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Andreu Nin

Andreu Nin i Pérez (1892–1937) was a Catalan politician, trade unionist and translator. He is mainly known for his role in various Spanish left-wing movements of the early 20th century and, later, for his role in the Spanish Civil War. He is also known for his work translating Russian classics such as Ana Karenina, Crime and Punishment and some works by Anton Chekhov, from Russian into Catalan.

Andreu Nin
Minister of Justice of Catalonia
In office
26 September 1936 – 17 December 1936
PresidentLluís Companys
Vice PresidentJosep Tarradellas
Preceded byJosep Quero i Molares [ca]
Succeeded byRafael Vidiella
Leader of the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM)
In office
18 July 1936 – 20 June 1937
Preceded byJoaquim Maurín
Succeeded byJulián Gorkin
Secretary General of the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo
In office
March 1921 – May 1921
Preceded byEvelio Boal
Succeeded byJoaquim Maurín
Personal details
Born
Andreu Nin i Pérez

(1892-02-04)4 February 1892
El Vendrell, Tarragona, Spain
Died20 June 1937(1937-06-20) (aged 45)
Alcalá de Henares, Madrid, Spain
NationalityCatalan
Political partyWorkers' Party of Marxist Unification (1935–1937)
Other political
affiliations
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (1917)
Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (1917–1922)
Communist Party of the Soviet Union (1922–1930)
Communist Left of Spain (1931–1935)
ProfessionJournalist, teacher, translator

A teacher and journalist, during his youth he was involved in various political movements until he joined the anarchist Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (CNT). During his stay in Russia, he witnessed the Russian Revolution, which marked his conversion to Marxism. After his return to Spain, he later became one of the founders of the small but active Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM). He eventually became a leading figure in Spanish revolutionary Marxism. He disappeared during the course of the Spanish Civil War, having been arrested by the Republican authorities following the "May Days".

Biography edit

Early life edit

Born on 4 February 1892 in the Tarragona town of El Vendrell,[1] the son of a cobbler and a peasant woman.[2] Despite his modest origins, thanks to his parents' efforts and his intelligence, he managed to become a teacher and move to Barcelona shortly before World War I.[2] Although he taught for a time in a secular, libertarian school, he soon turned to journalism and politics.

In 1911 he joined the ranks of the Catalan federalist movement,[3] joining the Republican Nationalist Federal Union (UFNR), but the social unrest that existed at the time quickly led him to evolve towards more left-wing politics. The year 1917 was a key year in his life: events such as the August general strike, the Russian Revolution and the struggles between Barcelona's employers and the trade unions, especially the National Confederation of Labour (CNT), had a profound effect on him. Although he first joined the ranks of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE), he soon embraced the cause of revolutionary syndicalism and joined the CNT, where, after attending the second congress in 1919, he defended its membership of the Communist International and replaced Evelio Boal, who had been assassinated, as secretary of the National Committee. In November 1920, Nin himself suffered an attack by the Sindicatos Libres that almost cost him his life.[4]

Political activity edit

 
in Moscow Komintern office

At the CNT national plenary meeting held in Lleida on 28 April 1921, he was elected as one of the delegates to be sent to Moscow to the 3rd World Congress of the Communist International and the founding congress of the Red Trade Union International (Profintern) along with Joaquín Maurín, Hilario Arlandis and Jesús Ibáñez;[5] becoming a key figure in both internationals (the CNT had left the Communist International in 1922). During his trip to Moscow he came to admire the Russian Revolution,[6] after which he abandoned anarchism and became a Marxist.[7] Nin, who was also to attend the second congress of the Profintern,[8] lived for a time in Moscow,[6] during which time he first worked for Nikolai Bukharin[9] and later became the secretary of Leon Trotsky, one of the Bolshevik leaders during the revolution.[10] Thanks to a job at the Profintern, Nin was able to visit France, Italy and Germany.[11] From 1926 onwards, he belonged to the "Left Opposition" led by Trotsky, which opposed the rise of Joseph Stalin within the Communist Party of the Soviet Union,[12] so Nin had to leave the USSR in 1930. He became fluent in the Russian language and later produced several Catalan translations of classic nineteenth-century Russian novelists.

Second Republic edit

 
with wife and children

On his return to Spain after the proclamation of the Second Republic, Nin was instrumental in the formation of a Trotskyist group, the Communist Left of Spain (ICE), in May 1931. The ICE soon became a group affiliated to the International Left Opposition and went on to publish the newspaper El Soviet. Although it had some very prominent militants, the Communist Left was too small a group to have any real influence on Spanish political life. Although it was considered a Trotskyist party opposed to Stalin, from his exile in Norway, Trotsky himself sharply criticised its political line.[13]

During the Revolution of 1934, he was a member of the Alianza Obrera [es] and took part in the events of 6 October in Catalonia. After earlier criticism of his political line, he ended up breaking with Trotsky after he did not accept his attempt to adopt an entryist tactic in the PSOE. When his group merged with Joaquín Maurín's Workers and Peasants' Bloc (BOC) to found the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM) in 1935,[14] Nin was appointed a member of the new party's executive committee and editor of its publication, La Nueva Era; the following year he was elected secretary general of the POUM.

