Within the run-up to the fiftieth anniversary of Francisco Franco’s loss of life on Nov. 20, 2025, the left-leaning Spanish govt led a vigil honoring the various sufferers of the dictator’s regime.
Whilst the precise numbers stay not possible to resolve, historians estimate that Franco’s males killed as much as 100,000 folks all over the brutal Spanish Civil Battle, and tens of hundreds had been carried out all over his dictatorial rule from 1939 till his loss of life in 1975. Masses of hundreds extra had been imprisoned, despatched to hard work camps or subjected to political persecution. To those figures, we will have to upload the more or less part 1,000,000 individuals who fled or had been pressured into exile.
Some of the multitudes of Francoism’s sufferers had been ladies and kids who persisted mental and bodily abuse in prisons, orphanages and asylums. But for many years their stories have remained marginal within the public narrative – highlighting the asymmetric acknowledgment of various teams of sufferers amid Spain’s broader combat to confront its previous.
Nonetheless, their tales stay alive within the testimonies of the ladies who had been imprisoned through the regime. In the summertime of 2024, I performed analysis on the Documentation Middle of Historic Reminiscence in Salamanca, gathering documented written accounts of worrying stories suffered through Spain’s feminine inhabitants below Franco. They disclose the level to which Francoist repression was once structured via gender, framing ladies as inherently subordinate and subjecting those that resisted the regime’s patriarchal order to particularly critical punishment.
Franco’s gendered violence
My learn about explores the testimonies of ladies imprisoned all over the civil warfare or next a long time, all of whom persisted struggling associated with their motherhood. Whilst some had been detained for his or her ideological allegiance to the republic that preceded Franco’s ascent, others had no formal partisan affiliations or had been simply associated with males who did.
Those ladies suffered what many survivors and historians have described as a “double punishment” – focused now not just for their ideals or associations however only for being ladies and moms.
The earliest testimony I got here throughout was once from a lady detained in 1939, simply 3 years after Franco, an army common, led an rebellion towards the democratically elected govt of the 2nd Republic that caused the civil warfare and his next reign.
Franco offers a fascist salute as he and his Nationalist forces input Barcelona in March 1939.
AP Photograph
Underneath Franco’s dictatorial regime, ladies’s roles had been rigidly managed through the ideology of Nationwide Catholicism, which related femininity, motherhood and loyalty to the state. The church bolstered this imaginative and prescient, “dictating that women served the fatherland through self-sacrifice and dedication to the common good.”
Those that defied the patriarchy had been criminalized and subjected to “re-education” interested by spiritual values.
Ladies’s so-called “redemption” below this reeducation was once no much less violent than their confinement. As one witness described, in Would possibly of 1939 the auditorium of Las Ventas jail was once ready to rejoice “two girls and a boy (… recently) born in prison.” Throughout the rite, a choir “composed of forty inmates, including opera singers, music teachers, violinists, and amateurs,” needed to carry out the nationwide anthems with the fascist arm-raised salute.
But confinement itself was once specifically brutal.
In step with Josefina García, a lady imprisoned all over the Nineteen Forties, guards often insulted and beat inmates. “If you were at home behaving like decent women, you wouldn’t be here,” she recalled one pronouncing. García endured: “Of course, they used a crude, sexist language. The police ‘used words’ in a way that sometimes leave a mark deeper than a bruise.”
Recounting her enjoy, any other witness reported the case of an 18-year-old sister of a guerrilla fighter in Valencia who “was subjected to terrible torture, stripped naked in a room with several Civil Guards who pricked her breasts, genitals, and stomach with … needles.”

A protester holds a banner with a picture of an unknown girl – a sufferer of the Franco regime.
AP Photograph/Paul White
Motherhood as battleground
Some of the painful facets of Franco’s repression was once the pressured separation of moms and their kids.
Upon incarceration, ladies incessantly misplaced custody in their little children, who had been positioned in orphanages or followed through households unswerving to Franco and his regime. Such violent ruptures of the maternal bond had been greater than an act of private cruelty – they had been a calculated political technique rooted within the broader Francoist ideology.
Since Francoism promoted a picture of ladies as obedient better halves and self-sacrificing moms dedicated to the Catholic circle of relatives type, Republican ladies had been demonized as immoral, bad and unworthy of motherhood.
Via stripping ladies in their kids, the regime each punished them and bolstered its narrative that best “loyal” ladies may well be true moms.
In the meantime, child-rearing or beginning all over incarceration was once marked through worry and uncertainty. In sure circumstances, newborns had been allowed to stick with their moms for a little while. Alternatively, a loss of right kind nourishment and psychological exhaustion made breastfeeding an not possible activity.
Every now and then, ladies who started to lactate had been denied the potential for nursing their babies, resulting in bodily ache and emotional torment.
Extra continuously, small children had been completely taken away altogether, deemed prone to being “contaminated” through their moms’ ideological values.
“When I was arrested, my son was five days old,” one sufferer, Carmen Caamaño, reported. “About a year later, they said I no longer needed to breastfeed him and took the child out of the prison. Some friends had to take him in because I had no family there.”

Ladies pay tribute to sufferers of the Franco regime in entrance of a flag of the Spanish Republic.
P Photograph/Alvaro Barrientos
There have been additionally numerous circumstances by which kids had been imprisoned along their moms. Without a different kinfolk to handle them, those kids suffered from starvation, illness and a loss of elementary hygiene of their overcrowded cells. For moms, the mental burden was once immense as they had been pressured to observe their kids endure, but they’d no energy to offer protection to them.
In the summertime of 1941, about six or seven kids died day by day in those prisons from hunger and illnesses, in line with accounts of survivors.
Trauma and resistance
Along trauma, there have been additionally moments of resistance.
Moms in jail seemed for tactics to nurture their kids regardless of shortage and worry. Testimonies I reviewed relate circumstances of inmates sharing meals, telling tales and protective kids as best possible they may. Those small acts of care had been a quiet however robust type of defiance.
But for plenty of ladies, the trauma of those losses by no means healed. Survivors continuously discuss of the ache of separation as an open wound that lasted a life-time. Kids raised in prisons or separated from their households carried the scars into maturity.
Even a long time after the regime ended, many descendants nonetheless combat with the burden of this silenced previous. But as a result of Spain’s Amnesty Act of 1977, which was once granted for previous political crimes, the ones accountable for atrocities dedicated below Franco have seldom been held responsible.
Histories of the Franco years continuously go away the grief of the intergenerational trauma within the shadows. And for the sufferers themselves, the worrying motherhood stories below his dictatorship disclose extra than simply non-public struggling – they divulge how authoritarian energy can succeed in into probably the most intimate portions of lifestyles.