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TheProle

(3,840 posts)
Thu Nov 6, 2025, 12:53 PM Thursday

Franco captivates young Spaniards 50 years after death

"Life was better under Franco" has become a trope on social media, hooking a frustrated generation that has received little education on the dictatorship and is receptive to anti-system politics.

After overthrowing a democratic republic in a 1936-1939 civil war that killed hundreds of thousands of people, Franco ruled Spain with an iron fist until his death in 1975.

But Cristina Luz Garcia, who teaches history at a Madrid school, said she has seen some of her students repeat "myths" and "phrases that are closely tied to the regime itself and Francoist propaganda".

Those pupils do not have "very deep knowledge of the person" or of "the negative consequences" of 36 years marked by torture and the denial of freedoms, she told AFP.

The pro-Franco narrative is, for some students, "a way to defy the teachers or appear to have a different opinion... which is something very attractive about adolescence itself", she added.


https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20251106-franco-captivates-young-spaniards-50-years-after-death
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Franco captivates young Spaniards 50 years after death (Original Post) TheProle Thursday OP
They should have thrown his carcass in a landfill dalton99a Thursday #1
Furthermore, he's still dead. nt Buns_of_Fire Thursday #2
That teacher should display 'Guernica' in Captain Zero Thursday #3
Oh! I remember SNL and the "Franco is still dead" trope, and ... electric_blue68 Thursday #4
This message was self-deleted by its author PeaceWave Thursday #5
I'd put money on it róisín_dubh Thursday #9
I spent some time in Spain in the 1980s. There were people who remembered LeftinOH Thursday #6
More from El Pais Solly Mack Thursday #7
Spain was scary place when los Grices roamed the streets in the 1970s. pecosbob Thursday #8

dalton99a

(91,098 posts)
1. They should have thrown his carcass in a landfill
Thu Nov 6, 2025, 01:08 PM
Thursday
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/oct/24/franco-victory-people-spain-mausoleum-dictatorship

At last Franco is properly buried. This victory belongs to the people of Spain
The dictator has laid in his pharaonic mausoleum for 44 years. Now the last great symbol of the dictatorship has gone
Irene Lozano
Thu 24 Oct 2019 13.44 EDT

n Spain, the process to exhume the remains of the dictator Francisco Franco from the basilica at the site known as the Valley of the Fallen concluded today. It brought to an end an anomaly that had persisted for 44 years – because in principle, a democracy cannot honour a dictatorship. Until now, Franco had been interred in a mausoleum of gigantic proportions, located in the mountains to the north of Madrid, at an altitude of 1,400 metres and crowned by a 150-metre-high cross that can be seen for miles.

From now on, his remains will lie in the family tomb of an ordinary cemetery, with no flag or honours of any kind. The dictator has left the monument that was constructed on his orders at the end of the civil war, under the initial direction of the Basque architect Pedro Muguruza, a sympathiser with the new regime. It is estimated that the monument’s construction was achieved with the labour of 20,000 Republican prisoners of war and political prisoners, a fact that has been especially hurtful to many.

The dictator’s family and the monks of the basilica had attempted to prevent the exhumation, using all the instruments legally available to them. It is the very strength of the Spanish legal system that has given them the protection that the dictator refused to the millions of Spaniards whom he made his enemies, and to those he executed without mercy. Nevertheless, these legal manoeuvres only delayed the outcome. The fact that the exhumation is taking place today, and not sooner, is due to those who opposed it, not because of government inaction.

The first step towards this conclusion was taken in May 2017, when a parliamentary initiative by the Spanish Socialist Workers party (PSOE) to reactivate the 2007 law of historical memory and to exhume the dictator generated an extraordinary degree of consensus in the congress of deputies. Only one vote was cast against the measure, and that was by mistake.

...


electric_blue68

(24,854 posts)
4. Oh! I remember SNL and the "Franco is still dead" trope, and ...
Thu Nov 6, 2025, 01:19 PM
Thursday

I didn't get really back then I guess you could call it grim comedy - in the sense of people looking over their shoulders after the trauma of living under his dictatorship making sure he/his followers no longer had the potential of riding back into power.

Response to TheProle (Original post)

róisín_dubh

(12,179 posts)
9. I'd put money on it
Thu Nov 6, 2025, 03:12 PM
Thursday

Just like all the fucking poison in Europe, it traces back to Russian troll farms and that fucking eat in the Kremlin.

LeftinOH

(5,602 posts)
6. I spent some time in Spain in the 1980s. There were people who remembered
Thu Nov 6, 2025, 01:44 PM
Thursday

the Franco era with great fondness. The hard line "anti-crime & traditional values" narrative always resonates with some people. I even visited a few homes where they had a small bust of Franco on the mantel.

pecosbob

(8,233 posts)
8. Spain was scary place when los Grices roamed the streets in the 1970s.
Thu Nov 6, 2025, 02:38 PM
Thursday

Didn't hang around any longer than I had to. They maimed, tortured, and killed with impunity.

For those that don't remember...

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