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ttJJLlcJ - - I ( fJi '''' ' rV fft ' ' ¥ li -- ' '„ rm Spanish Civil War J2£ K ' qV FRANCE - -- oi Corunna - " -U- -rx Reraemberecl S-miu- ni LuKcXASTURIAS-vBASQU- Ef Ovil-ClO- a 'Durafev Pcrpignan 'r ln_rl_tll-i-rilTA fI _J — vi:i?u_n:_ai Paninlnn Fifty years ago on 18 July 1936 Gen-eral Francisco Franco began a Hitler-Mussoli- ni supported revolt to over-thro- w the Republican Popular Govern-ment of Spanish President Azana elected to office five months pre-vious- ly What was supposed to be a quick takeover of povver turned into 33 months of civil war a fight for demo-crac- y and national independence by the Spanish people The war was ultimately lost because Germany and Italy grasped the oppor-tunit- y to' support the reactionary Franco forces And because the non-intervention- ist policies of Britain and France prohibited the säle of arms to the Republican government Even though thousands of volunteers from over 35 countries fought in the Interna-tional Brigades alongside the Republi-can army they needed arms to quell the fascist forces Mexico sent light Canadians the Spanish Civil - This poem vvas by Päiviö — one of most accomplishod plawrights and of the Finnish Canadian community — in 1938 and Finnish by his son Jules Päiviö in Finnish tvvice by fire To My Son in Spain Unexpected you arrived from yourjob to our cabin home In the middle of the week I have laken a bit of a holiday you say Just a short visit I have little time A costly ride is waiting That sounded strange But should I ask? The are young and so unpredicuble Such happy chaner with the brothers The youngest you get to laugh Encouragement to Mother But soon the too short wintry day passes You are aware and tearyourself away Abruptly a goodbye to ali and leave We leave you at the door and retum inside Butnotyetyougo Momenu later you call me outside And offer your hand firmly clasping mine And so quietly — that through the enbin walls not heard So that Mother should not hear She may not be able to stand it — murmur Goodbye Dad! I am on my way to Spain! So sudden — so unexpected It hiis like hail from the sky I had been bedridden and even now Couldhardly stand I feel so old and helpless Needing support Life is heavy so sad and sorrowful I struggle hesitate have difficulty finding I hardly expected this just now Passed my lips this vveakness That shames me secretly so Have you considered this matter? Look from such wars you do not retum I have considered — Dad and decided so! A hard firm handshake yet You disappear into the wintry darkness I slowly into the cabin stagger Such contradictory emotions seethe through me Now depressing me then again such elation Pride in a son who does not fear Who wants to fight for nght That feeling strengthens inspires me A son' s loss a life so young Perhaps That presses down on me in gloom Time and the wamng Mac-Pa- p veterans to Ottawa Two Mac-Pa- p veterans Ross Russell and Bill Stapleton vvere in a group that last week travelled to Ottawa to yet another petition to the government for recognition of the re-gim- ent Mr Stapleton stated that as a result of this last visit the possibility is better than ever before official Ca-nadian recognition these volunteers who fifty years ago fought in Spain for democracy and against the tide of Italian Fascism and German Naziism The Mae-Pap- s as they have come to be knovvn have been officially ignored in Canada Historian Victor Hoar of the University of Michigan has esti-mate- d that as many as 60 per cent of the volunteers were members of— or sympathetic toward— the Communist party a fact that caused the Canadian establishment to distrust them In April 1937 the government officially noninterventionist in the Spanish Civil War passed the Foreign Enlistment Act The legislation imposed severe penalties— including two years' hard labor— on anyone serving in a foreign army and was intended to keep Cana-dians from serving on either side of the conflict But it mostly affected those sympathetic to the republican 8 arms and food but the main support came from USSR And this support was frustrated by European countries refusing passage of Soviet military sup-plie- s to Spain and German subma-rine- s