The ghost of
Guernica
By Carlos
Alberto Montaner
The Basque regional government
wants the government of Spain to ask for forgiveness for the bombing on
Guernica on April 26, 1937, during the Civil War. Guernica the was -- and
still is -- a small town, not very far from Bilbao, with a population of about
5,000. One hundred and fifty people were killed and 70 percent of the
buildings were destroyed or damaged during the raid by German planes, allies
of Franco during the conflict. Allegedly, the purpose was to destroy two arms
factories and a bridge, but those objectives were not touched, which led
people to assume that the Germans wanted to try out their new warplanes,
certain that World War II would erupt shortly thereafter. The government of
the Spanish republic used the episode as a propaganda weapon and Pablo Picasso
wasted no time in painting "Guernica," an impressive mural in black and white,
filled with violence and horrified horses, perhaps the most famous and admired
painting of the 20th Century.
What does the Basque government
seek with this requested apology? The bombing of Guernica was no worse than
one hundred other monstrosities committed by both sides during the three years
of Civil War. Those events, which occurred seven decades ago, blurred by time
and almost unknown by today's Spaniards, took place amid a conflict provoked
by the tensions among fascists, socialists, communists and anarchists, typical
of an era in which liberal democracy and the rule of law had disappeared
almost throughout the European continent (and Latin America.)
Why should the government of this
democratic and peaceable Spain, which barely remembers the Civil War, ask for
forgiveness from the Basques? From whom? Half the Basques sided with the
nationalists, the Franco side, and allied themselves with the Germans. Is the
other half being asked for forgiveness? And why don't the Basques ask the
Spaniards for forgiveness for the three devastating Carlist Wars in the 19th
Century that tenaciously set back the country's modernization? And while we're
talking about forgiveness, wouldn't it be more reasonable for the Basque
government to ask the rest of the Spaniards for the thousand-and-one murders
committed by ETA?
The only transparent lesson
learned from the wars is that a violent solution of conflicts always leads to
barbarity and brings to the surface all the cruelty nestled in the hearts of
human beings. Worse than Guernica were the mass murders of political
prisoners, the shot in the back of the head of suspicious people, the tortures
inflicted on the captives from both sides. Why should the grandchildren of
those Spaniards have to assume the blame for the acts of their grandparents,
frenzied by hatred, who happened to live during a sinister era that drove them
into the abyss?
In 1971, a young American
psychologist, Philip G. Zimbardo, carried out at Stanford University a
blood-chilling experiment that today would be called a "role play." He
selected 23 students at random and asked some to act as prison guards and the
others as prisoners. What happened was remarkable: very soon, the "guards"
began to mistreat the "prisoners" with a total lack of compassion, to the
point that the research had to be halted for fear that some student might be
severely injured. The conclusion was obvious. There is no psychological
mechanism that will inhibit the unlimited brutality of human beings when there
are no clear rules or institutions that enforce them. The kindly street-corner
baker or the cheerful pharmacist can become machines of wrongdoing if the
circumstances are propitious. No need to waste time by vindicating victims who
have not asked for vindication. The only sensible homage is to protect the
rule of law so Guernica will never again happen.
January 26, 2007
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