If I remember correctly when I asked for help on my paper on the Moroccans in the Spanish Civil War a LONG time ago on this forum, someone asked me to post the final result.
Here's it:
Luchamos Contra los Moros: Moroccans and the Spanish Civil War
David Boshko
Moroccans have had an enormous impact on the course of modern
Spanish history. Setbacks in imperial adventures in Morocco lead to the
fall of Spanish governments in 1909 and 1926 and the long war against
the Rif uprising molded the Spanish army into the institution that
launched the Spanish Civil War. But most importantly, tens of
thousands of Moroccans fought for the Nationalists in the Civil War.
They were among the finest soldiers in that war and provided the core of
Franco’s army in the hard-fought early months of the struggle. It was
Moroccans who spearheaded the drive that tore across Republican Spain
from Seville to the outskirts of the Madrid, where they suffered horrific
casualties in a series of battles against the defenders of Madrid. This
bizarre spectacle of thousands of colonial subjects fighting for the army
that had so recently conquered them against the forces of the, at least
theoretically, anti-imperialist Left seems to have perplexed many
pro-Republican historians who tend to largely ignore it, try to pass the
blame to rival leftist faction, or retreat into racist denunciations of the
“barbarian” Moors. This, however, merely underlines the necessity
understanding the nature of Moroccan involvement in the Spanish Civil
War, if we are to shed light on the dark crevices of Spanish History.
To begin with the most obvious of questions, what exactly was
Spanish Morocco? It was a strip of land in North Africa that
encompassed 20,000 square kilometer and which had, in 1912, a
population of over a million.1 By the time of the Civil War, 35,000
Spaniards, 11,000 Jews, and a sizable German community lived
alongside the Arabs and the Berbers.2 Spain also possessed a tract of
land south of Morocco, what is now Western Sahara, but as that colony’s
population played little part in the Spanish Civil War and Spanish
colonial domination of this area was tenuous to non-existent in the
1930’s.3
Spain acquired its first outpost in North Africa in 1556, when a
Spanish Duke who had conquered Melilla 1497 ceded it to the Crown.
To this was added Ceuta in 1640 and Tetuan in 1860, by 1904 the
Spanish had acquired five coastal outposts.4 Spanish involvement in
Morocco was deepened in 1909 when Spain intervened to protect the
interests of a Hispano-German iron mining corporation and to extend its
colonial influence.5 This dispatch of Spanish youth, especially Catalan
reservists, to protect capitalist and imperialist interests was not terribly
popular with the Spanish Left and it triggered a series of violent
confrontations with the police, specifically the CNT in Barcelona, known
as the “Tragic Week” which lead to several deaths and the replacement of
the ruling Prime Minister and his cabinet.6
In 1911 Spain became further embroiled in Morocco when France
decided to establish colonial domination over the entirety of Morocco and
was able to convince the Moroccan Sultan to accept French “protection.”
This resulted in an international incident, as the Germans believed that
they had interests in Morocco and the British did not want to see a Great
Power establish itself on the strategically vital entrance to the
Mediterranean Sea. A compromise was reached in which Germany
received Cameroon and Spain received all of what was to be the
Protectorate of Spanish Morocco. However, Spain did little to extend its
authority over the bulk of its new and rather mountainous and arid
possession and it was not until after World War I that the Spanish
government attempted to impose its authority on the autonomous Rif
tribes of the interior in any serious manner.
The Iqar'ayen people, commonly known as the Rif (which means an
edge or an escarpment), are a Berber people whose ancestry predates the
Arab conquest and who had lived by herding in the barren Atlas
Mountains.7 They speak a dialect of Berber, write in classical Arabic,
and hold to a Sunni Islam that was often heavily colored with Sufism and
the veneration of Saints known as maraouts.8 They were a militant
culture in which virtually every male owned a gun and were fiercely
independent of external authority or any attempt to infringe on their
liberties or self-government. Naturally, the Rif did not take kindly to
Spain’s attempt to impose itself on them and resistance was soon
organized under a young village judge named Sidi Mohammed ben abd
el-Krim el-Khettabi, who is known to history as Abdel Krim. Krim was
able to provide a remarkable level of unity by convincing the fractious Rif
tribes to swear the traditional Rifi pact of mutual defense known as the
liff which bound them together against the Spanish intruders.9 Abdel
Krim’s army made life very difficult for the Spanish as they advanced into
the mountains. Even more surprisingly in 1923, at the battle of Anual,
the Rif were able to rout the main Spanish force under General Slyvestre.
