Irene Falcón: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Spanish journalist, feminist, pacifist and Communist activist}} |
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{{family name hatnote|Lewy|Rodríguez|lang=Spanish}} |
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{{Infobox person |
{{Infobox person |
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| name = Irene Falcón |
| name = Irene Falcón |
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| image = Irene_Falcón_flanked_by_Vicente_Uribe_and_Planelles_at_a_PCE_meeting_in_Moscow,_1940.jpg |
| image = Irene_Falcón_flanked_by_Vicente_Uribe_and_Planelles_at_a_PCE_meeting_in_Moscow,_1940.jpg |
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| alt = |
| alt = |
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| caption = Irene Falcón flanked by Vicente Uribe and Planelles at a PCE meeting in Moscow, 1940 |
| caption = Irene Falcón flanked by [[Vicente Uribe]] and Planelles at a PCE meeting in Moscow, 1940 |
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| birth_name = Irene |
| birth_name = Irene Carlota Berta Lewy y Rodríguez |
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| birth_date = 1907<!-- {{Birth date and age|YYYY|MM|DD}} or {{Birth-date and age|Month DD, YYYY}} --> |
| birth_date = 27 November 1907 <!-- {{Birth date and age|YYYY|MM|DD}} or {{Birth-date and age|Month DD, YYYY}} --> |
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| birth_place = [[Madrid]], Spain |
| birth_place = [[Madrid]], Spain |
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| death_date = 1999<!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} or {{Death-date and age|Month DD, YYYY|Month DD, YYYY}} (death date then birth date) --> |
| death_date = 19 August 1999<!-- {{Death date and age|YYYY|MM|DD|YYYY|MM|DD}} or {{Death-date and age|Month DD, YYYY|Month DD, YYYY}} (death date then birth date) --> |
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| death_place = |
| death_place = [[El Espinar]], Segovia, Spain |
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| nationality = Spanish |
| nationality = Spanish |
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| other_names = |
| other_names = |
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| known_for = |
| known_for = |
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}} |
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'''Irene |
'''Irene Rodríguez''', née ''Irene Carlota Berta Lewy y Rodríguez'' (27 November 1907 – 19 August 1999) was a Spanish journalist, feminist, pacifist and Communist activist. For many years she was the assistant of [[Dolores Ibárruri]], leader of the [[Communist Party of Spain|Spanish Communist Party]], and she is best known for this role. After the [[Spanish Civil War]] she was forced into exile in Moscow and Beijing. She returned to Spain after the return to democracy in 1977. |
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==Early years== |
==Early years== |
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Irene |
Irene Lewy Rodríguez was born in Madrid on 27 November 1907, the second of three sisters.{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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Her father was Siegried Levy Herzberg, a middle-class Polish Jew. |
Her father was Siegried Levy Herzberg, a middle-class Polish Jew.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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Her father died when she was five, and to survive her mother rented rooms in their house in the Calle de Trafalgar. |
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She attended the German School in Madrid, and learned several languages. |
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Irene was educated at the German College and learned four languages. |
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She worked as a journalist, and as a librarian for [[Santiago Ramón y Cajal]] (1852–1934), a biologist who won the Nobel Prize.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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She obtained a position as a librarian for [[Santiago Ramón y Cajal]] (1852–1934).{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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Irene married César Falcón, a revolutionary from Peru, in 1925 and moved with him to London, England. |
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He was a biologist who won the Nobel Prize.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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Their son Mayo was born there in May 1926 but was not registered at the Spanish consulate due to concerns with the dictatorship of [[Miguel Primo de Rivera]].{{sfn|Zurbano Melero|2010}} |
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[[File:César Falcón.jpg|thumb|[[César Falcón]] (1892–1970), Irene Falcón's husband]] |
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For a few years the couple lived in London, where Irene Falcón was the correspondent for ''La Voz'' (The Voice), a Spanish newspaper.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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In 1922 Irene Lewy met the Peruvian journalist [[César Falcón]] (1892–1970), and fell in love.{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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Irene and César returned to Spain when Primo de Rivera fell early in 1930. |