sinking Soviet ships carrying arms and food through Mediterra-nea- n The Spanish people and many of the international volunteers vvere the first victims of imperialist plans to quash real democracy in Spain These thou-sands of anti-fasci- st fighters made a brave attempt to hait political reaction in Spain but the civil war vvas a forerun-ne- r of vvorld war which brought devastation and death to untold mil-lion- s before fascist crusade vvas stopped It is time to remember the bravery and sacrifice of fighters for Republi-can Spain as we continue their fight for peace and democracy Finnish in War 1936 39 vvritten Aku the poets journalisti translated from 1980 The manuscript vvasdestroyed young vvords serious forever passes present Canadian now for for the by the two the the Some news amves You surmount obstaclcs but Have arrived it your destination — Spain More News Death stalks but you have survived I hear you With bnve comrades Doing what must be done wiih honour Weil done son And you others — Our Boys! You wbo are resolving such great maiters With your fina! tum to speak Your life at stake so threatened Salud! An honour volley — ihree limes! Destroy fascism That degraderof the people That loved ones torture butcher others That inflames to vu and such terrors sow That belligerent who awesome threatens bullies That from head to foot armed Even suckling infants to it sacrifice Drunk with dreams world domination Attacks destroys wild with blood Blood it demands In blood it shall iiself drown Strike it down That Spanish people and others too A people fiery strong as steel and brave A people enslaved and exploited So long who on their shoulders Camed the load of their masters Can now at last breathe in freedom In freedom walk the siinny soil of their land In freedom tend their vineyards In freedom build their homes In freedom with ali the strenglh of bursting energy Build a new a happy Spain Salud! An honour volley — ihreetimes! by Aku Päiviö1 I the son of Aku Päiviö was only one of about 1 80 Finnish Canadians from across the country whojoined the 1250 volunteers from Canada We fought in the famous Interna-tional Bngades the Bngadesthat helped save Madnd in its darkest days from the rebcl Franco troops who had the active support of fascist Italy and Nazi Germany2 See also Jules Päiviö Collection mhso and interview by Varpu Lindstrom-Bes- t 1980 mmm lii Russell: 'recording history faithfully' cause which attracted the majority of foreign volunteers None of the 600 Canadians who sur-vived the war was prosecuted under the act although many complained of 1939 Now denied official recognition by the Canadian government— and veterans' and medical care such recognition would bring— they have launched a campaign governmenfs policy But declared Constant a in University of Faculty of Engineering "most of us do not a damn about benefits It is principle the thing volunteered to fight fascism ATLANTIC OCEAN Ml ii h Pomexidri C 'Leon ] u VXNAVA KM --' - r LEON PaltnciaV) OLD i' A -- —— vAC_Trr — %_ ' " s UMl iLr 1 Zaniii l portugal) 7 lISBON Ii j ix tSar Af mKSaTRdKu- -raj' f V t mi iii I Km ii iiii I ii ! - liirKi (!lfel 50 yoaro ago in Tho Globo and Cloil On Nov 1936 "'Spanish Fascist insurgents stormed to the gates of Madrid tonight Government militia fought to keep the attacking Moors and Fascist troops from breaking through into the very streets of the Capital The roar and clatter of cannon and machine guns shook the city while overhead Government planes fought off Fas-cist bombers Insurgent shells screamed over' Madrids suburbs with Government batteries replying vvith heavy barrage The insur-gent attack for weeks an ever-nar-rowi- ng semi-circ- le south of Madrid was into solid front driving :oward the heart of Mad Salamani rid On Nov 10 1936 "Insurgent troops crossed the Manzanares River tonight and streamed into Madrid proper penetrating to the Calle de Toledo in the city's south-vveste- rn section The entrance to the city was made across the Toledo bridge which was quickly reconst-ructe- d by insurgent labor unions after having been dynamited by the Government Regular infantrymen vvere the first to cross the new span They were followed by light tanks which rumbled into the