In May 1936, he was also elected secretary general of the Workers' Federation of Trade Union Unity [ca] (FOUS), which had a strong trade union presence in the provinces of Lleida, Girona and also Tarragona.[15]

Spanish Civil War edit

 
mid-1930s

After the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, Andreu Nin became the leader of the POUM. Until July 1936, the party had a very limited presence in the Catalan political sphere and even less in the rest of Spain. From then on, Nin and other POUM leaders began to make themselves known outside their home provinces and often spoke out in public.[16] On 2 August, in statements to the daily La Vanguardia, Nin declared:[17]

The working class has solved the problem of the Church simply by not leaving even one of them standing.

After serving on the Consell d'Economia de Catalunya between August and September 1936, Nin was appointed Minister of Justice of the Generalitat on 26 September.[18] On 14 October 1936 he introduced the People's Courts by decree.[19] However, Nin's tenure as Minister of Justice was widely disputed. During those months extra-judicial executions continued to take place, without Nin taking action. As historian Hugh Thomas notes, "Nin had not been known for his humanitarian scruples towards the "bourgeoisie"".[20] The POUM militias also contributed to the repression of 'fascists' and 'enemies of the people'.[16] In the autumn, Nin had raised with the President of the Generalitat, Lluís Companys, the possibility of taking in as a refugee Leon Trotsky, who at that time had been forced to leave Norway under Soviet pressure.[21] This idea was not to the liking of the Unified Socialist Party of Catalonia (PSUC), who also participated in the government of the Generalitat. On 24 November, the PSUC handed the CNT a proposal on the establishment of a new government of the Generalitat, which included the departure of Nin as Minister of Justice.[22] Many anarchist members and leaders were not too fond of Nin, whom they considered a renegade from the CNT,[23] and so they resolved that it was more a conflict between Marxists.[24] Nin continued to hold the post until 16 December, when he was removed following a reshuffling of the council.[23] When explaining the reasons, as Nin later recounted in his interrogation, Josep Tarradellas also warned him of the danger to both the POUM and its leaders.[25]

During the spring of 1937 the Republican police located an alleged letter written by Nin to Francisco Franco, in which the Trotskyist leader was to endorse a plan for an uprising by the Madrid fifth column; the letter, in reality a forgery by the NKVD,[26] constituted one of the main pieces of evidence against Nin.[27] After the May Events, the Communist campaign against the POUM intensified. Its leaders were openly accused of being fascists and conspiring with Franco.[28] As early as 28 May, Communist pressure got the authorities to suspend the circulation of the party's newspaper, La Batalla.[29]

On 14 June the Director General of Security, Colonel Antonio Ortega Gutiérrez, informed the Minister of Education and Health that the head of the NKVD in Spain, Alexander Orlov, had indicated to him that all POUM leaders should be arrested.[29][a] The minister, who was the Communist Jesús Hernández Tomás, went to speak directly to Orlov about this matter. The NKVD chief claimed that there was evidence linking the Trotskyist party to Franco's espionage and that it was necessary for the government not to be aware of this plan because the Minister of the Interior, Julián Zugazagoitia, was a friend of some of the POUM leaders.[30] On 16 June the Republican authorities closed down the POUM headquarters in the Hotel Falcón and the party leadership was arrested by the police. According to the testimony of Julián Gorkín, the Republican police were accompanied by two foreigners, whom Gorkín suspected of being Soviet secret service agents.[31] Andreu Nin was separated from the rest of the party leadership, like Julián Gorkin and José Escuder, who were held in prisons in Madrid and Barcelona. After being separated from the rest, Nin disappeared.[31]

Controversy over his death edit

Nin was transferred to the city of Alcalá de Henares, near Madrid; the chosen location had become an important Soviet base in Republican Spain and therefore offered guarantees of security.[32][b] It has subsequently been claimed that Andreu Nin was subjected to interrogation and torture in the days following his arrest. Hugh Thomas notes that Nin was transported by car from Barcelona and then taken to the Cathedral of Alcalá de Henares, which functioned as a private prison of the Soviet NKVD.[34] Some claim that he died in Alcalá de Henares. However, various circumstances surrounding his death, such as whether or not he was tortured before his execution, remain unclear.[35] According to Paul Preston, Nin was possibly killed on 22 June by flaying,[36] on Orlov's orders and with the help of Iosif Grigulevich.[c] There is little doubt that the order for Nin's execution came from Moscow.[37] Thomas, for his part, claims that he may have been killed in El Pardo park,[38] near Madrid, but the final fate of his remains remains a mystery. Nin's biographer, Francesc Bonamusa, would comment on this:[39]

The fundamental aspects of the kidnapping and subsequent assassination of Andreu Nin are clear. Nin was arrested by members of the police services in Madrid and Barcelona, not by police from Valencia, which was the seat of the government of the Republic. He was transferred first to Valencia and then to Madrid...once in Madrid, he was probably transferred to the counter-espionage services of the NKVD, and taken to one of their barracks in Alcalá de Henares or El Pardo. For these reasons, and given that Nin was not a government official, it was impossible for the Ministers of Justice, Manuel de Irujo, and of the Interior, Julián Zugazagoitia, to obtain information on the whereabouts of the former Minister of Justice of the Generalitat.