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Two years later the newspaper ''El Sol'' asked Falcón to move to London as a correspondent. |
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Irene edited a collection of books on women, the best feminist literature of the time, including work by [[Doris Langley Moore]], [[Vera Inber]] and [[Dora Russell]], wife of [[Bertrand Russell]], whom Irene had met in London.{{sfn|Zurbano Melero|2010}} |
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They married, and Irene accompanied him. She was contracted as correspondent by the daily ''La Voz'' (The Voice), a Spanish newspaper.{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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Their son Mayo was born in London in May 1926 but was not registered at the Spanish consulate due to concerns with the dictatorship of [[Miguel Primo de Rivera]].{{sfn|Zurbano Melero|2010}} |
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Irene and César returned to Spain after Primo de Rivera fell in 1930.{{sfn|Zurbano Melero|2010}} |
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The Falcóns published ''Historia Nueva'' (New History) and launched the party ''Izquierda Revolucionaria y Antiimperialista'' (IRYA: Anti-Imperialist Revolutionary Left).{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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Irene founded the feminist organization ''Mujeres Antifascistas'' (Anti-Fascist Women).{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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She edited a collection of books by women, the best feminist literature of the time, including work by [[Doris Langley Moore]], [[Vera Inber]] and [[Dora Russell]], wife of [[Bertrand Russell]], whom Irene had met in London.{{sfn|Zurbano Melero|2010}} |
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Irene wrote in the preface to Dora Russell's ''Hypatia'', |
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{{blockquote|Female emancipation must bring peace to the people, must avoid by all means a repetition of the horrors of war, where their children, subjects of civilized nations, kill and are killed for no reason, bound by a false patriotism because true patriotism is the love of humanity. If mothers, wives know how to explain this to his men with intelligence, they will manage to overcome the pull of the trumpets and drums and all the decorative deception of militarism.{{sfn|Domingo|2004|p=152}} }} |
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==Communist activist== |
==Communist activist== |
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[[File:Dolores Ibárruri 1936.jpg|thumb|[[Dolores Ibárruri]] in 1936]] |
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The Falcóns joined the Spanish Communist Party in 1932, when IRYA merged into that party. |
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There Irene met [[Dolores Ibárruri]], known as ''Pasionaria''.{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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They lost their jobs with the newspapers, and lived in poverty in a slum in Madrid.{{sfn|Zurbano Melero|2010}} |
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They formed the ''Teatro Proletario'', a theater group.{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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This group, also called ''Nosotros'' ("Us"), was formed in 1933 and performed work by [[Maxim Gorky]] and the classic anti-war drama ''Hinkemann'' by [[Ernst Toller]].{{sfn|London|1997|p=9}} |
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In the summer of 1933 they visited Moscow with the ''Teatro Proletario'' group.{{sfn|Zurbano Melero|2010}} |
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The Soviet press reported in depth on their performances.{{sfn|London|1997|p=9}} |
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In 1933 Irene and César Falcón joined the [[Spanish Communist Party]] (PCE: ''Partido Comunista España'').{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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They lost their jobs with the newspapers, and lived in poverty in a slum in Madrid. |
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They joined a theater group, ''Teatro Proletario'', and in the summer of 1933 visited Moscow with the group.{{sfn|Zurbano Melero|2010}} |
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The Spanish Committee of Women against War and Fascism, affiliated with the [[World Committee Against War and Fascism]], was created with a committee controlled by the PCE.{{sfn|Alba|1983|p=166}} |
The Spanish Committee of Women against War and Fascism, affiliated with the [[World Committee Against War and Fascism]], was created with a committee controlled by the PCE.{{sfn|Alba|1983|p=166}} |
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In August 1934 the Spanish committee sent a delegation to the World Congress of Women against War and Fascism in Paris. |
