In Hiding is the spellbinding story of a man who spent thirty years holed-up in his own home to escape execution. Manuel Cortes, a socialist and mayor of the village of Mijas in Andalusia, became a marked man once Franco's forces took power. Cortes stayed under cover until amnesty was decreed in 1969. This absorbing narrative, based on numerous in-depth interviews, chronicles an awe-inspiring ordeal and depicts one of Spain's darkest hours in visceral detail.
Ronald Angus Fraser (9 December 1930 – 10 February 2012) was a British historian noted for his oral histories and in particular for Blood Of Spain: An Oral History of the Spanish Civil War, his oral history of the Spanish Civil War.
Born in Hamburg to an upper-middle class British father and wealthy American mother, Fraser was educated at boarding school in England and the USA and undertook further studies in Switzerland and France. He chronicled his upbringing in his oral history In Search of a Past (1984), in which interviews with the servants at his family's Berkshire country house served as a counterpoint to his own memories. Fraser spent five years as a correspondent with Reuters in Brussels, The Hague and London before moving to Spain in 1957 to become a full-time writer.
Fraser's friendship with André Gorz led to his involvement with the New Left Review from the early 1960s. He was a lifelong socialist and at his death a senior member of the New Left Trust. He was a founder of New Left Books, the parent company of publisher Verso Books.
Cortes was mayor of mijas until the traitorous military overtook the malaga area then he fled, joined the republic, s army. They were eventually defeated and Franco dictatorship lasted from 1939 to 1976. Cortes spent that time hiding in his own village home(s), unbeknownst to anyone. He had an execution hanging over him if caught. Interesting book of interviews with Manuel, his wife , and daughter. Mayor cortes was well read and informed and has interesting insights into the republic, the revolution and war, and the dictatorship. And lots of info about rural life on south coast. Has end notes and cool map that includes labor union control over portions of southern Spain.
An absolutely amazing read. Manuel Cortes hid for 30 years in his home upon the institution of the Franco regime at the end of the Spanish civil war, to escape persecution and certain death because of his socialist beliefs and leftist activities as a leader and mayor of his community in a village called Mijas in Andalusia.
This account of his time in hiding, and the historical circumstances that led to it, was very educational (I don't know much about Spanish history and political economy) and told in a very accessible, rational way, but an emotional read nonetheless.
The way the family came together, the way Manuel's wife Juliana and daughter Maria worked to keep him safe and secret for a full 30 years, is truly remarkable.
The things one learns about the character of this man through this telling are also remarkable. Here is a truly decent human being. Even during his time as mayor when the left was strong in Mijas, he protected his right-wing political opponents from death by mobs, many of whom didn't return the favour and/or had previously treated him with disdain. How many of us would do that given the option?
Manuel Cortes was an amazing human being. Ron Fraser (who sadly died earlier this year) has documented his struggle and his fortitude with painstaking accuracy and accessibility.
"I went into the struggle because that is what I believed in, and though I'm finished now with politics, my convictions will remain till I die." ~Manuel Cortes, 1969
"Even if nothing could be done outside, within the family a father can see that ideas are kept alive, that there is continuity and that everything doesn't die with him."
The true tale of a political 'criminal' in Franco's Spain, hiding in his own home for 30 year [1939-69]. The town, one of those annualy white washed glories of southern Spain is Mijas, 8KM north of Fuengirola [Costa del Sol]. No one casn 'hide' there today; a high spped road from the Coast has been built making it a tour bus delight.
I would have liked to hear more about Manuel and his day-to-day activities after coming out of hiding. Overall a well written book with 3 similar, yet different viewpoints. Makes one wonder how you mentally strong you are/ would have been in that position
This is a little known book, the true story of man who hid in his house or 40 years because Franco's government was intent on capturing and executing him. Here he tells his own story about the harrowing times when the house was searched top to bottom. He had hiding places in the walls and would sit for hours cramped there, barely breathing. In the meantime, his wife continued with a demanding work schedule. His children grew up, eventually told about Papa who was actually not lost in the war, but living there, beneath their fee at times. It is an amazing and well told story that gives a unique perspective on life in Spain under the fascist thumb of Francisco Franco.