The embarrassment of this defeat and increasing calls for the end
of the drain of money and Spanish lives into Morocco put the Restoration
government under an enormous degree of stress. A young Spanish
infantryman serving in Morocco summed up the prevailing sentiment of
much of Spain when he said
"Why have we to fight the Moors? Why must we civilize them
if they don't want to be civilized? Who is going to civilize us
we from Castile, from Adalusia, from the mountains of
Gerona? Our village has no school, its houses are of clay, we
sleep pin our clothes on a truckle bed beside the mules, to
keep warm. We eat an onion and a chunk of bread in the
morning and we go to work in the fields from sunrise to
sunset."10
This crisis lead to General Primo de Rivera’s Pronunciamento and the
establishment of the Dictatorship. Primo was initially rather opposed to
the Rif War, he labeled his predecessors handling of it "the most
expensive, the most protracted, the most useless and the most
unworthy"11 and ordered the retreat of Spanish forces from Yebala and
Xauen.12 However, just as it seems as if Abdel Krim was on the verge of
victory, the Beni Zerual tribe, which straddled the ill-defined southern
border of Spanish and French Morocco, appealed to Krim to drive out the
French that were intruding on their territory. The Beni Zerual invoked
the liff pact which Krim had used to bind together the Rif tribes into an
alliance of mutual defense against all invaders and Krim was
honor-bound to come to their aid, to reject the appeal would be extremely
shameful as it would be a renunciation of the very glue that was holding
together the Rif.13
Adbel Krim attempted to negotiate with the French colonial
administration and after he had been repeatedly rebuffed he launched an
invasion that drove deep into French Morocco.14 This attack, of course,
enraged the French and lead to a Spanish/French alliance which proved
well-neigh impossible for the Rif to counter. The Spanish won a major
victory at Alhuecemas Bay in an amphibious landing in September 1925,
at which Franco lead the Foreign Legion which provided the vanguard.15
The last battle of any size was fought in May 1926, although resistance
continued until 1928.16
Following this victory, Primo was faced with devising an
administration for the now-subdued land. Much groundwork had been
laid by his predecessors. The Spanish enclaves that pre-dated the
Protectorate were known as Presidios and had been ruled as parts of
metropolitan Spain (although extensive differences in legal codes existed)
rather than de jure colonies. Melilla was administered by Malaga, Ceuta
by Cadiz, and Penon de Velez by Villa Sanjurho.17 The treaty between
France and Spain in 1911 had given the Protectorate of Spanish Morocco
a Khalifa who ruled as the representative of the Moroccan Sultan. The
choice of Khalifa could be vetoed by the Spanish and he remained a
puppet of the Spanish High Commissioner who ruled at Tetuan.18
However, to hold onto any of this and extend his authority into the
Rifian interior, Primo would need to secure at least some degree of
consent from the Moroccans. He began this effort during the war by
putting the stop to such practices as the parading of Rif heads on
bayonets and by trying to encourage better treatment of the Moroccans.
Even more importantly, before the Rif were crushed Abdel Krim was able
to make large-scale judicial and administrative reforms to the country
which included reforming the law code to move it away from customary
law (Ufa) and towards Koranic law (Shari’a), which Primo adopted en
masse and used to form the basis of the administration of the
protectorate.19
"As a result, until 1956 Spain governed her Moroccan Zone
on a pattern laid down not by her own administrators but by
Abd el Krim. The Spanish merely substituted their own
authority for that of the Rifian leader."20
Spanish Imperialism was thus relatively low-impact and a good deal less
intrusive than the French colonial regimes that surrounded the Spanish
Protectorate. Much power was allowed the remain in the hands
Moroccan officials, especially the village judges known as qadi, and
“although strictly responsible to the Spanish colonial authorities was
able to exercise considerable power.”21 Also Primo’s large scale
investments in infrastructure were carried over to Morocco and many
roads, schools, and the like were established. And finally, and perhaps
most importantly, “deprived of their own leaders, and trained to no other
profession than the warrior's, many Rifians and Jibalis, took up military
service under the Spaniards"22 which put much of the remaining adult
Rif population in a rather dependent position and helped insure the
continuation of Spanish domination of northern Morocco.