Calle de Toledo to begin cautious advance toward the centre of the Capital A Government column the Casa de Campo was completely 6urrounded The artil-ler- y withdrew toward the northern part of Madrid" On Nov 936 "Horror grasped firc-ridd- en and blast-ravag-ed city tonight as General Jose Vare!a's svvarthy Moors sought to force their way tovvard the centre behind air artillery and shrapnel barrages vvhicii leit alrnost no por-tio- n of Madrid unscathed The Capi-tal blanketed under pall of smoke vvas to three new air raids during the morning The screams of women who refused to abandon the mangled bodies of their loved ones VMuhJliA Avulla XOuadalajara-- - ff Akil ANDALUSIA ' i J TIV Il I M SJ -- li 6 a a " J a 1 8 1 a J St- - iiii iii Vi l" I ?k J f V 1 " Malani (ilbriliar reminV LSPA NISH MeTilia- -7- -- XMOROCCO fSl country holding conferences on the subject Russell who left his as a Montreal assistant store manager in summer of 1937 to go to Spain said: changes In school was taught that Louis Riel was a terrible person Now they have a statue of him in Regina I would like to a plaque for the Mac-Pa- ps in Peace Tower police harassment following their re- - lt's a question of having history faith tum to Canada after the war ended in fuiiv record the role we nlaved the pensions to change the professor the Waterloo's give the the of VVe nationaiims republicans converged defending Government this subjected Scgovia Brum-u- - VA1 (C'iMiia the job the "History see the Russell's initiative may be bearing fruit In July Conservative MP Bud Jardine deputy chairman of the feder-a- l standing committee on veterans' af-fai-rs agreed to invite a delegation of battalion veterans to press their case before the committee this fall al-though a meeting has yet to take place At the same time Jardine has publicly stated his sympathy for battalion Indeed he once said: "These years before the Canadian government men did fight against fascism It vvas came around" against the law of the day but times Ross Russell 75 is spearheading the have changed It's time now to refresh assault on Ottawa He and a group of Canadians' memories" fellow veterans have travelled across -R- ICHARD in Toronto MADRID Cucnca J NEW C ASTI LE 'iiuithana' JClU(lnl Kriil iuinltihiiu n Jiiru Soria Ali) Mun I IIIUHrT 1 " j " ARAGON CATALONIA Lrrirli SaraKoSsa£Aro A VjTarrairana ValcnciiJ jVALENCIA BALEARIC MURCIA Munia C Iii tiuf-n- i H liesi i „ (ia Inn P„im-l- r 'tlRUlT-i- s UiTona Bilehile f~l Teruel Tolccln Jila Candi- - AliiMiur IBIZA Palm HTir ii n i 3 +r MKDITERRANEAN SEA y 'Barcelona MINORCA MAJORCA (Xj Q ISLEd ALGERIA REPUBLICAN AND NATIONALIST SPAIN AT THE START OF THE CIVIL WAR i --— i jiWJfämMWm}WmMs I vet-erans WRIGHT JULES PÄIVIÖ We were not heroes — we only did what we saw as our humanitarian duty The pomp and glory went to the victori-ou- s armies Dolores Ibarruri "La Pasionaria" the sym-boli- c leader and conscience of Republican Spain said on bidding farewell to the volunteers in Barcelona September 1938: You came to us from ali peoples ali races You came likebrothersofours like sons of undying Spain and in the hardest days of the war when the capital of the Spanish Republic was threatened it was you gallant comrades of the International Brigades who helped to save the city with your fighting enthusiasm your heroism and your spirit of sacrifice For the first time in the history of the people's struggles there has been the spectacle breath-takin- g in its grandeur of the formation of International Brigades to help save a threatened country's freedom and inde-pendence the freedom and independence of our Spanish land They gave us everything: their youthortheirmaturity their science or their experience their blood and their lives their hopes and their aspirations — and they asked us for nothing at ali! That is to say they did want a post in the struggle they did aspire to the honour of dying for us5 October 1936 The first Interna-tional Brigaders from Europe march through Barcelona
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Viikkosanomat, December 22, 1986 |
Language | fi |
Subject | Finland -- Newspapers; Newspapers -- Finland; Finnish Canadians Newspapers |
Date | 1986-12-22 |
Type | application/pdf |