In August 1934 the Spanish committee sent a delegation to the World Congress of Women against War and Fascism in Paris. |
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Ibárruri led the group, which included two Republicans and two Communists, [[Encarnación Fuyola]] and Irene Falcón. |
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The Spanish committee was dissolved in October 1934 during the repression that followed the [[Asturian miners' strike of 1934|Asturian miners' strike]].{{sfn|Alba|1983|p=166}} |
The Spanish committee was dissolved in October 1934 during the repression that followed the [[Asturian miners' strike of 1934|Asturian miners' strike]].{{sfn|Alba|1983|p=166}} |
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In 1934 Irene went to Moscow as correspondent of ''[[Mundo Obrero]]'' (Worker's World), the PCE newspaper. She returned to Spain in 1937 during the [[Spanish Civil War]] (1936–39) to help Dolores Ibárruri, and became her close colleague and friend until Ibárruri's death in November 1989.{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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She returned to Spain in 1937 during the [[Spanish Civil War]] (1936–39), where she became the aide of Dolores Ibárruri, the leader of the PCE.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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Irene Falcón collaborated with ''Pasionaria'' (Ibárruri) for more than fifty years.{{sfn|Díaz Arenas|1997|p=147}} |
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She used the pseudonym "Toboso". |
She used the pseudonym "Toboso". |
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Early in March 1939 she helped arrange the evacuation of senior party members from Spain. Ibárruri left for [[Oran]] on 6 March 1939.{{sfn|Dimitrov|2008|p=103}} |
Early in March 1939 she helped arrange the evacuation of senior party members from Spain. Ibárruri left for [[Oran]] on 6 March 1939.{{sfn|Dimitrov|2008|p=103}} |
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Falcón accompanied Ibárruri into exile in the Soviet Union. There she worked for the underground ''Radio Pirenaica''.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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==Exile== |
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Irene Falcón went into exile with Ibárruri in Paris and then the USSR.{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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There she worked for the underground ''Radio Pirenaica''.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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The Falcóns' marriage broke down because César Falcón could not remain faithful.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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During [[World War II]] (1939–45) Irene and César Falcón were separated, and after the war César returned to Peru.{{sfn|Zurbano Melero|2010}} |
During [[World War II]] (1939–45) Irene and César Falcón were separated, and after the war César returned to Peru.{{sfn|Zurbano Melero|2010}} |
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Their marriage broke down because César Falcón could not remain faithful.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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Irene Falcón remained a feminist within the Communist mold. Writing in the Communist magazine ''Nuestra Bandera'' in August 1946 Falcon called for women to continue to play their traditional nurturing role, but to also participate in the struggle against Fascism.{{sfn|Finnerty|2013|p=219}} |
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She wrote, "Precisely in the clandestine resistance, women can play and are playing an extremely important role. On the one hand, women who have already played an active part in workers or mass organizations are an important support to their partners and children who choose the heroic path of resistance, the one that helps the guerrilla movements."{{sfn|Finnerty|2013|pp=219–220}} |
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In August 1946 Falcon became national secretary of the Union of Spanish Women.{{sfn|Finnerty|2013|p=220}} |
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After the [[Slánský trial|Prague show trial of 1952]] eleven Czechoslovakian Communists were executed, including Falcón's former lover [[Bedřich Geminder]], head of the [[Czech Communist Party]]'s central committee's Department of International Relations.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
After the [[Slánský trial|Prague show trial of 1952]] eleven Czechoslovakian Communists were executed, including Falcón's former lover [[Bedřich Geminder]], head of the [[Czech Communist Party]]'s central committee's Department of International Relations.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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Although her relationship with Geminder had ended in 1945 Falcón was thrown out of the party |
Although her relationship with Geminder had ended in 1945 Falcón was thrown out of the party.{{sfn|Herrmann|2010|p=29}} |
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She became a ''persona non grata'' and lost her job at Radio Pirenaica. |
