Dangerous Subjects? Spanish Repatriates from the USSR in the Province of Vizcaya, 1956-1963

Between 1956 and 1959, at the end of the Cold War’s first full decade, 1900 Spaniards – niños, political exiles, former divisionarios, pilots, aviators– repatriated from the USSR. Departing from existing scholarship that has examined the repatriates’ “integration” into Spanish society under the Fran...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Glennys Young
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad Complutense de Madrid 2016-12-01
Series:Cuadernos de Historia Contemporánea
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/CHCO/article/view/54292
_version_ 1819093366328000512
author Glennys Young
author_facet Glennys Young
author_sort Glennys Young
collection DOAJ
description Between 1956 and 1959, at the end of the Cold War’s first full decade, 1900 Spaniards – niños, political exiles, former divisionarios, pilots, aviators– repatriated from the USSR. Departing from existing scholarship that has examined the repatriates’ “integration” into Spanish society under the Franco regime, this article explores their agency, that is, the choices they made as they interacted with the institutions of the Franco regime and other Spaniards, despite close surveillance by Franco authorities and interrogation by the CIA under “Project Niños.”The article offers the first study of repatriation in a single province: Vizcaya, to which more repatriates returned than elsewhere. Following repatriates from the USSR, where they constructed an “imaginary Spain” in preparation for displacement, to their reunions with family they had not seen for nearly two decades, to their search for decent jobs and apartments, the essay demonstrates that repatriates did not necessarily see themselves as passive recipients of the regime’s guidance in being “incorporated” into Spanish life. By pressing their needs for housing, employment, validation of their Soviet degrees, and, at times, to leave Spain for the USSR or elsewhere, some repatriates succeeded in making their lives more tolerable. Repatriates enlisted Spaniards on other continents in transnational advocacy networks on behalf of repatriates who had been detained, arrested, and, in some cases, tortured. They thereby brought the regime’s repression of the repatriates to the attention of international institutions with power to shape the court of world opinion.
first_indexed 2024-12-21T23:10:22Z
format Article
id doaj.art-71b345d35cd84684959eeaf06b982ec8
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 0214-400X
1988-2734
language Spanish
last_indexed 2024-12-21T23:10:22Z
publishDate 2016-12-01
publisher Universidad Complutense de Madrid
record_format Article
series Cuadernos de Historia Contemporánea
spelling doaj.art-71b345d35cd84684959eeaf06b982ec82022-12-21T18:47:03ZspaUniversidad Complutense de MadridCuadernos de Historia Contemporánea0214-400X1988-27342016-12-0138010312710.5209/CHCO.5429250770Dangerous Subjects? Spanish Repatriates from the USSR in the Province of Vizcaya, 1956-1963Glennys Young0University of Washington, Seattle (USA)Between 1956 and 1959, at the end of the Cold War’s first full decade, 1900 Spaniards – niños, political exiles, former divisionarios, pilots, aviators– repatriated from the USSR. Departing from existing scholarship that has examined the repatriates’ “integration” into Spanish society under the Franco regime, this article explores their agency, that is, the choices they made as they interacted with the institutions of the Franco regime and other Spaniards, despite close surveillance by Franco authorities and interrogation by the CIA under “Project Niños.”The article offers the first study of repatriation in a single province: Vizcaya, to which more repatriates returned than elsewhere. Following repatriates from the USSR, where they constructed an “imaginary Spain” in preparation for displacement, to their reunions with family they had not seen for nearly two decades, to their search for decent jobs and apartments, the essay demonstrates that repatriates did not necessarily see themselves as passive recipients of the regime’s guidance in being “incorporated” into Spanish life. By pressing their needs for housing, employment, validation of their Soviet degrees, and, at times, to leave Spain for the USSR or elsewhere, some repatriates succeeded in making their lives more tolerable. Repatriates enlisted Spaniards on other continents in transnational advocacy networks on behalf of repatriates who had been detained, arrested, and, in some cases, tortured. They thereby brought the regime’s repression of the repatriates to the attention of international institutions with power to shape the court of world opinion.https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/CHCO/article/view/54292RepatriaciónDelegación del Gobierno Para los Repatriados de la URSS (DGR)Comisión Coordinadora de Repatriados de Rusia (CCR)niños de RusiafranquismoUnión Soviética.
spellingShingle Glennys Young
Dangerous Subjects? Spanish Repatriates from the USSR in the Province of Vizcaya, 1956-1963
Cuadernos de Historia Contemporánea
Repatriación
Delegación del Gobierno Para los Repatriados de la URSS (DGR)
Comisión Coordinadora de Repatriados de Rusia (CCR)
niños de Rusia
franquismo
Unión Soviética.
title Dangerous Subjects? Spanish Repatriates from the USSR in the Province of Vizcaya, 1956-1963
title_full Dangerous Subjects? Spanish Repatriates from the USSR in the Province of Vizcaya, 1956-1963
title_fullStr Dangerous Subjects? Spanish Repatriates from the USSR in the Province of Vizcaya, 1956-1963
title_full_unstemmed Dangerous Subjects? Spanish Repatriates from the USSR in the Province of Vizcaya, 1956-1963
title_short Dangerous Subjects? Spanish Repatriates from the USSR in the Province of Vizcaya, 1956-1963
title_sort dangerous subjects spanish repatriates from the ussr in the province of vizcaya 1956 1963
topic Repatriación
Delegación del Gobierno Para los Repatriados de la URSS (DGR)
Comisión Coordinadora de Repatriados de Rusia (CCR)
niños de Rusia
franquismo
Unión Soviética.
url https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/CHCO/article/view/54292
work_keys_str_mv AT glennysyoung dangeroussubjectsspanishrepatriatesfromtheussrintheprovinceofvizcaya19561963