Within days of his arrest, rumours began to spread in Republican Spain that Andreu Nin had been assassinated. A campaign spread with the slogan: "Where is Nin?"[34] The former Minister of Health, the anarchist Federica Montseny, was one of the first personalities to raise the question in public.[40] In the Republican government itself they were not quite sure what had happened: several Socialist ministers questioned the two Communist ministers, who claimed not to know anything about the affair. The semi-official version that began to circulate was that Nin had been liberated from Checa by "his friends in the Gestapo".[d] This was claimed by Juan Negrín, head of the Republican government.[41] Communist circles began to reply "In Salamanca or Berlin"[42] to the question of the Trotskyist leader's real whereabouts. According to Ricardo Miralles and Hugh Thomas, Negrín would have been aware of the truth about what had happened from the beginning despite echoing the Gestapo's implausible version;[43] Thomas adds that the Nin case was in fact a 'dirty affair', but that the Republican leaders decided it was better not to bother the Soviets in order to continue receiving the precious military aid.[44] On the other hand, Republican leaders and ministers did not particularly like the leader of this small party, which they regarded as a mere "group of agitators who were damaging the war effort".[20] Julián Zugazagoitia, however, commented that this action had been carried out without the knowledge and/or consent of the Republican government.[42] In February 1938 a hit-squad related to POUM and Sección Bolchevique-Leninista de España shot a Soviet agent held responsible for the detention of Nin, Leon Narwicz.[45]

Notes edit

  1. ^ When the secretary general of the PCE, José Díaz Ramos, heard of this, he was deeply upset. He harshly criticised this idea and even clashed with the Comintern's representative in Spain, Victorio Codovilla. Díaz criticised the Soviets for acting in Spain as foreign agents.[10]
  2. ^ In March 2008, a mass grave was found by chance with the remains of five human bodies from the civil war period. At the time, it was suggested that one of the bodies might be that of Andreu Nin.[33]
  3. ^ Many years later Orlov, after going into exile in the United States, tried to evade responsibility for Nin's death and blamed it on an alleged Soviet agent, called "Bolodin", who had come expressly from the USSR.[34]
  4. ^ According to Hugh Thomas, the Soviets staged a farce in which they used German members of the International Brigades posing as Nazi Gestapo agents.[20]

References edit

  1. ^ Solano 1999, p. 127.
  2. ^ a b Martins 2014, p. 159.
  3. ^ Gutiérrez-Álvarez 2009, pp. 270–271.
  4. ^ Meaker 1974, p. 390.
  5. ^ Payne 2004; Ruipérez 1979.
  6. ^ a b Thomas 1976, pp. 140–141.
  7. ^ Thomas 1976, p. 88.
  8. ^ Meaker 1974, p. 452.
  9. ^ Alba 1983, p. 97.
  10. ^ a b Thomas 1976, p. 759.
  11. ^ Alba 1983, p. 74n.
  12. ^ Thomas 1976, p. 143.
  13. ^ Thomas 1976, p. 144.
  14. ^ Alexander 1999, p. 755.
  15. ^ Alexander 1999, p. 776.
  16. ^ a b Thomas 1976, p. 330.
  17. ^ Redondo 1993, p. 28.
  18. ^ Thomas 1976, p. 463.
  19. ^ Gallego 2008, p. 594.
  20. ^ a b c Thomas 1976, p. 762.
  21. ^ Alexander 1999, p. 774.
  22. ^ Alexander 1999, pp. 774–775.
  23. ^ a b Thomas 1976, p. 576.
  24. ^ Alexander 1999, p. 775.
  25. ^ Preston 2011, p. 529.
  26. ^ Viñas 2007.
  27. ^ Thomas 1976, pp. 757–758.
  28. ^ Thomas 1976, p. 756.
  29. ^ a b Thomas 1976, p. 758.
  30. ^ Thomas 1976, pp. 758–759.
  31. ^ a b Alexander 1999, p. 981.
  32. ^ "Andreu Nin, un esqueleto incómodo". ABC (in Spanish). 9 March 2008. Retrieved 15 November 2023.
  33. ^ Fraguas, Rafael (7 March 2008). "Investigan si los restos de de Andreu Nin están en una fosa de Alcalá". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 15 November 2023.
  34. ^ a b c Thomas 1976, p. 760.
  35. ^ Sennett 2014, p. 263.
  36. ^ Preston 2004, p. 182.
  37. ^ Sennett 2014, p. 264.
  38. ^ Thomas 1976, p. 761.
  39. ^ Alexander 1999, p. 982.
  40. ^ Alexander 1999, p. 987.
  41. ^ Thomas 1976, pp. 761–762.
  42. ^ a b Alexander 1999, p. 985.
  43. ^ Miralles 2003; Thomas 1976, pp. 759–762.
  44. ^ Thomas 1976, pp. 759–762.
  45. ^ Andy Durgan, With the POUM. International volunteers on the Aragon Front (1936-1937), [in:] Revista Internacional de la Guerra Civil 8 (2018), p. 158

