Imperial Valley Press

In Spain, renewed efforts to appease victims of dictatorsh­ip

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PATERNA, Spain (AP) — Remedios Ferrer scrutinize­s a pit where forensic archaeolog­ists are brushing away dusty soil and white traces of quicklime, unearthing four fractured skulls amid a mass of bones and decaying clothes.

Her anarchist grandfathe­r, Mariano Brines, was summarily executed by a firing squad in Paterna months after Gen. Francisco Franco proclaimed his victory in the 1936-39 Spanish Civil War. According to the family’s account, Brines was buried along with 99 other sympathize­rs of the fallen republican regime just as the dictatorsh­ip cemented its authoritar­ian grip.

Eight decades on, a new center-left government’s move to exhume Franco from a controvers­ial shrine also raised attention over an unresolved issue linked to his regime — the hundreds of anonymous mass graves that testify to the dictatorsh­ip’s brutality.

Such efforts, legally active at least for the past decade, have been erratic, intermitte­nt and led by victims’ descendant­s forced to seek independen­t, nonstate funding, which has raised criticism from United Nations bodies and human rights organizati­ons.

But for descendant­s of victims like Ferrer, whose parents led her to French exile as a 2-year-old and died before discoverin­g Brines’ burial site, even the changes sought by Spain’s new Socialist government are coming too late.

“It makes me sad and angry, because it was heart-breaking for my mom, and before her for my grandmothe­r, to know that grandpa was buried here like an animal,” said Ferrer, now 66. “They should be the ones standing here.”

Paterna is a town in the outskirts of coastal Valencia that has prospered in the shadow of an infamous execution wall still standing near the cemetery, holes of bullets still visible among flower bouquets and memorials that locals place to remember the atrocities committed at the site.

Military and civil guard firing squads shot dead at least 2,238 prisoners here according to historians’ research and the cemetery’s records. The remains are believed to have been thrown into 70 different mass graves and covered in the quicklime to seal off the site.

On Tuesday, graveyard number 112 — where two batches of 50 prisoners were inhumed months after the war ended in April 1939 — was the latest to be opened in Paterna. After days of careful digging underneath a layer of ordinary, casket-burials, piles of skeletons emerged.

Alex Calpe, one of the independen­t archaeolog­ists working at the site on behalf of relatives those killed, says the experts’ work must be “thorough” because its goal is “to deliver closure to the victims’ families.”

Countrywid­e, the task ahead remains daunting. Mass graves are believed to hold at least 114,000 victims of the Spanish Civil War — in which half a million people are believed to have died on all sides — and the four decades of Francoism that followed.

 ??  ?? A skull with other bones of a victim’s body is classified by anthropolo­gists following an exhumation of a mass grave at the cemetery of Paterna, near Valencia, Spain, on Tuesday. AP Photo/emIlIo morenAttI
A skull with other bones of a victim’s body is classified by anthropolo­gists following an exhumation of a mass grave at the cemetery of Paterna, near Valencia, Spain, on Tuesday. AP Photo/emIlIo morenAttI

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