Basque nationalism

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Political Spain in 1854, after the first Carlist War
Political Spain in 1854, after the first Carlist War
The Arrano beltza ("black eagle") flag is waved by radical Basque nationalists, mainly supporters of ETA and HB,  along the Ikurriña and the Navarrese flag as a claim of unity of the Basque lands.
The Arrano beltza ("black eagle") flag is waved by radical Basque nationalists, mainly supporters of ETA and HB, along the Ikurriña and the Navarrese flag as a claim of unity of the Basque lands.

Basque nationalism is a movement with roots in the Carlism and the loss, by the laws of 1839 and 1876, of the Ancien Régime relationship between the Basque provinces and the crown of Spain. The Spanish government revoked part of the fueros after the Third Carlist War. The fueros were charters granted by the successive kings of Castile and acted as part of the Basque legal system dealing with matters regarding the political ties of the Basque Provinces with the crown. The Fueros gave Basque subjects a privileged position in Spain with special tax and political status; basically, Basques were not subject to direct levee to the Castilian army, although many volunteered, especially in the Spanish navy, which was led, among others, by Basque sailors like Juan Sebastián Elcano.

During the 19th century, the reactionary Fuerista movement pleaded for the maintenance of the fueros system and territorial autonomy against the centralizing pressures from liberal governments in Madrid. The concept of Basque Nationalism was born from that disputes and the influence from the Romantic European view of nationalism in the nineteenth century.

The chief ideologist of early Basque nationalism was Sabino Arana, founder of the Basque Nationalist Party (PNV in its Spanish acronym). By the end of the 19th century Arana, coming from a Carlist background, created an ideology centered on the purity of the Basque race and its so-called moral supremacy over other Spaniards (a derivation of the system of limpieza de sangre of Modern-Age Spain), anti-Liberal Catholic integrism, and deep opposition to the migration of other Spaniards to the Basque Country which had started at the first stages of the industrial revolution.

In the early 20th century, Basque nationalism developed from a nucleus of petty bourgeois enthusiasts (non-native Basque speakers themselves) in Bilbao to incorporate the peasant basis of Carlism in Biscay and Guipuscoa. The movement survived without any problems the dictatorship of Miguel Primo de Rivera under the guise of cultural and athletic associations.

Basque nationalism managed to substitute Carlism in the favour of the Catholic church as a barrier against leftist anti-clericalism in most of the Basque provinces.

Several splits and reunifications were caused by clashes over different desires inside the early nationalism for the status of the Basque Country (autonomy versus independence). Soon also leftist approaches to nationalism were born, but the majority of the Basque working class (many of them immigrants)support was divided among the communist and socialist movements. The ELA-STV a nationalist Catholic trade union tried to bring nationalistideas to the workers, but its influence was minor until the end of the twentieh century with Spanish transition to democracy.

In 1936, the main part of the Christian democrat PNV sided with the Second Spanish Republic in the Spanish Civil War. The promise of autonomy was valued over the ideological differences (especially on the religious matter) and PNV decided to support the republican legal government, including member of the Popular Front. Autonomy was granted in october 1936. A republican autonomous Basque government was created, with José Antonio Agirre (PNV) as Lehendakari (president) and ministers from the PNV and other republican parties (mainly leftist spanish parties).

However, in 1937, roughly halfway through the war, Basque troops, then under control of the Autonomous Basque Government surrendered in an action brokered by the Basque church and the Vatican[citation needed] in Santoña to the Italian allies of General Franco on condition that the Basque heavy industry and economy was left untouched.

Thus began one of the culturally hardest periods of Basque history in Spain, due to immigration of non-Basque from other parts of Spain to serve a fast pace industrialising economy which followed and thrived (chiefly during the 1960s) enhanced by the protectionist measures of the Franco regime, requiring more workers from elswhere to fill the gap in the labour force. Simultaneously, the public expression of Basque language was prohibitted, only roughly tolerated at some folkloric or clerical activities, especially in Navarre and Álava, which sided Franco's uprising.

