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Sabaté brothers

The Sabaté brothers Quico and Pepe (Francesc Sabaté i Llopart, and Josep Sabaté i Llopart) were among the famed Catalan Spanish maquis and urban guerrilla of the Francoist post-Civil War period. They participated in an anarchist guerrilla vigilante group of expropriators before the war. Afterwards, as maquis, they turned their focus from unlikely anarchist mass insurrection to converting others to anti-Francoism. The maquis descended from exile in the French Pyrenees to the Barcelona area, attacking Francoists and continuing vigilante robberies as a form of propaganda by deed. Their youngest brother, Manolo (Manuel Sabaté i Llopart), rode with another maquis in defiance of his brothers' request that he pursue other work. Manolo was quickly caught in a police trap and executed by firing squad in 1949 at Barcelona's El Camp de la Bóta, the notorious execution grounds of the Franco period.

Los Novatos

The Sabaté brothers, Quico, Pepe and Manolo, were raised in L'Hospitalet de Llobregat, a Barcelona suburb at a time when anarchist organizations played more regular and practical roles in day-to-day living than government.[1] Their father was a policeman, but had retired by the time they had become famed expropriators.[2] Many future maquis were raised in these Barcelona industrial suburbs of the 1920s and 1930s, and were steeped in the anarchist tradition indigenous to Barcelona.[3] During those two decades, expropriators banded together in action/affinity groups in a time of pistolerisme ("gun law"), in which armed anarchist, urban guerrillas committed small-scale violence against the bourgeoisie with vigilante justice against their enemies.[4] Brothers Quico and Pepe participated in a group called Los Novatos, or "The Rookies". During a 1933 anarchist uprising, they downed L'Hospitalet's power supply.[4] Unlike the expropriators, however, who sought to incite insurrection towards the anarchist revolution, the guerrillas known as the maquis, as a result of the Spanish Civil War sought the fall of Franco first, as anarchist revolution became a remote possibility.[5] For this group, "propaganda of the deed" meant converting others to anti-Francoism, not anarchist insurrection.[6]

During the Spanish Civil War, Quico Sabaté was known to even protect members of the bourgeoisie, as long as they did not support fascism, and hid some such people in his house to protect them from radical Republicans.[5] Quico had evolved to this position, having seen what his anti-fascist but non-anarchist fellow Republicans sacrificed during the war.[6] Quico and Pepe joined a local Republican defense group that served on the Aragon front.[7] Through 1949, the decade after the war,[8] Republican guerrillas maquis lived in exile in the French Pyrenees and would regularly return to Spain to expropriate money and assassinate Francoist loyalists.[9] The maquis of Barcelona treated their social role with some theatricality and were known to have a level of friendliness and respect even while robbing people in their hometown. Their work was as much for personal gain as it was propaganda to share their message among their local comrades,[10] who continued to support them.[11] After one robbery, the Sabaté group left a note indicating that they, "anarchist resisters" and not "robbers", would redistribute the food to children of killed anti-fascists and continue fighting for freedom.[12] The Sabaté brothers Quico and Pepe were among the most famed maquis[1] and Quico himself, legendary.[13]

Quico

 
Quico's tomb

Francesc Sabaté i Llopart[14][15][16][17] or Francisco Sabaté y Llopart,[8] better known as Quico Sabaté or simply "El Quico",[18][19] was a propagandist who would engage in risky public displays, such as during robberies, to reaffirm both the importance of resisting the Franco regime and Sabaté's own example of resisting their order.[20] During his clandestine sojourns into Catalonia, Spain, Sabaté was known to make personal effort, at considerable risk, to visit and maintain friendships with his former neighbors of L'Hospitalet. These acts were partly to maintain his reputation as a member of the community, despite being an exile and fugitive.[21]

Quico's reputation traces to October 1945, when he freed three anarchist prisoners under police escort. He would ride across the Spanish–French border, staying briefly in Spain and escaping into the French mountains. In March 1949, he attempted to assassinate the police commissioner Eduardo Quintela. His attack on the wrong car killed its occupants. Upon his return to France, Quico was jailed through 1955. In late 1959, he returned to Spain for the last time. In January 1960, he and his group were surrounded in a Girona farmhouse. Quico escaped, wounded, and commandeered a train. After seeking medical treatment for his now gangrenous wound, Quico was spotted and killed on January 5.[22]