Bibliography edit

  • Alba, Víctor (1975). Dos revolucionarios, Andreu Nin, Joaquín Maurin (in Spanish). Madrid: Seminarios y Ediciones. ISBN 84-299-0074-8.
  • Alba, Víctor (1983). The Communist Party in Spain. New Brunswick: Transaction Books. ISBN 0-87855-464-5.
  • Alexander, Robert J. (1999). The Anarchists in the Spanish Civil War. Vol. 2. Janus Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1857564129. Retrieved 1 November 2016 – via Google Books.
  • Gallego, Ferran (2008) [2007]. La crisis del antifascismo: Barcelona, mayo de 1937 (in Spanish). Barcelona: DeBOLS!LLO. ISBN 978-84-8346-598-1.
  • Gutiérrez-Álvarez, Pepe (2009). Un Ramo de rosas rojas y una foto. Variaciones sobre el proceso del POUM (in Spanish). Barcelona: Laertes. ISBN 978-84-7584-655-2.
  • Gutiérrez-Alvarez, Pepe (2015). Retratos poumistas (in Spanish). Seville: Ediciones Espuela de Plata. ISBN 978-84-96133-71-6.
  • Martins, Laura M. (2014). New Readings in Latin American and Spanish Literary and Cultural Studies. Cambridge Scholars publishing.
  • Meaker, Gerald H. (1974). The Revolutionary Left in Spain, 1914-1923. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-0845-2.
  • Miralles, Ricardo (2003). Juan Negrín. La República en guerra. Madrid: Temas de hoy.
  • Navarra, Andreu (2021). La revolución imposible. Vida y muerte de Andreu Nin. Barcelona: Tusquets.
  • Pagès, Pelai (2009). Andreu Nin. Una vida al servei de la classe obrera. Barcelona: Laertes.
  • Payne, Stanley G. (2004). The Spanish Civil War, the Soviet Union, and Communism. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-10068-X.
  • Preston, Paul (2004). La Guerra Civil Española. Debolsillo.
  • Preston, Paul (2011). El holocausto español. Translated by Martínez Muñoz, Catalina; Vázquez Nacarino, Eugenia. Barcelona: Círculo de Lectores. ISBN 978-84-672-4533-2.
  • Radosh, Ronald; Habeck, Mary R.; Nikolaevič Sevost'ânov, Grigorij (2001). Spain Betrayed: The Soviet Union in the Spanish Civil War. Yale University Press. pp. 208–09. ISBN 0300089813. Retrieved 4 October 2013 – via Google Books.
  • Redondo, Gonzalo (1993). Historia de la Iglesia en España, 1931-1939: La Guerra Civil, 1936-1939. Ediciones Rialp. ISBN 9788432130168.[permanent dead link]
  • Rourera Farré, Luis (1992). Joaquín Maurín y su Tiempo. Vida y obras de un luchador. Claret.
  • Ruipérez, María (1979). "Andreu Nin: Un revolucionario en el recuerdo" (PDF). Tiempo de historia (60): 14–29.
  • Sennett, Alan (2014). Revolutionary Marxism in Spain, 1930-1937. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-22107-9.
  • Solano, Wilebaldo (1999). . Madrid: Los Libros de la Catarata. ISBN 9788483190593. Archived from the original on 18 September 2011.
  • Solano, Wilebaldo (2006). Biografía breve de Andreu Nin. Madrid: Sepha.
  • Thomas, Hugh (1976). Historia de la Guerra Civil Española. Barcelona: Círculo de Lectores. ISBN 84-226-0874-X.
  • Viñas, Ángel (22 April 2007). "Un agente estalinista, cerebro del asesinato de Nin". El País.

Further reading edit

  • Andrew Durgan, BOC 1930–1936: El Bloque Obrero y Campesino (BOC 1930–1936: The Workers' and Peasants' Bloc). Barcelona: Laertes S.A. de Ediciones, 1996.
  • Andrew Durgan, Dissident Communism in Catalonia, 1930–36. PhD dissertation. University of London, 1989.
  • Pelai Pagès, Andreu Nin: Su evolución política (1911–37) (Andreu Nin: His Political Evolution, 1911–37). Bilbao: Editorial Zero, 1975.
  • Pelai Pagès, Andreu Nin: Una vida al servicio de la clase obrera (Andreu Nin: A Life in the Service of the Working Class). Barcelona: Laertes S.A. de Ediciones, 2011.
  • Alan Sennett, Revolutionary Marxism in Spain, 1930–1937. [2014] Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2015.
  • "How the NKVD framed the POUM".
  • "Andres Nin". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 1 November 2016.

