Transcript Slide 1

The Spanish Civil War: Meet the American Volunteers
By
Rodeline Belizaire
Preview
What reasons would a person have to leave
his or her country to go to another country to
fight for a people he/she doesn’t even know?
The Spanish Civil Wart: The International Brigades
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32,000 people from 52
countries volunteered to fight
on the side of Spanish
Republic against General
Francisco Franco and the
military.
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Most of the volunteers were
recruited through their
country’s communist parties.
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The volunteers overall goal
was to "make Madrid the
tomb of fascism."
The Americans: Abraham Lincoln Brigade
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The Abraham Lincoln Brigade was
made up of both men and women.
The Brigade was the first racially
intergraded military unit in U.S.
History.
They served in combat, medical, and
transportation units.
Though they came from all walks of
life , the majority of the ALB were
members of the American
Communist Party.
They had individual motivations for
joining…
The Neutrality Acts by Congress
made it illegal to travel to Spain, they
broke the law when they left for
Spain.
The Americans: Abraham Lincoln Brigade
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An estimated 2,800 Were
Americans, close to 1,000 died in
Spain.
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Many went on to fight against
the Fascists again when the U.S.
entered WWII.
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They were labeled premature
anti-fascists after the U.S
entered WWII
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They were investigated by the
government during the 1950s
during the early years of the Cold
War.
The Americans: Women
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There were 80
women volunteers.
They mostly served
at nurses.
They Come Home
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In the spring of 1938, the
Spanish government called off
the International Brigades.
The Lincoln Brigade disbanded,
the volunteers returned home not
as American heroes, but as
“premature anti-fascists”.
Returning volunteers founded
Veterans of the Abraham Lincoln
Brigade (VALB) to keep the
memory of Spain alive.
In 1979 the VALB founded the
Abraham Lincoln Brigade
Archives (ALBA) in an effort to
preserve and share the legacy of
the American volunteers.
jNo Pasaran!
“No pasarán”–”They shall not
pass”–was the antifascist
rallying call throughout the
war. The phrase referred to
the defense of Madrid from
the Fascist onslaught.
http://www.albavolunteer.org/2011/01/newvideo-uploads-4-%C2%A1no-pasaran/
Journal of the Senses
Think of the volunteers’ overall experience
both in Spain and at home here in the U.S.,
what do you imagine the volunteers saw,
smelled, heard, tasted, and felt as veterans of
the Abraham Lincoln Brigade?