His death inspired the 1961 novel Killing a Mouse on Sunday,[23] which was adapted into the 1964 film Behold a Pale Horse.[24]

Pepe

Josep Sabaté i Llopart,[25] i.e. Pep[26] or Pepe Sabaté, was sighted while exiting a tram in Barcelona's Plaça Urquinaona in late 1949. Thinking that he might be followed, he drew his pistol and, when accosted by two police officers, shot and killed one. The other shot Pepe, who resisted but would bleed out due to his mortal wounds in Carrer de Sant Pere Més Baix, a street in the Sant Pere neighborhood of Barcelona's Old City. His wife and son continued to live in French exile.[13]

Manuel

Quico and Pepe's younger brother, Manolo (Manuel Sabaté i Llopart), was less political in comparison to his brothers. He pursued his dream of becoming a matador, spending his late teens in Andalucia, but later abandoned this pursuit and traveled to Eus in the Pyrenees mountains to join his brothers as a maquis. Quico and Pepe suggested that Manuel stay, study, and work in France instead. They doubted his devotion to the maquis cause and did not want Manuel along on their sojourns into Spain. Manuel defied them and convinced Ramon Vila Capdevila and an Italian anarchist to let him ride alongside in 1949.[27] They met up with another group but split off near Barcelona towards Vila's area, Berga.[28] Awaiting them was a police trap from which Vila escaped and Manuel was caught. It was Manuel's first arrest but his namesake guaranteed a death sentence.[29]

In prison, Manuel continued his propaganda by deed with reckless bravery and little effect, having no audience. He botched an escape attempt by irreparably destroying his toilet while looking for surfaces to dig out with a spoon. He was punished and later executed.[29]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Hayes 2015, p. 71.
  2. ^ Hayes 2015, p. 90.
  3. ^ Hayes 2015, p. 70.
  4. ^ a b Hayes 2015, p. 72.
  5. ^ a b Hayes 2015, p. 73.
  6. ^ a b Hayes 2015, p. 74.
  7. ^ Sheehan 2004, p. 97.
  8. ^ a b Hayes 2015, p. 75.
  9. ^ Hayes 2015, p. 66.
  10. ^ Hayes 2015, p. 76.
  11. ^ Hayes 2015, p. 79.
  12. ^ Hayes 2015, p. 88.
  13. ^ a b Hayes 2015, p. 119.
  14. ^ "Francesc Sabaté Llopart" at the Real Academia de Historia de España, Madrid (in Spanish). [Consulted Sept. 29, 2020].
  15. ^ "Francesc Sabaté i Llopart, Enciclopèdia Catalana (in Catalan). [Consulted Sept. 29, 2020].
  16. ^ "Quico Sabaté, maquis hasta el fin", La Vanguardia, March 30, 2020. (in Spanish). [Consulted Sept. 29, 2020].
  17. ^ "Francesc Sabaté i Llopart, vida y obra", Sobre la anaquía y otros temas (Vida, obra y biografías de activistas, luchadoras y luchadores anarquistas) II. Desde 1900 a nuestros días, 2018 (in Spanish). [Consulted Sept. 29, 2020].