External links edit

  • Fundación Andreu Nin The Spanish-language site containing an extensive collection of documents, biographical notes, and links related to the POUM and to Nin himself.
  • Andrés Nin Archive at marxists.org
  • Andreu Nin at the Association of Catalan Language Writers, AELC. Webpage in Catalan with English and Spanish translations.
  • (in Spanish) Andrés Nin: El crimen que remató la República.
  • Struggle of the trade unions against fascism 1923 pamphlet
  • La huelga general de enero y sus enseñanzas. 1930s pamphlet
  • Documents on Nin from "Trabajadores: The Spanish Civil War through the eyes of organised labour" 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine, a digitised collection of more than 13,000 pages of documents from the archives of the British Trades Union Congress held in the Modern Records Centre, University of Warwick
  • New Perspectives on The Spanish Civil War, archival and related research on the historiography of the Spanish Civil War since the death of Franco by Stephen Schwartz
Preceded by General Secretary of the CNT
 

1921
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the POUM
 

1936-1937
Succeeded by

andreu, this, catalan, name, first, paternal, surname, second, maternal, family, name, pérez, both, generally, joined, conjunction, pérez, 1892, 1937, catalan, politician, trade, unionist, translator, mainly, known, role, various, spanish, left, wing, movement. In this Catalan name the first or paternal surname is Nin and the second or maternal family name is Perez both are generally joined by the conjunction i Andreu Nin i Perez 1892 1937 was a Catalan politician trade unionist and translator He is mainly known for his role in various Spanish left wing movements of the early 20th century and later for his role in the Spanish Civil War He is also known for his work translating Russian classics such as Ana Karenina Crime and Punishment and some works by Anton Chekhov from Russian into Catalan Andreu NinMinister of Justice of CataloniaIn office 26 September 1936 17 December 1936PresidentLluis CompanysVice PresidentJosep TarradellasPreceded byJosep Quero i Molares ca Succeeded byRafael VidiellaLeader of the Workers Party of Marxist Unification POUM In office 18 July 1936 20 June 1937Preceded byJoaquim MaurinSucceeded byJulian GorkinSecretary General of the Confederacion Nacional del TrabajoIn office March 1921 May 1921Preceded byEvelio BoalSucceeded byJoaquim MaurinPersonal detailsBornAndreu Nin i Perez 1892 02 04 4 February 1892El Vendrell Tarragona SpainDied20 June 1937 1937 06 20 aged 45 Alcala de Henares Madrid SpainNationalityCatalanPolitical partyWorkers Party of Marxist Unification 1935 1937 Other politicalaffiliationsSpanish Socialist Workers Party 1917 Confederacion Nacional del Trabajo 1917 1922 Communist Party of the Soviet Union 1922 1930 Communist Left of Spain 1931 1935 ProfessionJournalist teacher translator A teacher and journalist during his youth he was involved in various political movements until he joined the anarchist Confederacion Nacional del Trabajo CNT During his stay in Russia he witnessed the Russian Revolution which marked his conversion to Marxism After his return to Spain he later became one of the founders of the small but active Workers Party of Marxist Unification POUM He eventually became a leading figure in Spanish revolutionary Marxism He disappeared during the course of the Spanish Civil War having been arrested by the Republican authorities following the May Days Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Political activity 1 2 1 Second Republic 1 2 2 Spanish Civil War 1 3 Controversy over his death 2 Notes 3 References 4 Bibliography 5 Further reading 6 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Born on 4 February 1892 in the Tarragona town of El Vendrell 1 the son of a cobbler and a peasant woman 2 Despite his modest origins thanks to his parents efforts and his intelligence he managed to become a teacher and move to Barcelona shortly before World War I 2 Although he taught for a time in a secular libertarian school he soon turned to journalism and politics In 1911 he joined the ranks of the Catalan federalist movement 3 joining the Republican Nationalist Federal Union UFNR but the social unrest that existed at the time quickly led him to evolve towards more left wing politics The year 1917 was a key year in his life events such as the August general strike the Russian Revolution and the struggles between Barcelona s employers and the trade unions especially the National Confederation of Labour CNT had a profound effect on him Although he first joined the ranks of the Spanish Socialist Workers Party PSOE he soon embraced the cause of revolutionary syndicalism and joined the CNT where after attending the second congress in 1919 he defended its membership of the Communist International and replaced Evelio Boal who had been assassinated as secretary of the National Committee In November 1920 Nin himself suffered an attack by the Sindicatos Libres that almost cost him his life 4 Political activity edit nbsp in Moscow Komintern office At the CNT national plenary meeting held in Lleida on 28 April 1921 he was elected as one of the delegates to be sent to Moscow to the 3rd World Congress of the Communist International and the founding congress of the Red Trade Union International Profintern along with Joaquin Maurin Hilario Arlandis and Jesus Ibanez 5 becoming a key figure in both internationals the CNT had left the Communist International in 1922 During his trip to Moscow he came to admire the Russian Revolution 6 after which he abandoned anarchism and became a Marxist 7 Nin who was also to attend the second congress of the Profintern 8 lived for a time in Moscow 6 during which time he first worked for Nikolai Bukharin 9 and later became the secretary of Leon Trotsky one of the Bolshevik leaders during the revolution 10 Thanks to a job at the Profintern Nin was able to visit France Italy and Germany 11 From 1926 onwards he belonged to the Left Opposition led by Trotsky which opposed the rise of Joseph Stalin within the Communist Party of the Soviet Union 12 so Nin had to leave the USSR in 1930 He became fluent in the Russian language and later produced several Catalan translations of classic nineteenth century Russian novelists Second Republic edit nbsp with wife and children On his return to Spain after the proclamation of the Second Republic Nin was instrumental in the formation of a Trotskyist group the Communist Left of Spain ICE in May 1931 The ICE soon became a group affiliated to the International Left Opposition and went on to publish the newspaper El Soviet Although it had some very prominent militants the Communist Left was too small a group to have any real influence on Spanish political life Although it was considered a Trotskyist party opposed to Stalin from his exile in Norway Trotsky himself sharply criticised its political line 13 During the Revolution of 1934 he was a member of the Alianza Obrera es and took part in the events of 6 October in Catalonia After earlier criticism of his political line he ended up breaking with Trotsky after he did not accept his attempt to adopt an entryist tactic in the PSOE When his group merged with Joaquin Maurin s Workers and Peasants Bloc BOC to found the Workers Party of Marxist Unification POUM in 1935 14 Nin was appointed a member of the new party s executive committee and editor of its publication La Nueva Era the following year he was elected secretary general of the POUM In May 1936 he was also elected secretary general of the Workers Federation of Trade Union Unity ca FOUS which had a strong trade union presence in the provinces of Lleida Girona and also Tarragona 15 Spanish Civil War edit nbsp mid 1930s After the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War Andreu Nin became the leader of the POUM Until July 1936 the party had a very limited presence in the Catalan political sphere and even less in the rest of Spain From then on Nin and other POUM leaders began to make themselves known outside their home provinces and often spoke out in public 16 On 2 August in statements to the daily La Vanguardia Nin declared 17 The working class has solved the problem of the Church simply by not leaving even one of them standing After serving on the Consell d Economia de Catalunya between August and September 1936 Nin was appointed Minister of Justice of the Generalitat on 26 September 18 On 14 October 1936 he introduced the People s Courts by decree 19 However Nin s tenure as Minister of Justice was widely disputed During those months extra judicial executions continued to take place without Nin taking action As historian Hugh Thomas notes Nin had not been known for his humanitarian scruples towards the bourgeoisie 20 The POUM militias also contributed to the repression of fascists and enemies of the people 16 In the autumn Nin had raised with the President of the Generalitat Lluis Companys the possibility of taking in as a refugee Leon Trotsky who at that time had been forced to leave Norway under Soviet pressure 21 This idea was not to the liking of the Unified Socialist Party of Catalonia PSUC who also participated in the government of the Generalitat On 24 November the PSUC handed the CNT a proposal on the establishment of a new government of the Generalitat which included the departure of Nin as Minister of Justice 22 Many anarchist members and leaders were not too fond of Nin whom they considered a renegade from the CNT 23 and so they resolved that it was more a conflict between Marxists 24 Nin continued to hold the post until 16 December when he was removed following a reshuffling of the council 23 When explaining the reasons as Nin later recounted in his interrogation Josep Tarradellas also warned him of the danger to both the POUM and its leaders 25 During the spring of 1937 the Republican police located an alleged letter written by Nin to Francisco Franco in which the Trotskyist leader was to endorse a plan for an uprising by the Madrid fifth column the letter in reality a forgery by the NKVD 26 constituted one of the main pieces of evidence against Nin 27 After the May Events the Communist campaign against the POUM intensified Its leaders were openly accused of being fascists and conspiring with Franco 28 As early as 28 May Communist pressure got the authorities to suspend the circulation of the party s newspaper La Batalla 29 On 14 June the Director General of Security Colonel Antonio Ortega Gutierrez informed the Minister of Education and Health that the head of the NKVD in Spain Alexander Orlov had indicated to him that all POUM leaders should be arrested 29 a The minister who was the Communist Jesus Hernandez Tomas went to speak directly to Orlov about this matter The NKVD chief claimed that there was evidence linking the Trotskyist party to Franco s espionage and that it was necessary for the government not to be aware of this plan because the