For many leftists in Spain the surrender of Basque troops in Santoña (Santander) is known as the Treason of Santoña. Many of the nationalist Basque soldiers were pardoned if they joined the Francoist army in the rest of the Northern front. Basque nationalists submitted, fled (the political leaders), went underground or to prison. Small groups fled to the Americas, France or the Benelux, of which only a minority returned after the restoration of democracy in Spain in the late seventies, or before. During World War 2 the PNV exiled government tried to join the Allies and settled itself in New York to gain the American recognition and support, but soon after the cold war finished, Franco became an American ally in the context of the cold war, which deprived the PNV exiled government of hopes of any hold in the Basque country.

ETA was created in the 50s by young nationalists. During the 60s, Marxists took over the organization. They turned it into a revolutionary organization inspired in movements like those of Castro in Cuba or Ho Chi Minh in Vietnam. Their goal was to establish a socialist independent Basque country,

Ever since Spain regained democracy in 1978, autonomy was restored for the Basques, achieving self-government without precedent in Basque modern history. Thus, based on the fueros and their Statute of Autonomy, Basques have their own police corps and manage their own public finances with virtually no intervention from the central government of Spain. The Basque Autonomous Community has been led by the nationalist Christian democrat PNV ever since it was reinstated, in the early 1980s, to date. In Navarre, Basque nationalism has not succeeded so far to win the elections held to run the government of the Autonomous Community, but different Basque nationalist parties do run in a number of municipalities.

Unlike Spain, France is a centralized State, but a Basque nationalist party has a presence in some municipalities through local elections.


[edit] Basque nationalist organizations

"You're in the Basque Country, not in Spain" – an example of Basque nationalism in a Bilbao lamp post. The sticker includes the website address of Gazte Abertzaleak.
"You're in the Basque Country, not in Spain" – an example of Basque nationalism in a Bilbao lamp post. The sticker includes the website address of Gazte Abertzaleak.
  • Acción Nacionalista Vasca, leftist political party
  • Aralar, leftist political party
  • Askatasuna, support for ETA prisoners.
  • Batasuna, leftist political party, illegal in the southern Basque Country
  • Batzarre
  • Comunión Nacionalista Vasca, former political party
  • ELA-STV, trade union
  • Enbata
  • ETA, violent revolutionary clandestine organization operating mainly in the southern Basque Country
  • Etxerat, support for Basque political prisoners
  • Euskadiko Ezkerra, former leftist political party
  • Euskal Ezkerra, a splinter of Euskadiko Ezkerra.
  • Eusko Alkartasuna, Social-Democratic political party
  • ESAIT, support for the Basque National teams in different sports
  • Gazte Abertzaleak, the youth group of the Spanish Basque political party Eusko Alkartasuna, left of the PNV but not aligned with ETA or Batasuna
  • Gestoras pro-Amnistía, support for ETA prisoners.
  • Herria 2000 Eliza, Catholic movement
  • Ikasle Abertzaleak, Group of Basque nationalist students
  • Iparretarrak, violently clandestine organization operating in the French part of the Basque Country
  • Jagi-Jagi, former magazine
  • LAB, leftist trade union
  • Nafarroa Bai, Navarrese political party (coalition between some Basque nationalist political parties)
  • Partido Nacionalista Vasco, Christian-Democrat political party
  • Senideak, relatives of ETA prisoners.
  • Segi, Batasuna's youth group
  • Udalbiltza, assembly of city councillors
  • Zutik, leftist party
History of the Basque people
Prehistory and Antiquity
Basque Prehistory
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Modern Age
The Basque Country in the Early Modern Age
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The Basque Country in the Late Modern Age
Carlist Wars
Basque nationalism
ETA
Monarchs
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Kings of Pamplona and Navarre
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Viscounts of Zuberoa
Topical
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Basque navigation
Basque culture
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Timeline of Basque history
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[edit] References

[edit] See also