  18. ^ "Francesc Sabaté Llopart" at the Real Academia de Historia de España, Madrid (in Spanish). [Consulted Sept. 29, 2020].
  19. ^ Knowles, Dorothy (1989). Armand Gatti in the Theatre: Wild Duck Against the Wind. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. p. 279. ISBN 978-0-8386-3371-7.
  20. ^ Hayes 2015, p. 89.
  21. ^ Hayes 2015, pp. 79–80.
  22. ^ Beevor 2007, p. 469.
  23. ^ Puertas, Emeterio Diez (April 15, 2018). Cine y comunicación política en Iberoamérica: Diez estrategias de poder ante el imperio de la imagen. ISBN 9788491801368.
  24. ^ Smyth, J. E. (February 6, 2014). Fred Zinnemann and the Cinema of Resistance. ISBN 9781617039645.
  25. ^ María Teresa Martínez de Sas, Diccionari biogràfic del moviment obrer als països catalans, L'Abadia de Montserrat, 2000, p. 1233, (in Catalan), ISBN 9788484152439. [Consulted Sept. 29, 2020].
  26. ^ "Entrevista a Joan Busquets, maquis supervivent de la guerrilla contra Franco. 'Els maquis som els oblidats de la lluita contra la dictadura franquista'", interview of Joan Busquets by Txema Bofill, with the collaboration of Pep Cara, expanded version of the interview published in issue no. 132 of the Catalunya-Papers magazine, Oct. 19, 2011. [Consulted Sept. 29, 2020].
  27. ^ Hayes 2015, p. 114.
  28. ^ Hayes 2015, pp. 114–115.
  29. ^ a b Hayes 2015, p. 115.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Cacucci, Pino (2001). "Quico". Ribelli!. Serie bianca/Feltrinelli (in Italian). Milan: Feltrinelli. ISBN 978-88-07-17050-8.
  • Eyre, Pilar (2000). Quico Sabaté, el último guerrillero. Atalaya (in Spanish). Barcelona: Ediciones Península. ISBN 978-84-8307-236-3.
  • Hobsbawm, Eric (1981). Bandits (Revised ed.). Pantheon. pp. 113–. ISBN 978-0-394-74850-4.
  • Marín Silvestre, Dolors (2002). Clandestinos: el maquis contra el franquismo, 1934-1975. Así fue (in Spanish). Barcelona: Plaza & Janés. ISBN 978-84-01-53053-1.
  • Martínez de Sas, María Teresa; Pagès i Blanch, Pelai, eds. (2000). "Sabaté". Diccionari biogràfic del moviment obrer als països catalans (in Catalan). Barcelona: L'Abadia de Montserrat. pp. 1232–1234. ISBN 978-84-8415-243-9.
  • Peirats, José (1989). Les anarchistes espagnols: révolution de 1936 et luttes de toujours (in French). Toulouse: Repères-Silena. ISBN 978-2-907966-00-9. OCLC 927895847.
  • Pons Prades, Eduardo (1977). Guerrillas españolas: 1936–1960 (in Spanish). Barcelona: Planeta. ISBN 978-84-320-5634-5. OCLC 3846973.
  • Sànchez i Agustí, Ferran (2006). El Maquis anarquista: de Toulouse a Barcelona por los Pirineos. Alfa (in Spanish). Lleida: Editorial Milenio. ISBN 978-84-9743-174-3. OCLC 255697770.
  • Thomas, Bernard; Villemont, Isabelle (2000). Lucio l'irréductible (in French). Paris: Flammarion. ISBN 978-2-08-067759-4. OCLC 214753216.

