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The Jews of the Spanish civil war: a forgotten story

July 13, 2016 09:45
spanish civil war

By

Robert Philpot,

Robert Philpot

6 min read

In July 1936, three Jewish tailors from Stepney set off to cycle to Barcelona. Card-carrying members of the Communist party, Nat Cohen, Sam Masters and Allick Sheller were travelling to the Catalan capital to witness the People’s Olympiad.

The games had been conceived by Spain’s new left-wing government as an alternative to the Berlin Olympics which Hitler was to open the following month.

They would never take place: as athletes and visitors began to pour into Barcelona, General Francisco Franco launched the uprising which plunged Spain into a brutal, three-year civil war and claimed the lives of 500,000 people.

But, like the Jewish team from Palestine which had come to compete in the Olympiad, Cohen and his comrades decided to stay in Spain to help resist the fascist coup.