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Ibárruri managed to get her another job, working discretely to avoid herself getting into trouble.{{sfn|Herrmann|2010|p=29}} |
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She and her sister Kety were banned from working, and her son Mayo was banned from the Soviet Communist Party.{{sfn|Preston|2011|p=421}} |
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Falcón obtained work with [[Radio Beijing]]. |
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Ibárruri managed to get her another job, working discreetly to avoid herself getting into trouble.{{sfn|Herrmann|2010|p=29}} |
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In 1977 she returned to Madrid. Irene Falcón died in 1999.{{sfn|Salvadó|2013|p=128}} |
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In 1954 Irene Falcón went to [[Beijing]] to launch a radio station in Castilian. After a year and a half she returned to the USSR.{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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Irene Falcón returned to Spain from exile in 1977 after the return of democracy. She became director of the Dolores Ibárruri Foundation. |
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In 1996 she published her memoirs entitled ''Asaltar los cielos. Mi vida junto a Pasionaria'' (Storm the Skies: My Life with Pasionaria). |
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She died on 19 August 1999 in [[El Espinar]], Segovia, from a respiratory condition.{{sfn|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}} |
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==Works== |
==Works== |
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{{ |
{{Refbegin}} |
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*{{cite book|title=Trotski et le trotskisme. Textes et documents | |
*{{cite book|title=Trotski et le trotskisme. Textes et documents |author=V. I. Lenin |author2=J. Stalin |author3=Trotski, Irène Falcon |author4=Michel Koltsov|pages=96 |
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|location=Paris |publisher=Bureau d'éditions, 31, boulevard Magenta |year=1937}} |
|location=Paris |publisher=Bureau d'éditions, 31, boulevard Magenta |year=1937}} |
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*{{cite book|title=Asalto a los cielos : mi vida junto a Pasionaria |author=Irene Falcón |
*{{cite book|title=Asalto a los cielos : mi vida junto a Pasionaria |author=Irene Falcón |author2=Manuel Jiménez |author3=Jesús Montero |name-list-style=amp|year=1996|pages= 455}} |
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{{ |
{{Refend}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{ |
{{Notelist}} |
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{{ |
{{Reflist |colwidth=30em}} |
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==Sources== |
==Sources== |
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{{ |
{{Refbegin}} |
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*{{cite book|last=Alba|first=Víctor|title=The Communist Party in Spain |
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*{{cite book|ref=harv |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=H0ydA3137WQC&pg=PA166|access-date=2015-03-07 |
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|last=Alba|first=Víctor|title=The Communist Party in Spain |
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|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=H0ydA3137WQC&pg=PA166|accessdate=2015-03-07 |
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|date=1983-01-01|publisher=Transaction Publishers|isbn=978-1-4128-1999-2}} |
|date=1983-01-01|publisher=Transaction Publishers|isbn=978-1-4128-1999-2}} |
||
*{{cite book|last=Díaz Arenas|first=Angel|title=Quién es quién en la obra narrativa de Manuel Vázquez Montalbán |
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*{{cite book|ref=harv |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=oDCo_a4410gC&pg=PA147|access-date=2015-03-19 |
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|last=Díaz Arenas|first=Angel|title=Quién es quién en la obra narrativa de Manuel Vázquez Montalbán |
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|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=oDCo_a4410gC&pg=PA147|accessdate=2015-03-19 |
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|date=1997-01-01|publisher=Edition Reichenberger|isbn=978-3-930700-53-0}} |
|date=1997-01-01|publisher=Edition Reichenberger|isbn=978-3-930700-53-0}} |
||
*{{cite book|last=Dimitrov|first=Georgi|title=The Diary of Georgi Dimitrov, 1933-1949 |
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*{{cite book|ref=harv |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FmwnBTggMssC&pg=PA103|access-date=2015-03-19 |
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|last=Dimitrov|first=Georgi|title=The Diary of Georgi Dimitrov, 1933-1949 |
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|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=FmwnBTggMssC&pg=PA103|accessdate=2015-03-19 |
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|date=2008-10-01|publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=978-0-300-13385-1}} |
|date=2008-10-01|publisher=Yale University Press|isbn=978-0-300-13385-1}} |
||
*{{cite book| |
