Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Spain: Remembering the forgotten Red Terror
Spain: Remembering the forgotten Red Terror
Jan 9, 2026 8:04 PM

As the world remembers the hundredth anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, memorates the thousands of Christians martyred by the Communists during the Spanish Red Terror. Historian Stanley G. Payne calledthis periodthe “most extensive and violent persecution of Catholicism in Western history, in some way even more intense than that of the French Revolution.”

Every November 6, the Roman Catholic Church in Spain remembers those martyred for their faith by socialists during this anti-Christian persecution, whichpeaked at the outset of the SpanishCivil War in 1936.

Ángel Manuel García Carmona brings this tragedy, and the intellectual trends that created it, to life for readers ofReligion & Liberty Transatlantic. He writes those regions of Spain controlled by the Popular Front – the alliance of socialists and Communists largely controlled by Moscow:

were the scenes of dramatic religious persecution. Some6,832 religiouswere murdered between 1936 and 1939 – including 13 bishops and 4,184 priests. As many as20,000 churches were destroyed, many of them before the menced.

One of the deadliest massacres came in the autumn of 1936. At least5,000 citizens were killedin the city of Paracuellos del Jarama (Madrid) by order of Madrid Committee of Defence, which was ruled munists. People, especially women, were murdered for attending Mass.

By the end of the Spanish Civil War in 1939, an estimated one-fifth of the nation’s Catholic clergy lay dead.

Nonetheless, a dogged propaganda campaign in the West, and the dictatorship of Generalissimo Francisco Franco (who is still dead), have swept these slaughters from public memory. “The mitted by the 40,000 international red brigades, under the leadership of the Moscow-controlled Comintern, remain, to date, uninvestigated and unpunished,” observed Spanish television producerJose Nieto a few years ago.

Indeed, they are largely forgotten, or never learned in the first place. Less well-understood yet is what preceded them: economic collectivism and the confiscation of Christians’ property. As Carmona writes, in 1931 “the Parliament passed aconstitutionthat banned religious orders, Catholic education, or religious cemeteries.” Here, the Popular Front followed the script established by the Bolsheviks when they conquered Russia just a few years earlier. In March 1922, Lenin instructed the Politburo to “confiscate all church property with all the ruthless energy we can still muster.”

Ángel Manuel García Carmona writes that the intertwined ideologies of collectivism and fundamentalist secularism continue to threaten people of faith to this day:

Marxist regimes and cadres were the vanguard of the intolerant secularism percolating throughout our culture. Its goals are achieved when economic resources are collectivised into the hands of those secular statists. Yet collectivism and militant atheism are growing as the prime threats to those of any faith, including faith in mon Western civilisation.

Read his full essay here.

Estrelas. This photo has been cropped.CC BY-SA 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Budget Morality
My Acton Commentary for this week tries to explain the differences between Christian proponents and opponents of Republican budget proposals: A Circle of Exchange is Better Than a Circle of Protection Strife over the budget in Washington continues, with religious leaders and organizations weighing in on both sides. The positions of Christian participants in this battle are as intractable as the batants and for the same reason: A fundamental difference of outlook concerning the role of government and the effect...
Global Problems, Global Solutions
There’s a saying that when goods cross borders, armies don’t (it’s the correlative to the observation attributed to Bastiat: “If goods cannot cross borders, armies will.”). The point is that trade tends to bring people together who might otherwise have cause to be hostile. One of the themes at Acton University, which begins in just a few hours, is globalization and various Christian responses. That’s sure to be the case again this year, as we have just about 70 countries...
Is the Green Movement Problematic for Christians?
The green movement has had a dramatic, long lasting impact on public policy, individuals, and even religion. But many people of faith have criticized supporters of the green movement, equating its strong followers with those who practice a pagan religion in support of Mother Nature. As Christians we are called to be environmental stewards and to care for God’s creation. However, putting aside the perceptual paganism of a too dedicated support of the green movement, one must ask, is the...
Follow Acton University on Twitter from the PowerBlog
We now have a live stream of the #ActonU hashtag on Twitter running on the right side of our blog. This tab will keep you updated on the folks who are using this tag in their Twitter posts. Feel free to join in and be featured on the blog! You might even find someone to meet up with between sessions. For those of you who aren’t at Acton University you can use the feed to find out what you’re missing....
Purchase Acton University 2011 Lectures Online
Continuing the tradition from 2010, Acton University 2011 lectures will be available for purchase online from our secure order page. New lectures will be posted as they conclude throughout the week, so check back often. The downloads are in MP3 format and can be transferred to any device that plays audio files such as an iPod or smartphone. Here are some useful Acton University links: Acton University 2011 Digital DownloadsActon University 2010 Digital DownloadsOfficial Acton University site ...
Rev. Sirico: Who Really Was John Galt, Anyway?
On the Patheos website, Rev. Robert A. Sirico examines the current debate over the legacy of Ayn Rand in conservative circles, and the attempt by liberal/progressives to tarnish prominent figures like Rep. Paul Ryan with “hyperbolic and personal critiques of the woman and her thought.” But what if there is much to Rand that defies the caricature? Rev. Sirico writes: There is in Rand an undeniable and passionate quest, a hunger for truth, for the ideal, for morality, for a...
Civil Society, Entrepreneurship, and the Common Good
Acton University has been full of thought provoking lectures and stimulating discussion. It is easy to see why the attendees wish the conference was much longer. There are many interesting lectures, one just wishes he or she could attend all of them. Yesterday Dr. John Bolt, of Calvin Theological Seminary, taught a course titled “Centralization and Civil Society.” Bolt’s course paid special attention to Alexis de Tocqueville and his contributions to defining a civil society. As one can imagine, by...
Samuel Gregg: Hell, Heaven, and Progressive Catholics
Recently, progressive Catholics met in Detroit and issued calls for a married clergy and the ordination of women priests. In a very timely article Samuel Gregg, research director at the Acton Institute, addresses the progressive Catholics who “sit rather loosely with Catholic teaching on questions like life and marriage” and how they are continuing “to press what is often a hyper-politicized understanding of the gospel.” Gregg’s article appearing in Crisis Magazine. The roots of the progressive Catholic’s problems may lie...
Samuel Gregg on India’s Civil Society
Current events in India have left the country wrestling with an important question: What is civil society and what does it consist of? These are not easy questions to answer as definitions of civil society can greatly vary. According to a story on the Wall Street Journal’s India Real Time section, “…political demonstrators have demanded greater civil society involvement in the governing country…” While many throughout India are trying to define a civil society and who represents it, the Journal...
The Complex Tax Code
Today at Capital Commentary I discuss the size and scope of the tax code in the US relative to its basic purposes. In “Back Door Social Engineering,” I argue, “When governments run huge deficits in part because of plexity of its tax system and the ability of people and institutions to engage in large-scale (and legal) tax avoidance, there is something deeply wrong with the system.” The basic purpose of taxes is to raise money for the government, not to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved