Onésimo Redondo
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Onésimo Redondo Ortega (Quintanilla de Onésimo, Valladolid, 1905 February 16 - Labajos, Segovia, 1936 July 24) was a Spanish Falangist politician, founder of Juntas Castellanas de Actuación Hispánica (Castilian Youngs of Hispanic Action), a political group that merged with Ramiro Ledesma's Juntas de Ofensiva Nacional-Sindicalista (Unions of the National-Syndicalist Offensive) and José Antonio Primo de Rivera's Falange Española.
He was born in Quintanilla de Abajo, Valladolid (today renamed after Redondo as Quintanilla de Onésimo). He studied Law at the University of Salamanca and was Spanish teacher at the University of Mannheim (1927-1928), where he knew the Nazism. He began to work in Valladolid for the Castilian union of sugar beet harvesters and joined the Catholic Action during his youth.
When the Second Republic was proclaimed (1931), he was distanced from Catholic Action because he thought he was very close to bourgeois liberalism, and founded a little newspaper, Libertad, where he wrote vehement flickers against Marxism, the Jewish (he published an annotated translation of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion) and bourgeois Capitalism, and admired European fascisms. He founded Juntas Castellanas de Actuación Hispánica in August 1931 and in November it merged with Juntas de Ofensiva Nacional-Sindicalista (JONS). They refused to participate in elections as they believed in the direct action against the power.
In 1932, he collaborated with the frustrated coup d'état of General Sanjurjo and had to flee to Portugal. He returned to Valladolid in April 1933. On March 24, 1934 JONS and Falange Española merged. He was arrested on March 19, 1936 and he was moved to the prison of Avila on June. He was liberated by the Nationalist after the beginning of the Civil War. He organized the Falange's militias in Valladolid and went to the Guadarrama mountains, where he died in combat on July 24. Francoist propaganda extolled him insistently as a war hero.
His widow, Mercedes Sanz Bachiller, founded Auxilio de Invierno (Winter Aid), after Auxilio Social (Social Aid), that was the welfare agency of Falange, further fully integrated in the Francoist State organization.
[edit] Writings
- Protocolos de los Sabios de Sión, Valladolid: Libertad, 1932
- Onésimo Redondo, caudillo de Castilla, Valladolid: Libertad, 1937, (newspaper articles and political speeches)
- El Estado Nacional, Valladolid: Libertad, 1938
- Obras Completas: edición cronológica (2 vols.), Madrid: Publicaciones Españolas, 1954-1955
- Textos políticos. Madrid: Doncel, 1975.
[edit] Bibliography
- Payne, Stanley: Falange: a history of Spanish fascism, Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1961
- Penella, Manuel: La Falange teórica, Barcelona: Planeta, 2006
- Rodríguez Jiménez, José Luis: Historia de la Falange Española de las JONS, Madrid: Alianza, 2000
[edit] External links
- (Spanish) Tribute web to Onésimo Redondo. Falangist and biased web, but with copious information about him.