Format | text |
Rights | Licenced under section 77(1) of the Copyright Act. For detailed information visit: http://www.connectingcanadians.org/en/content/copyright |
Identifier | VikkoD7000523 |
Description
Title | 001082 |
OCR text | ttJJLlcJ - - I ( fJi '''' ' rV fft ' ' ¥ li -- ' '„ rm Spanish Civil War J2£ K ' qV FRANCE - -- oi Corunna - " -U- -rx Reraemberecl S-miu- ni LuKcXASTURIAS-vBASQU- Ef Ovil-ClO- a 'Durafev Pcrpignan 'r ln_rl_tll-i-rilTA fI _J — vi:i?u_n:_ai Paninlnn Fifty years ago on 18 July 1936 Gen-eral Francisco Franco began a Hitler-Mussoli- ni supported revolt to over-thro- w the Republican Popular Govern-ment of Spanish President Azana elected to office five months pre-vious- ly What was supposed to be a quick takeover of povver turned into 33 months of civil war a fight for demo-crac- y and national independence by the Spanish people The war was ultimately lost because Germany and Italy grasped the oppor-tunit- y to' support the reactionary Franco forces And because the non-intervention- ist policies of Britain and France prohibited the säle of arms to the Republican government Even though thousands of volunteers from over 35 countries fought in the Interna-tional Brigades alongside the Republi-can army they needed arms to quell the fascist forces Mexico sent light Canadians the Spanish Civil - This poem vvas by Päiviö — one of most accomplishod plawrights and of the Finnish Canadian community — in 1938 and Finnish by his son Jules Päiviö in Finnish tvvice by fire To My Son in Spain Unexpected you arrived from yourjob to our cabin home In the middle of the week I have laken a bit of a holiday you say Just a short visit I have little time A costly ride is waiting That sounded strange But should I ask? The are young and so unpredicuble Such happy chaner with the brothers The youngest you get to laugh Encouragement to Mother But soon the too short wintry day passes You are aware and tearyourself away Abruptly a goodbye to ali and leave We leave you at the door and retum inside Butnotyetyougo Momenu later you call me outside And offer your hand firmly clasping mine And so quietly — that through the enbin walls not heard So that Mother should not hear She may not be able to stand it — murmur Goodbye Dad! I am on my way to Spain! So sudden — so unexpected It hiis like hail from the sky I had been bedridden and even now Couldhardly stand I feel so old and helpless Needing support Life is heavy so sad and sorrowful I struggle hesitate have difficulty finding I hardly expected this just now Passed my lips this vveakness That shames me secretly so Have you considered this matter? Look from such wars you do not retum I have considered — Dad and decided so! A hard firm handshake yet You disappear into the wintry darkness I slowly into the cabin stagger Such contradictory emotions seethe through me Now depressing me then again such elation Pride in a son who does not fear Who wants to fight for nght That feeling strengthens inspires me A son' s loss a life so young Perhaps That presses down on me in gloom Time and the wamng Mac-Pa- p veterans to Ottawa Two Mac-Pa- p veterans Ross Russell and Bill Stapleton vvere in a group that last week travelled to Ottawa to yet another petition to the government for recognition of the re-gim- ent Mr Stapleton stated that as a result of this last visit the possibility is better than ever before official Ca-nadian recognition these volunteers who fifty years ago fought in Spain for democracy and against the tide of Italian Fascism and German Naziism The Mae-Pap- s as they have come to be knovvn have been officially ignored in Canada Historian Victor Hoar of the University of Michigan has esti-mate- d that as many as 60 per cent of the volunteers were members of— or sympathetic toward— the Communist party a fact that caused the Canadian establishment to distrust them In April 1937 the government officially noninterventionist in the Spanish Civil War passed the Foreign Enlistment Act The legislation imposed severe penalties— including two years' hard labor— on anyone serving in a foreign army and was intended to keep Cana-dians from serving on either side of the conflict But it mostly affected those sympathetic to the republican 8 