Minister of the Interior Julian Zugazagoitia was a friend of some of the POUM leaders 30 On 16 June the Republican authorities closed down the POUM headquarters in the Hotel Falcon and the party leadership was arrested by the police According to the testimony of Julian Gorkin the Republican police were accompanied by two foreigners whom Gorkin suspected of being Soviet secret service agents 31 Andreu Nin was separated from the rest of the party leadership like Julian Gorkin and Jose Escuder who were held in prisons in Madrid and Barcelona After being separated from the rest Nin disappeared 31 Controversy over his death edit Nin was transferred to the city of Alcala de Henares near Madrid the chosen location had become an important Soviet base in Republican Spain and therefore offered guarantees of security 32 b It has subsequently been claimed that Andreu Nin was subjected to interrogation and torture in the days following his arrest Hugh Thomas notes that Nin was transported by car from Barcelona and then taken to the Cathedral of Alcala de Henares which functioned as a private prison of the Soviet NKVD 34 Some claim that he died in Alcala de Henares However various circumstances surrounding his death such as whether or not he was tortured before his execution remain unclear 35 According to Paul Preston Nin was possibly killed on 22 June by flaying 36 on Orlov s orders and with the help of Iosif Grigulevich c There is little doubt that the order for Nin s execution came from Moscow 37 Thomas for his part claims that he may have been killed in El Pardo park 38 near Madrid but the final fate of his remains remains a mystery Nin s biographer Francesc Bonamusa would comment on this 39 The fundamental aspects of the kidnapping and subsequent assassination of Andreu Nin are clear Nin was arrested by members of the police services in Madrid and Barcelona not by police from Valencia which was the seat of the government of the Republic He was transferred first to Valencia and then to Madrid once in Madrid he was probably transferred to the counter espionage services of the NKVD and taken to one of their barracks in Alcala de Henares or El Pardo For these reasons and given that Nin was not a government official it was impossible for the Ministers of Justice Manuel de Irujo and of the Interior Julian Zugazagoitia to obtain information on the whereabouts of the former Minister of Justice of the Generalitat Within days of his arrest rumours began to spread in Republican Spain that Andreu Nin had been assassinated A campaign spread with the slogan Where is Nin 34 The former Minister of Health the anarchist Federica Montseny was one of the first personalities to raise the question in public 40 In the Republican government itself they were not quite sure what had happened several Socialist ministers questioned the two Communist ministers who claimed not to know anything about the affair The semi official version that began to circulate was that Nin had been liberated from Checa by his friends in the Gestapo d This was claimed by Juan Negrin head of the Republican government 41 Communist circles began to reply In Salamanca or Berlin 42 to the question of the Trotskyist leader s real whereabouts According to Ricardo Miralles and Hugh Thomas Negrin would have been aware of the truth about what had happened from the beginning despite echoing the Gestapo s implausible version 43 Thomas adds that the Nin case was in fact a dirty affair but that the Republican leaders decided it was better not to bother the Soviets in order to continue receiving the precious military aid 44 On the other hand Republican leaders and ministers did not particularly like the leader of this small party which they regarded as a mere group of agitators who were damaging the war effort 20 Julian Zugazagoitia however commented that this action had been carried out without the knowledge and or consent of the Republican government 42 In February 1938 a hit squad related to POUM and Seccion Bolchevique Leninista de Espana shot a Soviet agent held responsible for the detention of Nin Leon Narwicz 45 Notes edit When the secretary general of the PCE Jose Diaz Ramos heard of this he was deeply upset He harshly criticised this idea and even clashed with the Comintern s representative in Spain Victorio Codovilla Diaz criticised the Soviets for acting in Spain as foreign agents 10 In March 2008 a mass grave was found by chance with the remains of five human bodies from the civil war period At the time it was suggested that one of the bodies might be that of Andreu Nin 33 Many years later Orlov after going into exile in the United States tried to evade responsibility for Nin s death and blamed it on an alleged Soviet agent called Bolodin who had come expressly from the USSR 34 According to Hugh Thomas the Soviets staged a farce in which they used German members of the International Brigades posing as Nazi Gestapo agents 20 References edit Solano 1999 p 127 a b Martins 2014 p 159 Gutierrez Alvarez 2009 pp 270 271 Meaker 1974 p 390 Payne 2004 Ruiperez 1979 a b Thomas 1976 pp 140 141 Thomas 1976 p 88 Meaker 1974 p 452 Alba 1983 p 97 a b Thomas 1976 p 759 Alba 1983 p 74n Thomas 1976 p 143 Thomas 1976 p 144 Alexander 1999 p 755 Alexander 1999 p 776 a b Thomas 1976 p 330 Redondo 1993 p 28 Thomas 1976 p 463 Gallego 2008 p 594 a b c Thomas 1976 p 762 Alexander 1999 p 774 Alexander 1999 pp 774 775 a b Thomas 1976 p 576 Alexander 1999 p 775 Preston 2011 p 529 Vinas 2007 Thomas 1976 pp 757 758 