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Latin American News

70 Years Later, Guernica Holds Secrets

Sunday, April 22, 2007 4:18:52 PM
By PAUL HAVEN

Pedro Balino passes the train station in the Basque town of Guernica, Spain, March 29, 2007, where he was, nearly 70 years ago, when the sirens wailed, looking at the first of the German and Italian fighter planes backing the fascist forces of Gen. Francisco Franco in the Spanish Civil War flying overhead to level the historic Basque town with splinter and incendiary bombs. Balino fled with a friend to the hills above town and watched the bombing from there. "After the bombing we came down from the hills, and at the entrance to Guernica we found eight or 10 guys who were dead or dying. One was missing his face, the other had no arm," Balino said. "Some of them I knew. They were young people, maybe 15 or 16 years old." (AP Photo/Jasper Juinen)GUERNICA, Spain (AP) - Itziar Arzanegi can still hear the roar of the German warplane overhead, and see the old woman shaking her fists at the foreigners destroying her town. She remembers the look of horror on the woman's face as the plane swooped low, opened fire and cut her down.

It has been nearly 70 years since German and Italian fighter planes backing the fascist forces of Gen. Francisco Franco in the Spanish Civil War leveled this historic Basque town on April 26, 1937.

Myths and misinformation have shrouded the bombing from the outset, starting with the death toll, which historians have been gradually revising downward for decades. But Guernica has come to be seen as a foretaste of the aerial blitzes of World War II, immortalized in Pablo Picasso's "Guernica," one of the most iconic paintings of the 20th century.


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