*{{cite book|last=Domingo|first=Carmen|title=Con voz y voto |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aJmF-m-mOIcC&pg=PT159|access-date=2015-03-20 |
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|last=Herrmann|first=Gina|title=Written in Red: The Communist Memoir in Spain |
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|year=2004|publisher=Lumen|isbn=978-84-264-1416-8}} |
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|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=qfL06dTmHyYC&pg=PA29|accessdate=2015-03-19 |
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*{{cite book|last=Finnerty|first=Deirdre|title=Memory and Cultural History of the Spanish Civil War: Realms of Oblivion |
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|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uRnhAQAAQBAJ&pg=PA219|access-date=2015-03-20 |
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|date=2013-10-04|publisher=BRILL|isbn=978-90-04-25996-6|chapter=The Republican Mother }} |
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*{{cite book|last=Herrmann|first=Gina|title=Written in Red: The Communist Memoir in Spain |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qfL06dTmHyYC&pg=PA29|access-date=2015-03-19 |
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|year=2010|publisher=University of Illinois Press|isbn=978-0-252-03469-5}} |
|year=2010|publisher=University of Illinois Press|isbn=978-0-252-03469-5}} |
||
*{{cite journal|ref={{harvid|Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País}}|url=http://elpais.com/diario/1999/08/20/agenda/935100001_850215.html |
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*{{cite book|ref=harv |
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|title=Irene Falcón, secretaria personal de Pasionaria|journal=El País|date=1999-08-20|access-date=2015-03-20}} |
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|last=Salvadó|first=Francisco J. Romero|title=Historical Dictionary of the Spanish Civil War |
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*{{cite book|last=London|first=John|title=Reception and Renewal in Modern Spanish Theatre, 1939-1963 |
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|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=wsE7Nm9-yDEC&pg=PA128|accessdate=2015-03-19 |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hQLnqUx4NpkC&pg=PA9|access-date=2015-03-20 |
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|year=1997|publisher=MHRA|isbn=978-0-901286-83-3}} |
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*{{cite book|last=Preston|first=Paul|title=Las tres Españas del 36 |
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|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pEIeCWTx7cMC&pg=PT421|access-date=2015-03-20 |
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|date=2011-04-08|publisher=Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial España|language=Spanish|isbn=978-84-9989-139-2}} |
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*{{cite book|last=Salvadó|first=Francisco J. Romero|title=Historical Dictionary of the Spanish Civil War |
|||
|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wsE7Nm9-yDEC&pg=PA128|access-date=2015-03-19 |
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|year=2013|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-0-8108-5784-1}} |
|year=2013|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|isbn=978-0-8108-5784-1}} |
||
*{{cite web |
*{{cite web|url=http://ciudad-futura.net/2010/11/22/cesar-falcon_jgz/ |
||
|last=Zurbano Melero |first=José Gabriel |title=César e Irene Falcón: un matrimonio con compromiso|date=2010-11-22|work=Ciudad futura | |
|last=Zurbano Melero |first=José Gabriel |title=César e Irene Falcón: un matrimonio con compromiso|date=2010-11-22|work=Ciudad futura |access-date=2015-03-19}} |
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{{ |
{{Refend}} |
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{{ |
{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Falcon Rodriguez, Irene}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Falcon Rodriguez, Irene}} |
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[[Category:1999 deaths]] |
[[Category:1999 deaths]] |
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[[Category:Spanish communists]] |
[[Category:Spanish communists]] |
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[[Category:Exiles of the Spanish Civil War in the Soviet Union]] |
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[[Category:Spanish socialist feminists]] |
Latest revision as of 18:37, 10 August 2023
Irene Falcón | |
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Born | Irene Carlota Berta Lewy y Rodríguez 27 November 1907 Madrid, Spain |
Died | 19 August 1999 El Espinar, Segovia, Spain |
Nationality | Spanish |
Occupation | Journalist |
Irene Rodríguez, née Irene Carlota Berta Lewy y Rodríguez (27 November 1907 – 19 August 1999) was a Spanish journalist, feminist, pacifist and Communist activist. For many years she was the assistant of Dolores Ibárruri, leader of the Spanish Communist Party, and she is best known for this role. After the Spanish Civil War she was forced into exile in Moscow and Beijing. She returned to Spain after the return to democracy in 1977.
