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Juan García Oliver

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Name
  
Juan Oliver


Juan Garcia Oliver

Discurso de juan garc a oliver en 1937


Juan García Oliver (1901, Reus, Tarragona Province – 1980, Guadalajara, Mexico) was a Spanish Anarcho-syndicalist revolutionary, and a leading figure of anarchism in Spain.

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Juan García Oliver Juan Garca Oliver El Movimiento Libertario en el exilio

During the General Strike of 1917, García Oliver arrived in Barcelona and got involved in trade union activities. Along with Buenaventura Durruti and Francisco Ascaso, he founded Los Solidarios, an Anarchist group responsible for various assassinations, including an attempt on King Alfonso XIII's life. In 1920, he joined the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (National Confederation of Labor, CNT).

Juan García Oliver 24N Charladebate Garca Oliver en la Valencia Republicana en la

He was one of the most vocal opponents of the moderate Syndicalist trend led by Ángel Pestaña (the latter was skeptical of the means advocated by the inner group of the CNT, the Federación Anarquista Ibérica (Iberian Anarchist Federation, FAI)). Pestaña led his supporters out of the Confederación in late 1932, in order to create the Syndicalist Party; García Oliver remained virtually unopposed as the advocate of paramilitary tactics, which he had argued for since the dictatorship of Miguel Primo de Rivera.

Juan García Oliver Juan Garca Oliver El Movimiento Libertario en el exilio

García Oliver eventually became the leader of the FAI. When the CNT reluctantly decided to enter the Popular Front government during the Spanish Civil War of 1936-1939, García Oliver served as Minister of Justice under Francisco Largo Caballero (1936-1937). He encouraged workers to disarm during the Barcelona May Days of May 1937, calling a ceasefire. Some consider him a traitor to the Spanish anarchists for his willingness to compromise with government, while others see his concessions as understandable considering the need to defeat Francisco Franco.

Juan García Oliver Guerra Civil y Revolucion Social Joan Garca Oliver

He left the government later in the same month, but remained active in Barcelona until Catalonia fell in 1939, taking refuge in France, then Sweden, and finally in Mexico (where he remained until his death).

Juan García Oliver CORRESPONDENCIA ENTRE DIEGO CAMACHO 39ABEL PAZ39 Y JUAN GARCA

Juan garc a oliver mitin valencia cnt ait


Juan García Oliver Juan Garcia Oliver YouTube

Juan García Oliver Garca Oliver recordando a Durruti Taringa

References

Juan García Oliver Wikipedia


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