sabaté, brothers, this, catalan, name, first, paternal, surname, sabaté, second, maternal, family, name, llopart, both, generally, joined, conjunction, quico, pepe, francesc, sabaté, llopart, josep, sabaté, llopart, were, among, famed, catalan, spanish, maquis. In this Catalan name the first or paternal surname is Sabate and the second or maternal family name is Llopart both are generally joined by the conjunction i The Sabate brothers Quico and Pepe Francesc Sabate i Llopart and Josep Sabate i Llopart were among the famed Catalan Spanish maquis and urban guerrilla of the Francoist post Civil War period They participated in an anarchist guerrilla vigilante group of expropriators before the war Afterwards as maquis they turned their focus from unlikely anarchist mass insurrection to converting others to anti Francoism The maquis descended from exile in the French Pyrenees to the Barcelona area attacking Francoists and continuing vigilante robberies as a form of propaganda by deed Their youngest brother Manolo Manuel Sabate i Llopart rode with another maquis in defiance of his brothers request that he pursue other work Manolo was quickly caught in a police trap and executed by firing squad in 1949 at Barcelona s El Camp de la Bota the notorious execution grounds of the Franco period Contents 1 Los Novatos 2 Quico 3 Pepe 4 Manuel 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further readingLos Novatos EditThe Sabate brothers Quico Pepe and Manolo were raised in L Hospitalet de Llobregat a Barcelona suburb at a time when anarchist organizations played more regular and practical roles in day to day living than government 1 Their father was a policeman but had retired by the time they had become famed expropriators 2 Many future maquis were raised in these Barcelona industrial suburbs of the 1920s and 1930s and were steeped in the anarchist tradition indigenous to Barcelona 3 During those two decades expropriators banded together in action affinity groups in a time of pistolerisme gun law in which armed anarchist urban guerrillas committed small scale violence against the bourgeoisie with vigilante justice against their enemies 4 Brothers Quico and Pepe participated in a group called Los Novatos or The Rookies During a 1933 anarchist uprising they downed L Hospitalet s power supply 4 Unlike the expropriators however who sought to incite insurrection towards the anarchist revolution the guerrillas known as the maquis as a result of the Spanish Civil War sought the fall of Franco first as anarchist revolution became a remote possibility 5 For this group propaganda of the deed meant converting others to anti Francoism not anarchist insurrection 6 During the Spanish Civil War Quico Sabate was known to even protect members of the bourgeoisie as long as they did not support fascism and hid some such people in his house to protect them from radical Republicans 5 Quico had evolved to this position having seen what his anti fascist but non anarchist fellow Republicans sacrificed during the war 6 Quico and Pepe joined a local Republican defense group that served on the Aragon front 7 Through 1949 the decade after the war 8 Republican guerrillas maquis lived in exile in the French Pyrenees and would regularly return to Spain to expropriate money and assassinate Francoist loyalists 9 The maquis of Barcelona treated their social role with some theatricality and were known to have a level of friendliness and respect even while robbing people in their hometown Their work was as much for personal gain as it was propaganda to share their message among their local comrades 10 who continued to support them 11 After one robbery the Sabate group left a note indicating that they anarchist resisters and not robbers would redistribute the food to children of killed anti fascists and continue fighting for freedom 12 The Sabate brothers Quico and Pepe were among the most famed maquis 1 and Quico himself legendary 13 Quico Edit Quico s tomb Francesc Sabate i Llopart 14 15 16 17 or Francisco Sabate y Llopart 8 better known as Quico Sabate or simply El Quico 18 19 was a propagandist who would engage in risky public displays such as during robberies to reaffirm both the importance of resisting the Franco regime and Sabate s own example of resisting their order 20 During his clandestine sojourns into Catalonia Spain Sabate was known to make personal effort at considerable risk to visit and maintain friendships with his former neighbors of L Hospitalet These acts were partly to maintain his reputation as a member of the community despite being an exile and fugitive 21 Quico s reputation traces to October 1945 when he freed three anarchist prisoners under police escort He would ride across the Spanish French border staying briefly in Spain and escaping into the French mountains In March 1949 he attempted to assassinate the police commissioner Eduardo Quintela His attack on the wrong car killed its occupants Upon his return to France Quico was jailed through 1955 In late 1959 he returned to Spain for the last time In January 1960 he and his group were surrounded in a Girona farmhouse Quico escaped wounded and commandeered a train After seeking medical treatment for his now gangrenous wound Quico was spotted and killed on January 5 22 His death inspired the 1961 novel Killing a Mouse on Sunday 23 which was adapted into the 1964 film Behold a Pale Horse 24 Pepe EditJosep