Here's it:
Luchamos Contra los Moros: Moroccans and the Spanish Civil War
David Boshko
Moroccans have had an enormous impact on the course of modern
Spanish history. Setbacks in imperial adventures in Morocco lead to the
fall of Spanish governments in 1909 and 1926 and the long war against
the Rif uprising molded the Spanish army into the institution that
launched the Spanish Civil War. But most importantly, tens of
thousands of Moroccans fought for the Nationalists in the Civil War.
They were among the finest soldiers in that war and provided the core of
Franco’s army in the hard-fought early months of the struggle. It was
Moroccans who spearheaded the drive that tore across Republican Spain
from Seville to the outskirts of the Madrid, where they suffered horrific
casualties in a series of battles against the defenders of Madrid. This
bizarre spectacle of thousands of colonial subjects fighting for the army
that had so recently conquered them against the forces of the, at least
theoretically, anti-imperialist Left seems to have perplexed many
pro-Republican historians who tend to largely ignore it, try to pass the
blame to rival leftist faction, or retreat into racist denunciations of the
“barbarian” Moors. This, however, merely underlines the necessity
understanding the nature of Moroccan involvement in the Spanish Civil
War, if we are to shed light on the dark crevices of Spanish History.
To begin with the most obvious of questions, what exactly was
Spanish Morocco? It was a strip of land in North Africa that
encompassed 20,000 square kilometer and which had, in 1912, a
population of over a million.1 By the time of the Civil War, 35,000
Spaniards, 11,000 Jews, and a sizable German community lived
alongside the Arabs and the Berbers.2 Spain also possessed a tract of
land south of Morocco, what is now Western Sahara, but as that colony’s
population played little part in the Spanish Civil War and Spanish
colonial domination of this area was tenuous to non-existent in the
1930’s.3
Spain acquired its first outpost in North Africa in 1556, when a
Spanish Duke who had conquered Melilla 1497 ceded it to the Crown.
To this was added Ceuta in 1640 and Tetuan in 1860, by 1904 the
Spanish had acquired five coastal outposts.4 Spanish involvement in
Morocco was deepened in 1909 when Spain intervened to protect the
interests of a Hispano-German iron mining corporation and to extend its
colonial influence.5 This dispatch of Spanish youth, especially Catalan
reservists, to protect capitalist and imperialist interests was not terribly
popular with the Spanish Left and it triggered a series of violent
confrontations with the police, specifically the CNT in Barcelona, known
as the “Tragic Week” which lead to several deaths and the replacement of
the ruling Prime Minister and his cabinet.6
In 1911 Spain became further embroiled in Morocco when France
decided to establish colonial domination over the entirety of Morocco and
was able to convince the Moroccan Sultan to accept French “protection.”
This resulted in an international incident, as the Germans believed that
they had interests in Morocco and the British did not want to see a Great
Power establish itself on the strategically vital entrance to the
Mediterranean Sea. A compromise was reached in which Germany
received Cameroon and Spain received all of what was to be the
Protectorate of Spanish Morocco. However, Spain did little to extend its
authority over the bulk of its new and rather mountainous and arid
possession and it was not until after World War I that the Spanish
government attempted to impose its authority on the autonomous Rif
tribes of the interior in any serious manner.
The Iqar'ayen people, commonly known as the Rif (which means an
edge or an escarpment), are a Berber people whose ancestry predates the
Arab conquest and who had lived by herding in the barren Atlas
Mountains.7 They speak a dialect of Berber, write in classical Arabic,
and hold to a Sunni Islam that was often heavily colored with Sufism and
the veneration of Saints known as maraouts.8 They were a militant
culture in which virtually every male owned a gun and were fiercely
independent of external authority or any attempt to infringe on their
liberties or self-government. Naturally, the Rif did not take kindly to
Spain’s attempt to impose itself on them and resistance was soon
organized under a young village judge named Sidi Mohammed ben abd
el-Krim el-Khettabi, who is known to history as Abdel Krim. Krim was
able to provide a remarkable level of unity by convincing the fractious Rif
tribes to swear the traditional Rifi pact of mutual defense known as the
liff which bound them together against the Spanish intruders.9 Abdel
Krim’s army made life very difficult for the Spanish as they advanced into
the mountains. Even more surprisingly in 1923, at the battle of Anual,
the Rif were able to rout the main Spanish force under General Slyvestre.