arms and food but the main support came from USSR And this support was frustrated by European countries refusing passage of Soviet military sup-plie- s to Spain and German subma-rine- s sinking Soviet ships carrying arms and food through Mediterra-nea- n The Spanish people and many of the international volunteers vvere the first victims of imperialist plans to quash real democracy in Spain These thou-sands of anti-fasci- st fighters made a brave attempt to hait political reaction in Spain but the civil war vvas a forerun-ne- r of vvorld war which brought devastation and death to untold mil-lion- s before fascist crusade vvas stopped It is time to remember the bravery and sacrifice of fighters for Republi-can Spain as we continue their fight for peace and democracy Finnish in War 1936 39 vvritten Aku the poets journalisti translated from 1980 The manuscript vvasdestroyed young vvords serious forever passes present Canadian now for for the by the two the the Some news amves You surmount obstaclcs but Have arrived it your destination — Spain More News Death stalks but you have survived I hear you With bnve comrades Doing what must be done wiih honour Weil done son And you others — Our Boys! You wbo are resolving such great maiters With your fina! tum to speak Your life at stake so threatened Salud! An honour volley — ihree limes! Destroy fascism That degraderof the people That loved ones torture butcher others That inflames to vu and such terrors sow That belligerent who awesome threatens bullies That from head to foot armed Even suckling infants to it sacrifice Drunk with dreams world domination Attacks destroys wild with blood Blood it demands In blood it shall iiself drown Strike it down That Spanish people and others too A people fiery strong as steel and brave A people enslaved and exploited So long who on their shoulders Camed the load of their masters Can now at last breathe in freedom In freedom walk the siinny soil of their land In freedom tend their vineyards In freedom build their homes In freedom with ali the strenglh of bursting energy Build a new a happy Spain Salud! An honour volley — ihreetimes! by Aku Päiviö1 I the son of Aku Päiviö was only one of about 1 80 Finnish Canadians from across the country whojoined the 1250 volunteers from Canada We fought in the famous Interna-tional Bngades the Bngadesthat helped save Madnd in its darkest days from the rebcl Franco troops who had the active support of fascist Italy and Nazi Germany2 See also Jules Päiviö Collection mhso and interview by Varpu Lindstrom-Bes- t 1980 mmm lii Russell: 'recording history faithfully' cause which attracted the majority of foreign volunteers None of the 600 Canadians who sur-vived the war was prosecuted under the act although many complained of 1939 Now denied official recognition by the Canadian government— and veterans' and medical care such recognition would bring— they have launched a campaign governmenfs policy But declared Constant a in University of Faculty of Engineering "most of us do not a damn about benefits It is principle the thing volunteered to fight fascism ATLANTIC OCEAN Ml ii h Pomexidri C 'Leon ] u VXNAVA KM --' - r LEON PaltnciaV) OLD i' A -- —— vAC_Trr — %_ ' " s UMl iLr 1 Zaniii l portugal) 7 lISBON Ii j ix tSar Af mKSaTRdKu- -raj' f V t mi iii I Km ii iiii I ii ! - liirKi (!lfel 50 yoaro ago in Tho Globo and Cloil On Nov 1936 "'Spanish Fascist insurgents stormed to the gates of Madrid tonight Government militia fought to keep the attacking Moors and Fascist troops from breaking through into the very streets of the Capital The roar and clatter of cannon and machine guns shook the city while overhead Government planes fought off Fas-cist bombers Insurgent shells screamed over' Madrids suburbs with Government batteries replying vvith heavy barrage The insur-gent attack for weeks an ever-nar-rowi- ng semi-circ- le south of Madrid was into solid front driving :oward the heart of Mad Salamani rid On Nov 10 1936 "Insurgent troops crossed the Manzanares River tonight and streamed into Madrid proper penetrating to the Calle de Toledo in the city's south-vveste- rn section The entrance to the city was made across the Toledo bridge which was quickly reconst-ructe- d by