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Politics of Identity, Secessionism and Communal
Plurality:
The Catalan Case
By Ben
Tanosborn
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
November 4, 2017
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Deposed Catalan President, Carles Puigdemont, in Brussels,
November 4, 2017
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Patriotism is, fundamentally, if we follow George Bernard Shaw’s
dictum, a conviction that a particular country is the best in the world
because you were born in it. And as I look around me here in the United
States, or around much of the world for that matter, I see little room
to contradict GBS. The Irish playwright had us diagnosed well… all
victims of man’s oldest and greatest epidemic. Very early in my
childhood – in a place the world then called Franco’s Spain – I remember
my colorful cultural introduction to those people who populated the
Northeastern part of the Iberian Peninsula: the Catalans. Some
entrepreneurial relatives who had ventured to establish a dairy business
in Mollerusa, a small city in Catalonia’s Lleida province, would bring
back the strangest tales from that land during their summer visits to
Cantabria, the land of their birth. We would listen with incredulity,
at times in awe, how our relatives extolled the money-virtuosity in
Catalonia where wasteful spending was treated as if mortal sin; and
children like us, none older than 10, were taught to carefully manage a
weekly allowance, most often laboriously earned with duties at home; the
children, we were told, were even expected to pay their own street car
fares. Not everything was virtuosity and admiration, however, as
I do recall; for there were also claims of both Catalan treason and
cowardice voiced by neighboring Asturian miners who a generation before
had counted on workers from that Spanish region to put up a greater
fight during a failed workers’ general strike-insurrection back in
October 1934. And then, we had the “traveling city-slickers,” mostly
carny-type Catalans, who would make their weekly rounds at the towns’
open markets where they would use their palavering skills and mastery of
human greed to diligently relieve from the local yokels some of their
excess money. I also recall how upset it made my godfather-uncle to
listen to Catalonians speak to each other in their language, seeing him
several times address them menacingly with a forceful request “to talk
in Christian,” which I assumed to be our pure, unadulterated and
accent-free Castilian as spoken by “us,” the urbane people of our
beloved Cantabria. Those days of long ago predating today’s era
of political correctness – often the mask for hypocritical pretense –
may seem verbally harsh and unacceptable, but I feel we survived them
without measurable damage to anyone’s psyche… the multi-lingual,
business-savvy Catalans coexisting, for the most part in conviviality,
with the mono-lingual, ascetic Castilians, plus the many other distinct
peoples of peninsular Iberia. Unlike the balkanization that took
place in Tito’s Yugoslavia after he died in 1980, the death of the
Generalissimo (1975) did not fragment Spain quite the same way with
cooler heads and a living brand new constitution (1978) saving the day
for a super-plural nation, rich in common history, but just as rich in
communal alliances deep-rooted in ethnic-cultural-language diversity,
which defined some geographic areas more as separate countries than
regions of a political state. Catalans and Basques had long felt their
uniqueness in that respect, often voiced in cries for independence. But
past political efforts to obtain some federal or con-federal
answer/option to the prospect of separatism, some dating back over one
and a-half centuries, did not find common ground… or purposely failed to
seek common ground. Spain’s last two decades under Franco had
seen resurgence in its economy which was further stimulated by Spain’s
entry in the EU (1986). Those decades saw the internal migration in
Spain increase more than three-fold as the labor demand increased in the
more developed regions, specifically in the industrialized areas of
Madrid, Barcelona (Catalonia) and Bilbao (Basque Country). It became an
internal migration which accelerated the change in the ethnic make-up of
both Catalonia and the Basque Country, most particularly in the urban
areas. Last week’s unilateral declaration of
independence by the parliament in Catalonia, instigated by ex-President
Carles Puigdemont and his cabinet-advisers, after what had been
deemed by Spain’s central government to be a
non-constitutionally-approved referendum by separatist parties, could
become the ultimate modern test case to the conflict that brings
homogenous people to band together against diversity and communal
plurality. Will Barcelona become the see of a
small but wealthy Catalan Republic proud of its final revenge against an
“oppressor” incapable of dancing sardanas or, will it become the great
urban-cultural center of a greater, more inclusive Spain; a city of
communal plurality, just like the Córdoba of a
millennium ago with its cultural, religious, ethnic, political, and
economic acknowledged-universality?
***
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