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useless-catalanfacts · 2 months
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1st of March, 1936.
People on the streets of Barcelona (capital city of Catalonia) welcoming the president of Catalonia Lluís Companys and other members of the democratically-elected government of Catalonia, who had been arrested and jailed after the October Events (Fets d’Octubre) of 1934.
Context: As the Spanish government became more and more conservative, leaving important decision-making positions to fascists and reactionary monarchists, Catalonia was leaning every time more towards the left and republicanism (anti-monarchy). The Republican Left of Catalonia (ERC) party had won the elections in Catalonia and the anarchist union CNT kept growing in members. The difference was absolute. And it got even worse when the Spanish Government cancelled the newly approved law of the Catalan Government that protected landless agricultural workers against the abuses of landowners (the Spanish Government claimed that important decisions like this were exceeding the power of a regional government, even when Catalonia’s inhabitant massively claimed in favour of this law).
To put an end to this situation, the government of Catalonia organized a Revolutionary Committee (Comitè Revolucionari) with people from many different Catalanist organizations to prepare a response. Most trade unions declared a general strike against the Spanish government and, on October 6th, Lluís Companys went on the balcony of the Government of Catalonia (the balcony overlooks a big square where a huge crowd had gathered) and declared the Catalan state inside the Spanish federation.
As a response, the Spanish government declared the state of war in Catalonia and sent the army to arrest all the Catalan government. The Spanish army shot against the population who was defending the institutions, killing 74 people and injuring 252, including members of the Catalan Proletarian Party, the Communist Party of Catalonia, Catalan State, the Workers’ and Peasants’ Block, the CNT, and other civilians. On the other side, the revolutionaries who defended themselves from the army killed 12 soldiers and 2 military policemen (guardia civil), and 10 civilians who died as part of crossed fire.
The Catalan State only lasted 10 hours. The Spanish army, on top of killing and injuring all those people, also arrested more than 3,500 people, including all members of the democratically-elected Government of Catalonia, many mayors and MPs, and leaders of other Catalan leftist parties and unions. The members of the Government of Catalonia were judged and sentenced to 30 years of prison, the Government of Catalonia was abolished and Catalonia became direct subject of a Spanish military governor chosen by the Spanish government. 129 city councils around Catalonia, where the election winner had been ERC, were also abolished and given to conservative parties. The Spanish government also used the opportunity to once again impose Spanish as the only language to be used in official documents in Catalonia (during the Republic, Catalan had been legalized); ban many of the most popular Catalan newspapers, including La Publicitat, L’Opinió, La Humanitat, El Diluvio, Solidaridad Obrera (this one is the CNT’s newspaper) and La Rambla; turned the Parliament of Catalonia into a military barrack; prohibited the activities held by pro-Catalan/leftist parties, unions and associations and closed their headquarters. Of course, they also made sure that the law that protected the agricultural workers remained illegal, and did 1,400 trials against landless agricultural workers affected by this law to evict them from the fields.
The Spanish Government didn’t lift the state of war in Catalonia until April 1935. The Government of Catalonia was restored but with little power, it wouldn’t get back the power that it had before the October Events (which, as you saw, already wasn’t that much) and restore democracy in Catalonia until the general elections of February 16th 1936. The leftists won the elections and the people in prison for the October Events were given an amnesty, this is where the pictures you saw above are from.
However, this reinstalled (partial) democracy did not last for long. The fascist Spanish nationalists are sore losers and couldn’t accept that the right-wing had lost the elections in Spain, so they did a coup, starting the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939). The war would be won by the fascists, starting a fascist dictatorship that lasted until 1978, based on the concepts of national-Catholicism, anti-labour, hatred of national minorities like Catalans, and strict patriarchal gender behaviour codes.
