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The International Brigade Memorial Trust

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About Me


Welcome to the myspace website of The International Brigade Memorial Trust.
The IBMT is formed from the veterans of the International Brigade Association, the Friends of the I.B.A., representatives of the Marx Memorial Library, and historians specialising in the Spanish Civil War.
Its aims are:
To educate the public in the history of the men and women who fought in the International Brigades and in the medical and other support services in the Spanish Civil War. In particular, by preserving and cataloguing valuable historical material relating hereto and by making such material available to the public.
To foster good citizenship by remembering those who have fallen in the Spanish Civil War by preserving, maintaining and assisting in the construction of war memorials.

Spain, July 1936: from uprising to civil war
In July 1936 a military rising was launched in Spain by a group of military generals aiming to overthrow the Republican government, elected only five months previously. Though initially successful in many parts of Spain, opponents of the rising- working people, trade-unionists, members of political organisations from the centre to the left and, in some cases, members of the Civil Guard and the new Republican police force, the Assault Guard- took to the streets, erected barricades, and confronted the insurgents.
Faced with determined opposition the generals saw that their rising was in real danger of being defeated. With their best soldiers, the elite Army of Africa commanded by General Francisco Franco, trapped in Morocco, the Rebels turned to fascist Italy and Nazi Germany for assistance. After some initial hesitation, both Hitler and Mussolini sent help to the Rebels, crucially providing aircraft to ferry the Army of Africa across the strait of Gibraltar onto the peninsular. Once across the strait, the Army of Africa rapidly headed north, leaving a trail of slaughter and destruction in their wake. Within weeks Franco's forces were approaching Madrid, where they united with the rebel army of the north, led by General Mola.
Desperate pleas by the Spanish Republican government for assistance from the European democracies of Britain and France fell, overwhelmingly, on deaf ears. Terrified of the prospect of a wider European conflagration, and convinced that appeasement of Germany and Italy was the best means of preventing it, the European powers chose not to intervene, nor even to provide military support to the Republican government. Instead, an agreement was made not to intervene in the conflict, to which Britain, France, Germany Italy, Portugal and the USSR all agreed to adhere. However, it quickly became apparent that the agreement strongly favoured the Rebels, who continued to receive assistance from Germany and Italy, despite the non-intervention agreement.
Appalled at the prospect of another European country succumbing to fascism, supporters of the Spanish Republicans government from around the world flocked to its aid. To these anti-fascists, Spain was the latest battleground in the European war against fascism, and Spain offered a chance to, at last, to check its advance. At the same time, the Comintern and the USSR, fully aware of the extent of German and Italian assistance to the Rebels, chose to provide help to the Republicans. In addition to the military help sent from the USSR, the Comintern (the Communist International) took on the role of organising the volunteers for the Spanish Republic, many of whom had already arrived in Spain. Over the coming months, these International Brigades of foreign volunteers would fight and die alongside the Spanish Republicans in their determination not to let the fascists pass. Madrid, its defenders declared, 'would be the tomb of fascism'.
The 'British' volunteers
Between 1936 and 1939 over 35,000 men and women, from over 50 countries, left their homes to volunteer for the Republican forces. More than 2,300 of these came from Britain, Ireland and the commonwealth, of whom over 500 were killed. Perhaps 80% were members of the Communist Party, or the Young Communist League, though volunteers with an alternative political background or who were active in the trade union movement were also accepted. Recent research suggests that a significant number, perhaps 20%, were Jewish in origin.
The volunteers came from overwhelmingly working class backgrounds, with large numbers hailing from cities such as London, Manchester, Liverpool and Glasgow. Only a small number were unemployed with large numbers involved in industrial occupations, such as labouring, construction, ship-building and mining.
And despite an enduring image of the brigades comprising young poets, the volunteers were somewhat older than this myth would have it. The average age for the volunteers from Britain was twenty-nine.
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My Interests

Philosophy Football have produced a range of "Spanish Civil War" t-shirts, as a tribute to the 70 year anniversary of the republican struggle against Fascism.

Philosophy Football have also supported the publishing of Jim Jumps "Poems From Spain'' and have the book available for a web based purchase.

Please visit their web site to find out more.

http://www.philosophyfootball.com

70 years ago in 1937 the British Battalion of the International Brigade fought in its first battle at Jarama against Franco's fascists. This superb anniversary T-shirt is based on the Battalion's banner from the period which was carried to Brunete, Ebro and elsewhere. Volunteers from Britain totalled 2,300, of whom 525 died in Spain.

I'd like to meet:


IBMT - The International Brigade Memorial Trust - Please click this link to visit our web site

Music:

The Internationale, Jarama Valley, En La Plaza De Mi Pueblo, The Abraham Lincoln Brigade, Asturias, El Quinto Regimiento, The Bantry Girls’ Lament, García y Galán, Los Cuatro Generales, Llegó Con Tres Heridas, Noche Nochera, Viva La Quinte Brigada, Si Me Quieres Escribir, Tú Que Brillas, Los Marineros, Peat Bog Soldiers, Viva La Quince Brigada, Taste of Ashes, Spanish Bombs (By The Clash), Song Of The Spanish War (By Phil Ochs), Always The Cause (By Al Stewart), A La Barricadas, Sons Of The People.

Movies:

Land and Freedom (1995) Director: Ken Loach.

For Whom the Bell Tolls (1943) Director: Sam Wood.

BFI - The British Film Institute - Please click here to search their web site for historic footage

Books:

Poems from Spain: British and Irish International Brigaders on the Spanish Civil War
Edited by Jim Jump, Foreword by Jack Jones
There are now five books on the British Battalion. Three are works by members of the battalion, or its supporters:
Alexander, Bill. British Volunteers for Liberty, London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1982.
Ryan, Frank (ed.). The Book of the XVth Brigade: Records of British, American, Canadian and Irish Volunteers in the XV International Brigade in Spain 1936-1938, Madrid: War Commissariat, 1938 (reissued by Warren & Pell in 2003.)
Rust, William. Britons in Spain, London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1939 (reissued by Warren & Pell in 2003.)
The other two are both academic studies.
The first, a recent rather more critical work, draws heavily on the previously unseen material held in Moscow:
Hopkins, James K. Into the Heart of the Fire: The British in the Spanish Civil War, California: Stanford, 1998.
The second, and more recent publication, forms the basis of much of the information on this website:
Baxell, Richard. British Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War: The British Battalion in the International Brigades, 1936-1939, London, Routledge/Cañada Blanch Studies on Contemporary Spain, 2004 (reissued by Warren & Pell in 2006.)

Heroes:

"You Are History. You Are Legend"