are lovely people. I’ll tell you about them later…
Excerpts from a letter from Canute Frankson, Abraham Lincoln Brigade in Spain, as repeated in Nelson and Hendricks, Madrid 1937: Letters from the Abraham Lincoln Brigade (New York: Routledge, 1996)
On 17 Jul 1936, after months of planning by several military leaders, Nationalist rebels under General Francisco Franco staged an uprising designed to topple the Spanish government. The Spanish army fractured, some supporting the Republican (government side), but most supporting Franco. Within days, all of Spain was engulfed in an open civil war, one that would rage for three years and ultimately lead to a Nationalist dictatorship under Franco.
Shortly after the civil war started, socialist elements in Spain called for help defending the republic. Stalin’s Soviet Union and Mexico answered the call. Western powers, leery of being dragged into a war, distanced themselves from the conflict, but individual socialists and communists from around the globe began pouring into Spain, many in defiance of their home countries. Calling themselves the “International Brigades”, foreigners eventually numbered 32000-35000 soldiers fighting in Spain. Among these numbers were around 2800 men and women from the United States.
Organized in January 1937, the US volunteers called themselves the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, and were a loose conglomeration of socialists, labor unionists and other leftists interested in fighting fascism. Of the 2800 or so that eventually served in Spain, almost 1/3 lost their lives during the war. Included in these numbers were dozens of black Americans, many of whom equating Spanish Nationalist right-wing ideas with the Jim-crow racism they themselves had experienced firsthand. At a time in our nation’s history when the US was still in the grips of legalized segregation as a result of the Plessy decision forty years earlier, these black Americans found in Spain a society that accepted them as individuals and soldiers in a common cause. Unfortunately, the US government didn’t see them as heroes. When the war ended with a Franco victory in 1939, Americans who had served in Spain were seen as radicals and troublemakers. Although some served in the US military fighting fascism and totalitarianism during WWII, they did so in segregated units and squadrons. It would be another 20 years before America was ready for fundamental social changes.
Through the investigation of primary and secondary sources, students in this lesson will identify, understand and be able to explain the story of the Abraham Lincoln Brigade, including how and why the brigade formed, its experiences in Spain during the civil war, and how these soldiers were treated when they returned home.
To view resource web pages, download the lesson plan PDF above.
While on tour, students will undoubtedly see different memorials and monuments to various men and/or regiments of the Spanish Civil War, whether they be in the Valley of the Fallen (where Franco is buried), where a fascist monument was built to honor those killed during the Civil War, or in various other cities and towns, where since 1975 smaller monuments have been erected to honor those that lost their lives fighting Franco. Spain is still very much a divided nation today when it comes to Franco’s regime. Right-wing groups, many of them allied with conservative elements of the Church, long for the dictatorship, while left-wing radicals seek to bring Spain into line with other more modern European nations. There is no “official” monument to the international brigades in Spain, at least not any more, after Spanish courts forced the removal in late summer 2013 of the Memorial de las Internacionales at Madrid University (where a great deal of fighting took place – often building to building). As students tour the campus for themselves, perhaps they can consider why the Spanish courts forced the monument’s removal.
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