'The Basque History of the World' By Mark Kurlansky
- By Robert Wernick
- Smithsonian.com, April 01, 2000, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
They learned early on that a reliable source of income could come from smuggling goods over an international border, which for them has never been more than a line on the map. At times the goods were human: in World War II, they smuggled thousands of resistance fighters, Jews and British intelligence agents over the mountains from occupied France into Spain. After World War II, they smuggled Nazis and collaborators out of liberated France into Spain. But year in and year out, they smuggled any kind of goods on which duty was supposed to be paid.
After half a century of turmoil — bloody civil war, brutal repression under General Franco, a long campaign of bombings, murders and kidnappings by intransigent fighters for Basque independence — the ancient land has been slipping into an era of peace and prosperity. The three Spanish provinces of Vizcaya, Guipúzcoa and Alava have been formed into a Basque Autonomous Community, with considerable powers over local matters like education. Euskera, which Basques were forbidden to speak under Franco, is taught in schools; road signs are full of incomprehensible words full of x's and z's.
But the more the Basques indulge their sentimental devotion to the past, the more they are being absorbed inexorably into the modern world. The younger generation is more interested in the jobs they can get in the new high-tech factories. And the Bilbao skyline is no longer dominated by steel mills but by the Bilbao Guggenheim Museum, lured here at a cost of $56 to every citizen of the Basque Autonomous Community.
There are no more smugglers because there is no more frontier; Spain and France are members of the European Union. Jeannine Pereuil, who runs a pastry shop specializing in gâteau basque in the village of St. Pée-sur-Nivelle, on the French side, finds life distinctly less interesting than it was in the old days. "You used to hide a little bottle of Pernod in your clothes and nervously smile at the customs officials. Now, it's not any fun at all to go across."
But fun or no fun, she is going to stay in St. Pée-sur-Nivelle.
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Comments (4)
Note to all, Basques they are Armenians, you can find it in the Spanish oldest and Mexican (DISCVRSOS) historical books.
Posted by Basque on March 2,2013 | 05:36 PM
My grandmother was basque and she left Spain early 1900's because of the war. They were not allowed to speak Euskeda. I had a great uncle that was in a natzi concentration camp, I saw his serial number tatooed on this arm. I went to Spain during Franco and they had fear of speaking against Franco just in case somebody could hear them and turn them in. Spanish only. Great people, I'm very proud to have their blood.
Posted by Flybarb on October 11,2012 | 04:12 PM
Very wrongly aimed comment. The nazis are so hated in the Basque Country, especially as they helped Franco crush the Basque Country during the Spanish Civil War, including the bombing of Gernika, our holy city.
The Comet network helped hundreds of allied downed airmen to return to allied countries smuggling them through the Pyrenees, and then sailing them to England. The network was discovered many times, dismantled and many killed, but always reorganised.
When I was a kid I still remember going to Spain with my mother, leaving the Basque Country for a few months due to my mother's job, and how in the Spanish schools children were forced to sing fascist songs with the nazi salute, something even during Franco's time would be asking too much in the Basque Country. And I remember how me and my brothers were expelled from school for not complying. This was in the late 1970's.
Accusing the Basques as a group of helping nazis is very offensive and false. Get better informed!
Posted by Patxi on August 20,2010 | 11:52 AM
I would like to know if Basques collaborated with the SS or the Spanish Blue Division, and if the only reason they helped Nazi war criminals and collaborators cross the Pyrennees in 1945 was for money.
Posted by Barry willig on April 24,2010 | 09:59 AM