Early years
[edit]Irene Lewy Rodríguez was born in Madrid on 27 November 1907, the second of three sisters.[1] Her father was Siegried Levy Herzberg, a middle-class Polish Jew.[2] Her father died when she was five, and to survive her mother rented rooms in their house in the Calle de Trafalgar. Irene was educated at the German College and learned four languages. She obtained a position as a librarian for Santiago Ramón y Cajal (1852–1934).[1] He was a biologist who won the Nobel Prize.[2]
In 1922 Irene Lewy met the Peruvian journalist César Falcón (1892–1970), and fell in love.[1] Two years later the newspaper El Sol asked Falcón to move to London as a correspondent. They married, and Irene accompanied him. She was contracted as correspondent by the daily La Voz (The Voice), a Spanish newspaper.[1] Their son Mayo was born in London in May 1926 but was not registered at the Spanish consulate due to concerns with the dictatorship of Miguel Primo de Rivera.[3]
Irene and César returned to Spain after Primo de Rivera fell in 1930.[3] The Falcóns published Historia Nueva (New History) and launched the party Izquierda Revolucionaria y Antiimperialista (IRYA: Anti-Imperialist Revolutionary Left).[1] Irene founded the feminist organization Mujeres Antifascistas (Anti-Fascist Women).[1] She edited a collection of books by women, the best feminist literature of the time, including work by Doris Langley Moore, Vera Inber and Dora Russell, wife of Bertrand Russell, whom Irene had met in London.[3] Irene wrote in the preface to Dora Russell's Hypatia,
Female emancipation must bring peace to the people, must avoid by all means a repetition of the horrors of war, where their children, subjects of civilized nations, kill and are killed for no reason, bound by a false patriotism because true patriotism is the love of humanity. If mothers, wives know how to explain this to his men with intelligence, they will manage to overcome the pull of the trumpets and drums and all the decorative deception of militarism.[4]
Communist activist
[edit]The Falcóns joined the Spanish Communist Party in 1932, when IRYA merged into that party. There Irene met Dolores Ibárruri, known as Pasionaria.[1] They lost their jobs with the newspapers, and lived in poverty in a slum in Madrid.[3] They formed the Teatro Proletario, a theater group.[1] This group, also called Nosotros ("Us"), was formed in 1933 and performed work by Maxim Gorky and the classic anti-war drama Hinkemann by Ernst Toller.[5] In the summer of 1933 they visited Moscow with the Teatro Proletario group.[3] The Soviet press reported in depth on their performances.[5]
The Spanish Committee of Women against War and Fascism, affiliated with the World Committee Against War and Fascism, was created with a committee controlled by the PCE.[6] In August 1934 the Spanish committee sent a delegation to the World Congress of Women against War and Fascism in Paris. Ibárruri led the group, which included two Republicans and two Communists, Encarnación Fuyola and Irene Falcón. The Spanish committee was dissolved in October 1934 during the repression that followed the Asturian miners' strike.[6]
In 1934 Irene went to Moscow as correspondent of Mundo Obrero (Worker's World), the PCE newspaper. She returned to Spain in 1937 during the Spanish Civil War (1936–39) to help Dolores Ibárruri, and became her close colleague and friend until Ibárruri's death in November 1989.[1] She used the pseudonym "Toboso". Early in March 1939 she helped arrange the evacuation of senior party members from Spain. Ibárruri left for Oran on 6 March 1939.[7]
Exile
[edit]Irene Falcón went into exile with Ibárruri in Paris and then the USSR.[1] There she worked for the underground Radio Pirenaica.[2] The Falcóns' marriage broke down because César Falcón could not remain faithful.[2] During World War II (1939–45) Irene and César Falcón were separated, and after the war César returned to Peru.[3]
