*** For Eddie Klementowski And Those Kindred Who Fought For The
Republic In The Spanish Civil War-1936-39
Moreover he and Eddie would have some friendly battle royales (usually after a few too many of Mike’s Polish imported beers) about the “correct” strategy that should have been applied in the Spanish situation. Eddie adamantly stood on the grounds that after the suppression of Franco’s forces by the Republican forces in the summer of 1936 the Commune should have been declared like in Russia in 1917. The Republican forces had the capacity, at least in the areas they controlled, especially in Catalonia, to do so but were, according to Eddie, hamstrung by the policy of the Communist Party (and behind that organization, the Soviet Union) that it was necessary to win the war against Franco first and then the Commune could be proclaimed and some socialist organization of society attempted.
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Eddie Clements
right up until the day he died in 1997 always said that he left the best part
of himself, the part that was generous and not self-serving, in Spain back in
his youth, the1930s, specifically 1936 and 1937 when he had served in a POUM
(Party Of Marxist Unification in Spanish) battalion on the Lerida front and had
fought like seven dervishes to beat back Franco’s forces, and beat them good.
For a while. By the way that POUM
military organization (all the political parties had their own military arms,
at least at first before the command was centralized under the aegis of the Spanish
Communist Party, acting as agents for the Soviet Union who were footing the
bill, and the only ones providing military aid to
the Republican forces at the time) was the same one that George Orwell got
dragooned into and wrote about in his famous book Homage to Catalonia. And a further
by the way, just so you know, Eddie Clements was not his real name, not back
then anyway but he had shortened it and Anglicized it when the deal went south
on the Republican forces and it was a lot better, a hell of a lot better, for
him to seem to be English when he tried to immigrate to the United States
in1939.
Eddie,
born Edward Klementowski, a Polish national, was
on the run in those days from the Pilsudski regime in Poland and found himself
in Spain like many others when they saw that the shades were being pulled down
over Europe by one madman or another. Of course in Poland Eddie had been a
Polish Communist Party member in good standing until about 1936 when he was
expelled from the party for some vague Trotskyite heresy and hence when he
tumbled into Spain he joined the POUM militia since the Polish unit of the
International Brigades was off limits to him, way off limits to hear him tell
over beer or seven at Mike Diceks’s Tavern over in “Little Poland,” Andrew
Square in Boston.
That is
where Pete Markin who gave me the story had meet him back in the 1970s when
somebody that he worked with, also Polish although born in the United States,
who knew the newly left-wing politicized Markin was interested in the Spanish
Civil War and guys who actually fought there. And so they met, met
occasionally, when Markin was in the area and discussed, or maybe that was too
polite a word over a few beers (usually on Markin’s tab) the various maneuvers,
military and political of that war. And when they finished up any session Eddie
would always, always close by saying that he had left the best part of him in
Spain back then. It took Markin a long time to understand that, to mull over
the politics of it, since he had been way to young, hadn’t even been born yet,
when some hearty men not afraid to fight, and to die,
became the “premature anti-fascists” in that struggle. He, himself, a military
veteran, Vietnam, although kicking and screaming about it, and thus no stranger
to war, and rumors of war, could not understand what it was like when men went
way out of their various ways to fight in Spain. He was glad that they did,
glad that Eddie did so, but still he was perplexed by that
commitment. Moreover he and Eddie would have some friendly battle royales (usually after a few too many of Mike’s Polish imported beers) about the “correct” strategy that should have been applied in the Spanish situation. Eddie adamantly stood on the grounds that after the suppression of Franco’s forces by the Republican forces in the summer of 1936 the Commune should have been declared like in Russia in 1917. The Republican forces had the capacity, at least in the areas they controlled, especially in Catalonia, to do so but were, according to Eddie, hamstrung by the policy of the Communist Party (and behind that organization, the Soviet Union) that it was necessary to win the war against Franco first and then the Commune could be proclaimed and some socialist organization of society attempted.
Pete
felt just the opposite, felt under the influence of the communists that he
associated with at the time that, given the isolation of the Spanish Republican
forces, the attitude of the British and French governments to try and maintain
the status quo in Europe in the face of the menace of Hitler and his associates
that military victory was the first consideration. Eddie would bring up the May
Day events in Barcelona to buttress his case but Pete would counter that, given
the precarious military situation those Barcelona actions were
counter-productive (actually he said he used
the stronger words counter-revolutionary in those days).
And so
they would go back and forth, fighting the old political battles like it was just
that minute that such questions had to be decided for good. And then Eddie
would pull out one his stories, his stories of the personal acts of bravery and
bravado in the battles that he had witnessed, had a part in, and the fury of
the polemics would wilt before those acts of bravery and devotion. That was the reality
of Eddie’s Spain, and such material Peter enhanced long time love affair with
the kindred of that fight.
Eddie
would tell one story in particular about
when his unit was pinned down in some desolate out rock and it looked like
curtains for them because the Franco forces had them surrounded on three sides
and the other exit was over some tough and exposed rocky terrain. Now his unit
was strictly an international unit because at that time the POUM was putting
together such units as morale boosters and as signs of internationalism. One
guy, an Irishman, Duffy, who had fought the bloody British in the early
1920s when the heat for an independent t nation in Ireland was on, had been a
sapper and so he, out of seemingly nowhere had put together a charge to try to
block the Francoists from over-running
their position. He and Duffy stayed behind in order to set the charge behind
as the others cleared out. Then Duffy told Eddie to
get the hell out of there. Duffy stayed and blew the charge blocking the
Francoists. At the cost of his own blessed life. Yes,
it was stuff like that drove Eddie’s memory bank.
Eddie
was reticent to discuss his life after Spain, how he got to America, and the
like but later on a few years before he died he told Markin that he had spent
too much time drinking and alley-catting while in America and that he just kind
of had a tough time adjusting after the various brushes with death that he undertook
gladly back then. And that is when Pete finally realized what Spain had meant
to Eddie, and maybe that story about Duffy just kind of put paid to the whole
experience. Funny though after Eddie died Pete started thinking about all the
times that they had argued and Pete started to see that maybe Eddie had a point
about the right strategy in Spain. All he knew was that he had lost his last
living connection with Spain and he cursed each time he thought about the fact that he had not even been born then to leave the best part of
himself there like Eddie.
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