Sunday, 13 September 2020

STUART CHRISTIE DIES! Intro. by Brian Bamford

PART ONE - THE AUTHOR'S INTRODUCTION:
Stuart Christie: a Scottish anarchist writer and publisher. Who when aged 18, Christie was arrested in Madrid while carrying explosives to assassinate the Spanish caudillo, General Francisco Franco. He was later alleged to be a member of the Angry Brigade, but was acquitted of related charges.
Born: July 10, 1946, Partick, Glasgow, United Kingdom
Died: August 15, 2020
Movies: The Angry Brigade: The Spectacular Rise and Fall of Britain’s First Urban Guerilla Group Organizations founded: Anarchist Black Cross Federation, Cienfuegos Press
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BEYOND an OBITUARY!:
STUART Christie was an anarchist who had quality and consistency as well as quantity and a prolific output. From the early 1960s when he first engaged with Bobby Lynn and the Glasgow anarchists to his death bed listening to 'Pennies from Heaven' Stuart sternly stuck to his beliefs dedicated to a classical version of anarchism.
My last contact with Stuart was an unusually brief e-mail from him last November in which he wrote: 'Bearing up, Brian. Hope you are too. Un abrazo!.'
However I must offer a health warning, as in the 56 years since we first became acquainted in Paris in 1964, our paths have been very different. His commitment was to internationalist view while mine since the 1960s when I lived and worked in Spain has been mostly more parochial. My engagement with the anarchist movement in Spain and later Gibraltar was very different from that of Stuart even though we were functioning in the same organisation: the FIJL (DI). My role was purely one of propaganda and intelligence, and at no time was I involved in the violent activist deeds which were designed to discourage tourism or strike at General Franco.
My task and that of my then wife, Joan, was the much more humdrum; in my case one of working on the tools as an electrician, and delivering Butane Gas to the villages on the Cabo San Antonio in Alicante. Much more boring than 'daring-do' and prison life, but a way of soaking-up Spanish culture and everyday life as it was lived by many young Spaniards at that time who migrated to the coast from places like Albacete and Andalucia: working a six day week and paid 750 pesetas. Meanwhile, our FIJL campaign against Spanish tourism clearly failed, yet fortunately less tragically than Stuart's failed mission to kill Franco.
Among the many obituaries published on Stuart the most perceptive that I have yet seen has been that of the historian Julián Casanova in El País 'El escocés de la FAI que trató de matar a Franco' Casanova argues that Stuart Christie believed that 'a fusion of different forms of resistance such as the workers, the students, the greens into the language of political anarchism. Just as Bakunin, thought it was possible to harmonise individualism with the socialist collectivism.' Casanova writes: 'He [Stuart] liked the men of action, but in reality he [Stuart] and his wife Brenda went on to propagate forms of idelogy with various cultural manifestations, which demonstrated the force of culture with ideas.'
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Stuart's wife Brenda died last year aged 70 years, from cancer. Casanova writes: 'The obituaries now record that his prime intention was to kill Franco. Yet he was a committed anarchist using his pen and the engaged in cultural aggitation, in times when the revolutionaries with "consciences" have past into history. Anarchist solidarity, that reflects on the concequences of industrial capilalism, nuclear disarmament, and abuses by the State. He was a Scot who would have loved to live in the golden epoch of Spanish anarchism.'
Julián Casanova knew Stuart Christie from when he met him at Queen Mary College, London, in the Autumn of 1985. At that event were other hispanistas like Ronald Fraser, and he speaks warmly of the seminars, dinners and debates over the Spanish Civil War, Franco, the monarchy, Juan Carlos and the transistion.
It strikes me that Casanova understood Stuart better than most of us.
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7 comments:

Dave Douglass said...

I take it his funeral has been held was there a memorial assembly of any sort yet

James said...

An online wake of sorts happened last week, and a few people nearby met up in person with his clan. Not sure if anything else is planned – but, if it comes across my radar I’ll send it your way.

Yep – bad news about Stuart, and David Graeber too. Class War’s Ian Bone is also in coma at the moment, I think.

Lynn said...

I read the article,although I had never heard of the chap. The years you refer to I was only 12 or 13 so had no real idea of what you where doing. Interesting to read though!

Lewis Mates said...

Yes, I had heard the news; very sad.

Dolores said...

I did know about Stuart and I heard about his death - but thanks for the extra information

Harriet Ward said...

I had not heard about Stuart Christie -- was there an obit in the Guardian? -- the only newspaper I see regularly, where I did read about David Graeber.

Colin [Ward] was an anarchist of the word, not much of the deed, except for the occasional demo. I'm not sure if he knew Christie, but I think he disapproved of his Spanish adventures, and he disliked Meltzer.

Joy Bratherton said...

I heard of his death on line. He sounds a real character. Please keep me in the loop regarding any events you have in the pipeline aand I shall do my best to attend, situation allowing of course.