HOME   UP

 

SPANISH SKY SPREADS ITS STARS : THE STORY OF THE THALMANN BATTALION AND THE FIRST GERMANS IN ARMED STRUGGLE AGAINST FASCISM

By Ewald P. Schulz

International Brigade Commemoration Committee. 59 pages. £6

Reviewed by Jim Burns

The title of this small book is taken from a song composed for the Thalmann battalion of the 11th International Brigade: “Spanish sky spreads its stars/Over our trenches/And the morning already greets from afar/Soon we’ll go out to fight again”. The music was written by Paul Desau, the lyrics credited to Karl Ernst, a pseudonym for G.Kabisch, Desau’s wife. The battalion took its name from that of Ernst Thalmann, head of the KPD (German Communist Party), who had been arrested in 1933 when Hitler came to power. He was killed in Buchenwald concentration camp in 1944.

The Thalmann battalion was largely formed from anti-Fascist Germans, some of whom were already living in exile in Spain when the Civil War broke out in July 1936. They initially formed two small units, the Grupo Thalmann which fought with the Spanish Anarchist militia, and the Centuria Thalmann, the larger of the two. There is a photograph of their banner in the book. When the Communist Party decided to call for volunteers from around the world to join the International Brigades, the Germans became an integral part of the 11th Brigade, the first to be formed. French, Polish, Austrian, Dutch and other volunteers were also incorporated into the 11th Brigade.

The German Battalion comprised approximately 4,000 men and women. Exact numbers are always difficult to arrive at with regard to the Spanish Civil War. Around 1,000 Germans were killed during the fighting. If my reading of material relating to the war is anything to go by I would guess that quite a few of those who did survive suffered a wound, of one kind or another.

It’s a fact that the Comintern, the international arm of the Russian Communist Party, effectively controlled the International Brigades.  However,  this did not mean that every member of the Brigades was a communist. A figure of 60% to 70%  membership is quoted for the Germans, but it’s of interest to note that Alois Weisberger, a miner individually profiled, was a member of the Catholic Centre Party in Germany.  He was interned in France when the Spanish Republic collapsed in 1939, was arrested by French police in 1943 and handed over to the Gestapo who sent him to a concentration camp.  He survived the war.

The Thalmann battalion had participated in many of the leading battles of the Spanish Civil War, from the defence of Madrid to Jarama, Guadalajara, Brunete, Teruel, and the Ebro. When the International Brigades were withdrawn in November, 1938 it was obviously impossible for German, Austrian and Czech volunteers to return to their native countries. They were, in many cases, still in Spain early in 1939, and helped cover the retreat of remnants of the Republican Army, along with numerous civilians, into France, where they were interned in makeshift camps.

What happened to them when war was declared in 1939? Some escaped from the internment camps and joined Resistance groups. Others volunteered for the French Foreign Legion. The unlucky ones still in internment were captured and moved to concentration camps, where many died. A few who had managed to get to Russia were treated with suspicion by Stalin and, according to the book, “unjustly persecuted”.

And after the war? We are told that, in West Germany, Spanish Civil War veterans were “regarded first and foremost as communists who were not to be trusted.....Brigaders were often denied recognition as victims of fascism, and suffered numerous disadvantages and repression in their professional and private lives”. It seems that members of the Condor Legion, Hitler’s contribution to Franco’s forces, “had their service time in Spain credited to their retirement pay.....Needless to say they never faced any disadvantages or persecution”. The situation in East Germany was different, and veterans there were honoured and were active in the creation of the new state.

Spanish Sky Spreads its Stars, as well as what it says about Germans in Spain, also has an article about Paddy McAllister, an Irish veteran of the International Brigades, and another about Manus O’Riordan, described as “a champion of economic and social justice”. His father fought in the Spanish Civil War. There are photographs, a bibliography, and other relevant material.  It all adds up to a useful addition to the story of the International Brigades in Spain.

The price of this publication is £6 plus £2.50 postage and it is available from Lynda Walker at lyndaernest@btinternet.com