- Juan García Oliver
Juan García Oliver (1901,
Reus , Tarragona Province—1980) was aSpain Anarcho-syndicalist revolutionary, and a leading figure of
SpanishAnarchism in Spain .During the
General Strike of 1917, García Oliver arrived inBarcelona and got involved intrade union activities. Along withBuenaventura Durruti andFrancisco Ascaso , he founded "Los Solidarios ", an Anarchist group responsible for variousassassination s, including an attempt on King Alfonso XIII's life. In 1920, he joined the "Confederación Nacional del Trabajo " (National Confederation of Labor, CNT).He was one of the most vocal opponents of the moderate Syndicalist trend led by
Ángel Pestaña (the latter was skeptical of the means advocated by the inner group of the CNT, the "Federación Anarquista Ibérica " (Iberian Anarchist Federation, FAI)). Pestaña led his supporters out of the Confederación in late 1932, in order to create theSyndicalist Party ; García Oliver remained virtually unopposed as the advocate ofparamilitary tactics, which he had argued for since the dictatorship ofMiguel Primo de Rivera .García Oliver eventually became the leader of the FAI. When the CNT reluctantly decided to enter the Popular Front government during the
Spanish Civil War of 1936-1939, García Oliver served as Minister of Justice underFrancisco Largo Caballero (1936-1937). He encouraged workers to disarm during the "Barcelona May Days " of May 1937, calling aceasefire . Some consider him a traitor to the Spanish anarchists for his willingness to compromise with government, while others see his concessions as understandable considering the need to defeatFrancisco Franco .He left the government later in the same month, but remained active in Barcelona until Catalonia fell in 1939, taking refuge in
France , thenSweden , and finally inMexico (where he remained until his death).ources
*"My Revolutionary Life: Juan Garcia Oliver interviewed by Freddy Gomez" (Translated by Paul Sharkey) (2008), Anarchist Library series #19,
Kate Sharpley Library , ISBN 9781873605721.
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