Sabate i Llopart 25 i e Pep 26 or Pepe Sabate was sighted while exiting a tram in Barcelona s Placa Urquinaona in late 1949 Thinking that he might be followed he drew his pistol and when accosted by two police officers shot and killed one The other shot Pepe who resisted but would bleed out due to his mortal wounds in Carrer de Sant Pere Mes Baix a street in the Sant Pere neighborhood of Barcelona s Old City His wife and son continued to live in French exile 13 Manuel EditQuico and Pepe s younger brother Manolo Manuel Sabate i Llopart was less political in comparison to his brothers He pursued his dream of becoming a matador spending his late teens in Andalucia but later abandoned this pursuit and traveled to Eus in the Pyrenees mountains to join his brothers as a maquis Quico and Pepe suggested that Manuel stay study and work in France instead They doubted his devotion to the maquis cause and did not want Manuel along on their sojourns into Spain Manuel defied them and convinced Ramon Vila Capdevila and an Italian anarchist to let him ride alongside in 1949 27 They met up with another group but split off near Barcelona towards Vila s area Berga 28 Awaiting them was a police trap from which Vila escaped and Manuel was caught It was Manuel s first arrest but his namesake guaranteed a death sentence 29 In prison Manuel continued his propaganda by deed with reckless bravery and little effect having no audience He botched an escape attempt by irreparably destroying his toilet while looking for surfaces to dig out with a spoon He was punished and later executed 29 See also EditLucio UrtubiaReferences Edit a b Hayes 2015 p 71 Hayes 2015 p 90 Hayes 2015 p 70 a b Hayes 2015 p 72 a b Hayes 2015 p 73 a b Hayes 2015 p 74 Sheehan 2004 p 97 a b Hayes 2015 p 75 Hayes 2015 p 66 Hayes 2015 p 76 Hayes 2015 p 79 Hayes 2015 p 88 a b Hayes 2015 p 119 Francesc Sabate Llopart at the Real Academia de Historia de Espana Madrid in Spanish Consulted Sept 29 2020 Francesc Sabate i Llopart Enciclopedia Catalana in Catalan Consulted Sept 29 2020 Quico Sabate maquis hasta el fin La Vanguardia March 30 2020 in Spanish Consulted Sept 29 2020 Francesc Sabate i Llopart vida y obra Sobre la anaquia y otros temas Vida obra y biografias de activistas luchadoras y luchadores anarquistas II Desde 1900 a nuestros dias 2018 in Spanish Consulted Sept 29 2020 Francesc Sabate Llopart at the Real Academia de Historia de Espana Madrid in Spanish Consulted Sept 29 2020 Knowles Dorothy 1989 Armand Gatti in the Theatre Wild Duck Against the Wind Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press p 279 ISBN 978 0 8386 3371 7 Hayes 2015 p 89 Hayes 2015 pp 79 80 Beevor 2007 p 469 Puertas Emeterio Diez April 15 2018 Cine y comunicacion politica en Iberoamerica Diez estrategias de poder ante el imperio de la imagen ISBN 9788491801368 Smyth J E February 6 2014 Fred Zinnemann and the Cinema of Resistance ISBN 9781617039645 Maria Teresa Martinez de Sas Diccionari biografic del moviment obrer als paisos catalans L Abadia de Montserrat 2000 p 1233 in Catalan ISBN 9788484152439 Consulted Sept 29 2020 Entrevista a Joan Busquets maquis supervivent de la guerrilla contra Franco Els maquis som els oblidats de la lluita contra la dictadura franquista interview of Joan Busquets by Txema Bofill with the collaboration of Pep Cara expanded version of the interview published in issue no 132 of the Catalunya Papers magazine Oct 19 2011 Consulted Sept 29 2020 Hayes 2015 p 114 Hayes 2015 pp 114 115 a b Hayes 2015 p 115 Bibliography EditBeevor Antony 2007 2006 The Battle for Spain The Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 London Phoenix ISBN 978 0 7538 2165 7 OCLC 845175717 Hayes Marcella 2015 The Rebel Gesture Anarchist Maquis of Barcelona 1939 1960 The Spanish Civil War and Its Memory Barcelona University of Barcelona pp 63 127 ISBN 978 84 475 3927 7 Sheehan Sean 2004 Anarchism Reaktion Books pp 97 98 ISBN 978 1 86189 507 3 Further reading EditCacucci Pino 2001 Quico Ribelli Serie bianca Feltrinelli in Italian Milan Feltrinelli ISBN 978 88 07 17050 8 Eyre Pilar 2000 Quico Sabate el ultimo guerrillero Atalaya in Spanish Barcelona Ediciones Peninsula ISBN 978 84 8307 236 3 Hobsbawm Eric 1981 Bandits Revised ed Pantheon pp 113 ISBN 978 0 394 74850 4 Marin Silvestre Dolors 2002 Clandestinos el maquis contra el franquismo 1934 1975 Asi fue in Spanish Barcelona Plaza amp Janes ISBN 978 84 01 53053 1 Martinez de Sas Maria Teresa Pages i Blanch Pelai eds 2000 Sabate Diccionari biografic del moviment obrer als paisos catalans in Catalan Barcelona L Abadia de Montserrat pp 1232 1234 ISBN 978 84 8415 243 9 Peirats Jose 1989 Les anarchistes espagnols revolution de 1936 et luttes de toujours in French Toulouse Reperes Silena ISBN 978 2 907966 00 9 OCLC 927895847 Pons Prades Eduardo 1977 Guerrillas espanolas 1936 1960 in Spanish Barcelona Planeta ISBN 978 84 320 5634 5 OCLC 3846973 Sanchez i Agusti Ferran 2006 El Maquis anarquista de Toulouse a Barcelona por los Pirineos Alfa in Spanish Lleida Editorial Milenio ISBN 978 84 9743 174 3 OCLC 255697770 Thomas Bernard Villemont Isabelle 2000 Lucio l irreductible in French Paris Flammarion ISBN 978 2 08 067759 4 OCLC 214753216 Portals Anarchism Spain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sabate brothers amp oldid 1100639099 Quico, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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