Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Victim Respect

From the BBC:
“Franco victim's daughter buried next to him after long battle”


Ascensión Mendieta's life changed at the age of 13  Supporters and relatives saw Ascensión Mendieta fulfil her ambition of being buried together with her father on Tuesday, after a life spent searching for justice. Aged 93, she died in Madrid 80 years after Timoteo Mendieta was shot by a fascist firing squad and his body was dumped in a mass grave. She became a justice campaigner for victims of Spanish dictator Gen Francisco Franco, and fought successfully to have her father's body exhumed and given a proper burial. "Now I can rest in peace," she said in 2017, at the end of a legal battle that had taken her as far as Argentina following a lifetime of closed doors in Spain.

Sentenced to death 
The second eldest of seven children from the village of Sacedón, east of Madrid, she never forgot how, as a 13 year old, she had opened the door after lunchtime one day to a group of men she described as "well spoken". It was autumn 1939 and the soldiers asked where her father was sleeping the siesta, before taking him away to Guadalajara, 50km (31 miles) away. According to his family, Timoteo Mendieta had seen no real action as a soldier on the losing Republican side in the Spanish Civil War (1936-39). But, besides being the village butcher, he had been the head of the local branch of the UGT trade union. In the Spain led by Franco, that was enough to warrant a death sentence. Mendieta was shot against the wall of Guadalajara's cemetery on 16 November 1939, one of an estimated 822 executions carried out there up to 1944.  The family were not allowed to visit the mass grave and instead threw flowers over the cemetery wall.  As well as the cruelty of her father's murder, Ascensión recalled the hardship and ostracism her mother endured, forced to move the family away to a single room in Madrid.  "My mother was left a widow with seven children. I don't feel rancour, but all those killed unjustly should all be buried decently in boxes," she once said. Once democracy was restored in Spain after Franco's death in 1975, Ascensión and other relatives petitioned Spain's authorities to assist in the location of their father's remains, but without success.  Then, at the age of 88, Ascensión flew to Argentina to add her complaint to a growing case file being compiled by Judge María Servini. The Argentine judge had launched an investigation, at the behest of Spanish memory associations, into crimes against humanity during the Franco regime.  When Timoteo Mendieta's remains were finally exhumed on the order of a Spanish judge who accepted Ms Servini's request that he be sought as a missing person, it was the first time a Franco-era victim had been recovered through the courts.

'Infected wounds'
It was a huge breakthrough, but Ascensión's first thoughts were for Paz, the sister with whom she had knocked on doors in Guadalajara and Madrid in search of justice, but who had died too soon to see it arrive. "If it wasn't for that judge in Argentina, we would never have found him. In Spain no-one has done a thing for the dead," Ascensión said. This most personal of struggles had inadvertently made humble Ascensión into a public figure in her final years. She bore her celebrity status with smiling bewilderment, but she always had a crystal-clear view on the injustice her family and thousands more had to stomach during the Franco regime, and the failure of the modern Spanish state to come to terms with the country's bloody legacy. After her coffin had been lowered into the same tomb as her father, one of her four children, Francisco Vargas Mendieta, paid tribute to her life, from the cruel blow of losing her father to her hard times as a teenage seamstress and her battle for justice and historical memory.  "Many people say what Ascensión did, and what others of us do, reopens wounds, but, quite honestly, our wounds are already infected."

Who was Francisco Franco?
 After election of leftist Popular Front in 1936, Franco and other generals launch revolt, sparking three-year civil war Helped by Nazi Germany and Mussolini's Italy, Franco wins civil war in 1939 and establishes a dictatorship, proclaiming himself head of state - "El Caudillo" Franco keeps tight grip on power until his death in 1975, after which Spain becomes a democracy

^ This is a happy and also a sad ending to a very sad story. Ascension Mendieta not only lost her father at a young age to Franco’s Dictatorship, but in supposedly-democratic Spain she had to fight for over 40 years. The Spanish Government decided rather than deal with the crimes and deaths committed by Franco and his followers they would simply bury their heads in the sand and make-believe nothing bad happened from 1936-1975. Can you imagine the world’s reaction if the Germans did the same thing regarding Hitler and the Nazis by burying their heads in the sand and making-believe nothing bad happened from 1933-1945? The world would not stand for it and yet it is allowed and encouraged in Spain. The Spanish Government and the Spanish people need to start admitting the crimes that occurred in their country in the not-to-distant past and after admitting the crimes they need to start being open about their dark history. Only then can Spain be called democratic. ^

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