The embarrassment of this defeat and increasing calls for the end
of the drain of money and Spanish lives into Morocco put the Restoration
government under an enormous degree of stress. A young Spanish
infantryman serving in Morocco summed up the prevailing sentiment of
much of Spain when he said
"Why have we to fight the Moors? Why must we civilize them
if they don't want to be civilized? Who is going to civilize us
we from Castile, from Adalusia, from the mountains of
Gerona? Our village has no school, its houses are of clay, we
sleep pin our clothes on a truckle bed beside the mules, to
keep warm. We eat an onion and a chunk of bread in the
morning and we go to work in the fields from sunrise to
sunset."10
This crisis lead to General Primo de Rivera’s Pronunciamento and the
establishment of the Dictatorship. Primo was initially rather opposed to
the Rif War, he labeled his predecessors handling of it "the most
expensive, the most protracted, the most useless and the most
unworthy"11 and ordered the retreat of Spanish forces from Yebala and
Xauen.12 However, just as it seems as if Abdel Krim was on the verge of
victory, the Beni Zerual tribe, which straddled the ill-defined southern
border of Spanish and French Morocco, appealed to Krim to drive out the
French that were intruding on their territory. The Beni Zerual invoked
the liff pact which Krim had used to bind together the Rif tribes into an
alliance of mutual defense against all invaders and Krim was
honor-bound to come to their aid, to reject the appeal would be extremely
shameful as it would be a renunciation of the very glue that was holding
together the Rif.13
Adbel Krim attempted to negotiate with the French colonial
administration and after he had been repeatedly rebuffed he launched an
invasion that drove deep into French Morocco.14 This attack, of course,
enraged the French and lead to a Spanish/French alliance which proved
well-neigh impossible for the Rif to counter. The Spanish won a major
victory at Alhuecemas Bay in an amphibious landing in September 1925,
at which Franco lead the Foreign Legion which provided the vanguard.15
The last battle of any size was fought in May 1926, although resistance
continued until 1928.16
Following this victory, Primo was faced with devising an
administration for the now-subdued land. Much groundwork had been
laid by his predecessors. The Spanish enclaves that pre-dated the
Protectorate were known as Presidios and had been ruled as parts of
metropolitan Spain (although extensive differences in legal codes existed)
rather than de jure colonies. Melilla was administered by Malaga, Ceuta
by Cadiz, and Penon de Velez by Villa Sanjurho.17 The treaty between
France and Spain in 1911 had given the Protectorate of Spanish Morocco
a Khalifa who ruled as the representative of the Moroccan Sultan. The
choice of Khalifa could be vetoed by the Spanish and he remained a
puppet of the Spanish High Commissioner who ruled at Tetuan.18
However, to hold onto any of this and extend his authority into the
Rifian interior, Primo would need to secure at least some degree of
consent from the Moroccans. He began this effort during the war by
putting the stop to such practices as the parading of Rif heads on
bayonets and by trying to encourage better treatment of the Moroccans.
Even more importantly, before the Rif were crushed Abdel Krim was able
to make large-scale judicial and administrative reforms to the country
which included reforming the law code to move it away from customary
law (Ufa) and towards Koranic law (Shari’a), which Primo adopted en
masse and used to form the basis of the administration of the
protectorate.19
"As a result, until 1956 Spain governed her Moroccan Zone
on a pattern laid down not by her own administrators but by
Abd el Krim. The Spanish merely substituted their own
authority for that of the Rifian leader."20
Spanish Imperialism was thus relatively low-impact and a good deal less
intrusive than the French colonial regimes that surrounded the Spanish
Protectorate. Much power was allowed the remain in the hands
Moroccan officials, especially the village judges known as qadi, and
“although strictly responsible to the Spanish colonial authorities was
able to exercise considerable power.”21 Also Primo’s large scale
investments in infrastructure were carried over to Morocco and many
roads, schools, and the like were established. And finally, and perhaps
most importantly, “deprived of their own leaders, and trained to no other
profession than the warrior's, many Rifians and Jibalis, took up military
service under the Spaniards"22 which put much of the remaining adult
Rif population in a rather dependent position and helped insure the
continuation of Spanish domination of northern Morocco.
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