Thomas 1976 p 756 a b Thomas 1976 p 758 Thomas 1976 pp 758 759 a b Alexander 1999 p 981 Andreu Nin un esqueleto incomodo ABC in Spanish 9 March 2008 Retrieved 15 November 2023 Fraguas Rafael 7 March 2008 Investigan si los restos de de Andreu Nin estan en una fosa de Alcala El Pais in Spanish Retrieved 15 November 2023 a b c Thomas 1976 p 760 Sennett 2014 p 263 Preston 2004 p 182 Sennett 2014 p 264 Thomas 1976 p 761 Alexander 1999 p 982 Alexander 1999 p 987 Thomas 1976 pp 761 762 a b Alexander 1999 p 985 Miralles 2003 Thomas 1976 pp 759 762 Thomas 1976 pp 759 762 Andy Durgan With the POUM International volunteers on the Aragon Front 1936 1937 in Revista Internacional de la Guerra Civil 8 2018 p 158Bibliography editAlba Victor 1975 Dos revolucionarios Andreu Nin Joaquin Maurin in Spanish Madrid Seminarios y Ediciones ISBN 84 299 0074 8 Alba Victor 1983 The Communist Party in Spain New Brunswick Transaction Books ISBN 0 87855 464 5 Alexander Robert J 1999 The Anarchists in the Spanish Civil War Vol 2 Janus Publishing Company ISBN 978 1857564129 Retrieved 1 November 2016 via Google Books Gallego Ferran 2008 2007 La crisis del antifascismo Barcelona mayo de 1937 in Spanish Barcelona DeBOLS LLO ISBN 978 84 8346 598 1 Gutierrez Alvarez Pepe 2009 Un Ramo de rosas rojas y una foto Variaciones sobre el proceso del POUM in Spanish Barcelona Laertes ISBN 978 84 7584 655 2 Gutierrez Alvarez Pepe 2015 Retratos poumistas in Spanish Seville Ediciones Espuela de Plata ISBN 978 84 96133 71 6 Martins Laura M 2014 New Readings in Latin American and Spanish Literary and Cultural Studies Cambridge Scholars publishing Meaker Gerald H 1974 The Revolutionary Left in Spain 1914 1923 Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 0845 2 Miralles Ricardo 2003 Juan Negrin La Republica en guerra Madrid Temas de hoy Navarra Andreu 2021 La revolucion imposible Vida y muerte de Andreu Nin Barcelona Tusquets Pages Pelai 2009 Andreu Nin Una vida al servei de la classe obrera Barcelona Laertes Payne Stanley G 2004 The Spanish Civil War the Soviet Union and Communism New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 10068 X Preston Paul 2004 La Guerra Civil Espanola Debolsillo Preston Paul 2011 El holocausto espanol Translated by Martinez Munoz Catalina Vazquez Nacarino Eugenia Barcelona Circulo de Lectores ISBN 978 84 672 4533 2 Radosh Ronald Habeck Mary R Nikolaevic Sevost anov Grigorij 2001 Spain Betrayed The Soviet Union in the Spanish Civil War Yale University Press pp 208 09 ISBN 0300089813 Retrieved 4 October 2013 via Google Books Redondo Gonzalo 1993 Historia de la Iglesia en Espana 1931 1939 La Guerra Civil 1936 1939 Ediciones Rialp ISBN 9788432130168 permanent dead link Rourera Farre Luis 1992 Joaquin Maurin y su Tiempo Vida y obras de un luchador Claret Ruiperez Maria 1979 Andreu Nin Un revolucionario en el recuerdo PDF Tiempo de historia 60 14 29 Sennett Alan 2014 Revolutionary Marxism in Spain 1930 1937 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 22107 9 Solano Wilebaldo 1999 El POUM en la historia Andreu Nin y la revolucion espanola Madrid Los Libros de la Catarata ISBN 9788483190593 Archived from the original on 18 September 2011 Solano Wilebaldo 2006 Biografia breve de Andreu Nin Madrid Sepha Thomas Hugh 1976 Historia de la Guerra Civil Espanola Barcelona Circulo de Lectores ISBN 84 226 0874 X Vinas Angel 22 April 2007 Un agente estalinista cerebro del asesinato de Nin El Pais Further reading editAndrew Durgan BOC 1930 1936 El Bloque Obrero y Campesino BOC 1930 1936 The Workers and Peasants Bloc Barcelona Laertes S A de Ediciones 1996 Andrew Durgan Dissident Communism in Catalonia 1930 36 PhD dissertation University of London 1989 Pelai Pages Andreu Nin Su evolucion politica 1911 37 Andreu Nin His Political Evolution 1911 37 Bilbao Editorial Zero 1975 Pelai Pages Andreu Nin Una vida al servicio de la clase obrera Andreu Nin A Life in the Service of the Working Class Barcelona Laertes S A de Ediciones 2011 Alan Sennett Revolutionary Marxism in Spain 1930 1937 2014 Chicago Haymarket Books 2015 How the NKVD framed the POUM Andres Nin Spartacus Educational Retrieved 1 November 2016 External links editFundacion Andreu Nin The Spanish language site containing an extensive collection of documents biographical notes and links related to the POUM and to Nin himself Andres Nin Archive at marxists org Andreu Nin at the Association of Catalan Language Writers AELC Webpage in Catalan with English and Spanish translations in Spanish Andres Nin El crimen que remato la Republica Struggle of the trade unions against fascism 1923 pamphlet La huelga general de enero y sus ensenanzas 1930s pamphlet Documents on Nin from Trabajadores The Spanish Civil War through the eyes of organised labour Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine a digitised collection of more than 13 000 pages of documents from the archives of the British Trades Union Congress held in the Modern Records Centre University of Warwick New Perspectives on The Spanish Civil War archival and related research on the historiography of the Spanish Civil War since the death of Franco by Stephen Schwartz Preceded byEvelio Boal General Secretary of the CNT nbsp 1921 Succeeded byJoaquin Maurin Preceded byJoaquin Maurin Leader of the POUM nbsp 1936 1937 Succeeded byJulian Gorkin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andreu Nin amp oldid 1218202889, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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