Franco’s ghost

The generalísimo kept Saint Teresa of Avila’s mummified hand by his bedside

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The shadow of fascism, 2017: Franco admirers on the 42nd anniversary of his death
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This article is in The Spectator’s December 2019 US edition. Subscribe here.

I was no sooner in Madrid than General Franco was exhumed from his mausoleum not far from El Escorial. An air-force helicopter ferried his remains from the Valley of the Fallen, where a gigantic stone cross marks the dictator’s grave as well as those of 34,000 Spanish Civil War dead. For four decades the dictator had lain beneath a one-and-a-half-ton granite slab. No longer. As eight of his descendants shouldered the coffin to the helicopter, shouts went up of ‘Viva España¡ Viva Franco¡’ from Falangist diehards…

This article is in

 The Spectator’s December 2019 US edition. Subscribe here.

I was no sooner in Madrid than General Franco was exhumed from his mausoleum not far from El Escorial. An air-force helicopter ferried his remains from the Valley of the Fallen, where a gigantic stone cross marks the dictator’s grave as well as those of 34,000 Spanish Civil War dead. For four decades the dictator had lain beneath a one-and-a-half-ton granite slab. No longer. As eight of his descendants shouldered the coffin to the helicopter, shouts went up of ‘Viva España¡ Viva Franco¡’ from Falangist diehards behind a police cordon. Franco was reinterred the same day alongside his wife, Carmen Polo, in a family pantheon 20 miles away.

The exhumation was a symbolic triumph for Spain’s socialist government under Pedro Sánchez, which had long argued that the Valley of the Fallen glorifies the generalísimo at the expense of the thousands in unmarked graves from the 1936-39 civil war. The elimination of the last great symbol of Spain’s dictatorship may have helped to win votes for Sánchez in November’s general election.

I had come to Madrid to talk about Dante Alighieri and the Italian writer-chemist Primo Levi. University City, where I was staying, was the site of a savage battle for Madrid in November 1936 and still bears pockmarks of shrapnel. The campus entrance itself is marked by a monumental Arch of Victory built by Franco to celebrate the defeat of the Second Republic. Against the Republican infidel Franco had launched a self-styled ‘crusade’ which he compared to the Christian Reconquista of Spain from the Moors. Hailed as caudillo (the nearest equivalent to führer), Franco radiated a sour Catholic asceticism. He kept Saint Teresa of Avila’s mummified hand by his bedside.

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Next day I was taken on a tour of the Prado Museum. Diego Velázquez’s astonishing 1656 painting ‘Las Meninas’ (The Maids of Honor) attracts hordes of visitors, many of them Chinese. For my friend Michael Jacobs, who died in 2014 of cancer, aged 61, this was quite simply the greatest painting of all time. Michael had studied at the Courtauld Institute in London under the dubious Anthony Blunt — later revealed to have been a Russian spy — who taught him how to ‘read’ Velázquez and other Spanish Golden Age painters patronized by King Philip IV. Michael’s book on Velázquez, Everything is Happening, sadly left unfinished at his death, investigates the mystery of ‘Las Meninas’ in all its glittery allure.

I liked Michael so much that I coveted him as my mentor. He had first traveled to Spain in 1968 while still a schoolboy. In Madrid he discovered a world of dark, ‘thorny’ Catholicism that haunted him. (Salvador Dalí, who admired Franco, believed the word España derived from the Spanish for ‘thorn’, espina.) Francisco Goya’s notorious ‘Black Paintings’, on display in the Prado, offer images of misfits, bloody flagellants, hooded inquisitors and sideshow freaks. Though Goya was a favorite at the Spanish court, he was also a prototype war reporter. The Peninsular War, fought on Spanish soil between Napoleon’s France and Britain from 1807 to 1812, was unimaginably barbarous, yet Goya chronicled its cruelties unflinchingly. A draft sketch for his canvas ‘The Third of May 1808’, where a French firing squad is about to execute a group of Madrid resisters, was used for the cover of the 1947 edition of Primo Levi’s If This Is a Man.

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It was a relief to escape from the crowded Prado to the Botanical Garden opposite. While I sat waiting at the entrance for Dale Sumner, an English expatriate who had married into the Domecq sherry dynasty, I finished Richard Greene’s superb forthcoming biography of Graham Greene, Russian Roulette. Greene did not like Franco, but his allegiances were problematic. Any Englishman who was openly anti-Fascist in the 1930s was assumed to be anti-Catholic and for the Republican cause. Yet Greene was a Catholic — and a leftist. Whose side was he on?

Dale Sumner turned out to resemble Graham Greene. He had been to Dulwich College, the same school as me, Raymond Chandler, P.G. Wodehouse and Nigel Farage, and was wearing a Dulwich alumnus tie for identification purposes. ‘I’ve lived in Madrid for 25 years,’ he said as we inspected some greenhouse dates, ‘and I must say I haven’t regretted a single day.’ Afterwards we sat in a tapas bar off Plaza del Sol, the floor littered with discarded shrimp tails.

On my last day I took a bus to Franco’s new resting place in the barrio of El Pardo, north of the city center. At the cemetery gates, surprisingly, there were no nostálgicos (as the dictator’s faithful are called) or even curious bystanders. The anniversary of Franco’s death on November 20, however, drew pilgrims, and turned El Pardo into what the conservative Spanish newspaper ABC predictively called a ‘Francolandia’ of Nationalist flags and Francoist geegaws for sale. Rafael Trujillo, the Dominican dictator, happens to lie buried in El Pardo. He and Franco should get along fine.

This article is in The Spectator’s December 2019 US edition. Subscribe here.