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Ramon Vila Capdevila

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Nationality
  
Spanish

Known for
  
Anarchist insurgent


Movement
  
Anarchism

Name
  
Ramon Capdevila

Ramon Vila Capdevila caracremada21jpg

Born
  
April 2, 1908 (
1908-04-02
)
Peguera, Bergueda, Catalonia

Other names
  
Caraquemada (burnt-face); Jabala (wild boar); Pasos Largos (long steps);

Died
  
August 7, 1963, Balsareny, Spain

Organization
  
Confederacion Nacional del Trabajo

Reinauguracio placa amb placa a ramon vila capdevila caracremada a berga 2017 1


Ramon Vila Capdevila ([rəˈmom ˈbiɫə kədːəˈβiɫə], 2 April 1908 - 7 August 1963), sometimes known by various nicknames, including Caracremada (Catalan: "burnt-face"), was a Catalan anarchist, member of the Confederación Nacional del Trabajo (Spanish: National Confederation of Labor), and guerrilla fighter.

Contents

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Early life

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Vila was born in 1908 in a small village called Peguera in the comarca (roughly translated as "county") of Berguedà, Catalonia. When he was very young, Vila was nearly struck by lightning, which gave him the facial scars which earned him the nickname Caraquemada. The lightning strike killed his mother, who was hiding with him from a storm.

Ramon Vila Capdevila Ramn Vila Capdevila Peridico Diagonal

In 1932, after participating in a workers' insurrection, Vila was imprisoned in Manresa and held for a few years. In the period between his release and the start of the Spanish Civil War in 1936, Vila moved around constantly for fear of harassment by the "Special Branch". In April 1936, while Vila was in Castelló de la Plana, he was approached by two officers. Vila and his cousin Ramon Rives fired at the officers, but Rives was shot in the ensuing gun battle, as well as the two officers. One of the officers died as a result of his wounds. Vila fled the scene, and later turned himself in to the Guardia Civil, hoping for better treatment than he would receive from the "Special Branch".

Ramon Vila Capdevila wwwchristiebookscomChristieBooksWPwpcontentu

On 18 July 1936, after the Nationalist uprising, the prisons were opened in an effort to gain fighters to put down the uprising. Vila was released, joined the fighting, and was later made a commandant in the Carabinero Corps. Vila also held the post of Supplies Delegate at the factory he worked at in Fígols.

Post-civil war

Following the Nationalist victory over the Second Spanish Republic in 1939, Vila crossed the French border, to be interned at the concentration camp in Argelès-sur-Mer. However, the following year, Vila escaped, and returned to Spain. At this point, Vila formed a clandestine resistance group. Not long after, Vila returned to Vichy France to acquire supplies, and was arrested by Germans, who were by this point occupying France. Vila was imprisoned in Perpignan, but was only there a short time before the Germans sent him to work a bauxite mine. He was soon able to join the French Resistance, and put his experience with explosives to use in sabotage operations. The battalion that Vila was a member of was incorporated into the Free French 2nd Armored Division, led by General Philippe Leclerc de Hauteclocque.

Following the end of World War II, Vila primarily operated in the Catalan counties of Alt Llobregat and Baix Llobregat. As his last act of resistance before his death, Vila destroyed transmission towers on 2 August 1963 near Manresa.

Death

Vila was killed on 7 August 1963 after being shot in the heart by Guardia Civil officers near a castle in Balsareny. When hailed by the three officers Vila fired at them, without killing any of the three. The official press release announcing his death referred to Vila as a "bandit".

Vila was buried in Fígols. On 15 July 2000, a plaque was placed at the burial site of Vila which reads

Here lie the remains of Ramon Vila Capdevila. Militant of the CNT and the last of the Catalan anarchist maquis, he was involved in the proclamation of libertarian communism (1932), the civil war (1936-39), and the French Resistance (1939-45) and, for a further 18 years, the fight against Francoism. In memory of him and of all who gave their lives for freedom and the anarchist ideal

References

Ramon Vila Capdevila Wikipedia