Irene Falcón remained a feminist within the Communist mold. Writing in the Communist magazine Nuestra Bandera in August 1946 Falcon called for women to continue to play their traditional nurturing role, but to also participate in the struggle against Fascism.[8] She wrote, "Precisely in the clandestine resistance, women can play and are playing an extremely important role. On the one hand, women who have already played an active part in workers or mass organizations are an important support to their partners and children who choose the heroic path of resistance, the one that helps the guerrilla movements."[9] In August 1946 Falcon became national secretary of the Union of Spanish Women.[10]
After the Prague show trial of 1952 eleven Czechoslovakian Communists were executed, including Falcón's former lover Bedřich Geminder, head of the Czech Communist Party's central committee's Department of International Relations.[2] Although her relationship with Geminder had ended in 1945 Falcón was thrown out of the party.[11] She became a persona non grata and lost her job at Radio Pirenaica. She and her sister Kety were banned from working, and her son Mayo was banned from the Soviet Communist Party.[12] Ibárruri managed to get her another job, working discreetly to avoid herself getting into trouble.[11] In 1954 Irene Falcón went to Beijing to launch a radio station in Castilian. After a year and a half she returned to the USSR.[1]
Irene Falcón returned to Spain from exile in 1977 after the return of democracy. She became director of the Dolores Ibárruri Foundation. In 1996 she published her memoirs entitled Asaltar los cielos. Mi vida junto a Pasionaria (Storm the Skies: My Life with Pasionaria). She died on 19 August 1999 in El Espinar, Segovia, from a respiratory condition.[1]
Works
[edit]- V. I. Lenin; J. Stalin; Trotski, Irène Falcon; Michel Koltsov (1937). Trotski et le trotskisme. Textes et documents. Paris: Bureau d'éditions, 31, boulevard Magenta. p. 96.
- Irene Falcón; Manuel Jiménez & Jesús Montero (1996). Asalto a los cielos : mi vida junto a Pasionaria. p. 455.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Irene Falcón, secretaria personal... El País.
- ^ a b c d e Salvadó 2013, p. 128.
- ^ a b c d e f Zurbano Melero 2010.
- ^ Domingo 2004, p. 152.
- ^ a b London 1997, p. 9.
- ^ a b Alba 1983, p. 166.
- ^ Dimitrov 2008, p. 103.
- ^ Finnerty 2013, p. 219.
- ^ Finnerty 2013, pp. 219–220.
- ^ Finnerty 2013, p. 220.
- ^ a b Herrmann 2010, p. 29.
- ^ Preston 2011, p. 421.
Sources
[edit]- Alba, Víctor (1983-01-01). The Communist Party in Spain. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4128-1999-2. Retrieved 2015-03-07.
- Díaz Arenas, Angel (1997-01-01). Quién es quién en la obra narrativa de Manuel Vázquez Montalbán. Edition Reichenberger. ISBN 978-3-930700-53-0. Retrieved 2015-03-19.
- Dimitrov, Georgi (2008-10-01). The Diary of Georgi Dimitrov, 1933-1949. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-13385-1. Retrieved 2015-03-19.
- Domingo, Carmen (2004). Con voz y voto. Lumen. ISBN 978-84-264-1416-8. Retrieved 2015-03-20.
- Finnerty, Deirdre (2013-10-04). "The Republican Mother". Memory and Cultural History of the Spanish Civil War: Realms of Oblivion. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-25996-6. Retrieved 2015-03-20.
- Herrmann, Gina (2010). Written in Red: The Communist Memoir in Spain. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-03469-5. Retrieved 2015-03-19.
- "Irene Falcón, secretaria personal de Pasionaria". El País. 1999-08-20. Retrieved 2015-03-20.
- London, John (1997). Reception and Renewal in Modern Spanish Theatre, 1939-1963. MHRA. ISBN 978-0-901286-83-3. Retrieved 2015-03-20.
- Preston, Paul (2011-04-08). Las tres Españas del 36 (in Spanish). Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial España. ISBN 978-84-9989-139-2. Retrieved 2015-03-20.
- Salvadó, Francisco J. Romero (2013). Historical Dictionary of the Spanish Civil War. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8108-5784-1. Retrieved 2015-03-19.
- Zurbano Melero, José Gabriel (2010-11-22). "César e Irene Falcón: un matrimonio con compromiso". Ciudad futura. Retrieved 2015-03-19.