insurgent labor unions after having been dynamited by the Government Regular infantrymen vvere the first to cross the new span They were followed by light tanks which rumbled into the Calle de Toledo to begin cautious advance toward the centre of the Capital A Government column the Casa de Campo was completely 6urrounded The artil-ler- y withdrew toward the northern part of Madrid" On Nov 936 "Horror grasped firc-ridd- en and blast-ravag-ed city tonight as General Jose Vare!a's svvarthy Moors sought to force their way tovvard the centre behind air artillery and shrapnel barrages vvhicii leit alrnost no por-tio- n of Madrid unscathed The Capi-tal blanketed under pall of smoke vvas to three new air raids during the morning The screams of women who refused to abandon the mangled bodies of their loved ones VMuhJliA Avulla XOuadalajara-- - ff Akil ANDALUSIA ' i J TIV Il I M SJ -- li 6 a a " J a 1 8 1 a J St- - iiii iii Vi l" I ?k J f V 1 " Malani (ilbriliar reminV LSPA NISH MeTilia- -7- -- XMOROCCO fSl country holding conferences on the subject Russell who left his as a Montreal assistant store manager in summer of 1937 to go to Spain said: changes In school was taught that Louis Riel was a terrible person Now they have a statue of him in Regina I would like to a plaque for the Mac-Pa- ps in Peace Tower police harassment following their re- - lt's a question of having history faith tum to Canada after the war ended in fuiiv record the role we nlaved the pensions to change the professor the Waterloo's give the the of VVe nationaiims republicans converged defending Government this subjected Scgovia Brum-u- - VA1 (C'iMiia the job the "History see the Russell's initiative may be bearing fruit In July Conservative MP Bud Jardine deputy chairman of the feder-a- l standing committee on veterans' af-fai-rs agreed to invite a delegation of battalion veterans to press their case before the committee this fall al-though a meeting has yet to take place At the same time Jardine has publicly stated his sympathy for battalion Indeed he once said: "These years before the Canadian government men did fight against fascism It vvas came around" against the law of the day but times Ross Russell 75 is spearheading the have changed It's time now to refresh assault on Ottawa He and a group of Canadians' memories" fellow veterans have travelled across -R- ICHARD in Toronto MADRID Cucnca J NEW C ASTI LE 'iiuithana' JClU(lnl Kriil iuinltihiiu n Jiiru Soria Ali) Mun I IIIUHrT 1 " j " ARAGON CATALONIA Lrrirli SaraKoSsa£Aro A VjTarrairana ValcnciiJ jVALENCIA BALEARIC MURCIA Munia C Iii tiuf-n- i H liesi i „ (ia Inn P„im-l- r 'tlRUlT-i- s UiTona Bilehile f~l Teruel Tolccln Jila Candi- - AliiMiur IBIZA Palm HTir ii n i 3 +r MKDITERRANEAN SEA y 'Barcelona MINORCA MAJORCA (Xj Q ISLEd ALGERIA REPUBLICAN AND NATIONALIST SPAIN AT THE START OF THE CIVIL WAR i --— i jiWJfämMWm}WmMs I vet-erans WRIGHT JULES PÄIVIÖ We were not heroes — we only did what we saw as our humanitarian duty The pomp and glory went to the victori-ou- s armies Dolores Ibarruri "La Pasionaria" the sym-boli- c leader and conscience of Republican Spain said on bidding farewell to the volunteers in Barcelona September 1938: You came to us from ali peoples ali races You came likebrothersofours like sons of undying Spain and in the hardest days of the war when the capital of the Spanish Republic was threatened it was you gallant comrades of the International Brigades who helped to save the city with your fighting enthusiasm your heroism and your spirit of sacrifice For the first time in the history of the people's struggles there has been the spectacle breath-takin- g in its grandeur of the formation of International Brigades to help save a threatened country's freedom and inde-pendence the freedom and independence of our Spanish land They gave us everything: their youthortheirmaturity their science or their experience their blood and their lives their hopes and their aspirations — and they asked us for nothing at ali! That is to say they did want a post in the struggle they did aspire to the honour of dying for us5 October 1936 The first Interna-tional Brigaders from Europe march through Barcelona |
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