Knowing that they would be killed if found by the fascists, Lluís Companys and the rest of members of the Government of Catalonia left Barcelona at the last moment, when the fascist troops were entering the city. They escaped to France, but the Spanish fascist government asked the Gestapo (secret police of Nazi Germany) to search for them and sent them to Spain. In August 13th 1940, the Gestapo found Lluís Companys in Paris, arrested him and sent him to Madrid (Spain’s capital city). He was judged by a military court-martial and sentenced to death, and the next day he was executed. He was 58 years old. His last words, right before getting shot, were “for Catalonia!”.
Lluís Companys is the only democratically-elected president to have been executed by a fascist government in Europe’s history. Between the entrance of fascist troops in Barcelona (January 26th 1939) and Lluís Company’s execution (October 15th 1940), the Spanish fascist government had already officially executed 2,760 people in Catalonia, and more would follow.
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In the centre of the photo, Lluís Companys (the one wearing a beret) receiving a flower bouquet upon his return to Catalonia after the amnesty.
(Photos: Arxiu Fotogràfic de Barcelona)
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uncatolicoperplejo · 11 months
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Lluís Companys Jover, miembro de la logia masónica "Lealtad" (Barcelona).
@filtradano (Twitter) (15 oct.2022). Lluís Companys Jover, miembro de la logia masónica “Lealtad” (Barcelona). Expediente de la Comisión General Político-Social de la Dirección General de Seguridad del Ministerio de la Gobernación (26/04/1949). Lluís Companys se inició en la masonería el 2 de mayo de 1922 en la logia Lealtad n°6. Se desconoce su nombre simbólico (alias masónico) y en 1929 fue…
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estadijohan · 11 months
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LOS ANTECEDENTES DEL FC BARCELONA EN MONTJUÏC​
Nuestro querido David Ruiz trae al gran Josep de Golstalgia para repasar todos los partidos del FC Barcelona en Montjuïc tras disputarse el último encuentro en el Camp Nou previo a las obras de remodelación que lo mantendrán alejado hasta noviembre de 2024 si todo va según lo previsto.
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copper-16 · 1 month
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Scary
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Several things go amiss during an El Clásico, but it is nothing that cannot be fixed with a little love and bravery.
(a/n: This might be a stretch to the imagination, but let’s just pretend that all the RM/Barcelona games are played at bigger stadiums in this universe. Also Marta Cardona still plays at RM in this as well, because I said so <3)
Ingrid and Mapi had made a small list of rules regarding their daughter when she was born. Some of them included things like: 
4. She would not attend any games at stadiums bigger than Johan Cryuff until she was three years old. 
7. She would never go to a Spain camp or a Spanish national team game unless situations change drastically. 
12. She would take turns being their mascot, unless it was a big event for one of their teammates, and they wanted Elena as their mascot. 
All of them had been good additions to the list, and they had stuck to their guns on it. They were made for her safety, to make sure that she wasn’t overwhelmed or overstimulated as a young child, or put in situations that could negatively affect her as such a young child. They did not regret their choices, but it did lend itself to an interesting situation just a few weeks after Elena’s third birthday. 
Ever since she had been born, all of the Barcelona vs. Real Madrid games had been played at large arenas, beyond the capacity that they wanted Elena to experience at such a young age. And just as they said, the toddler had never been to a Spain national team camp or game. She readily came to the Norwegian camps and games, but Mapi strictly forbade her from coming to Spains. 
When the Spanish defender had made the decision to go back to the Spanish national team, it wasn’t something she had taken lightly. But Pina and Patri wished to go back, and the brunette both wanted to protect her friends, and play for her country again. 
But hell would freeze over before she let her baby anywhere near that environment, near the coaches and structures that had played a hand in so much abuse, both physically and mentally. 
It was better for Elena this way, and Mapi preferred it that way. But it also meant that several of the Real Madrid girls who Mapi wasn’t necessarily as close with, had never met Elena. 
So when El Clásico is scheduled for early January at Lluís Companys Olympic Stadium, the mothers realize that it will be their first time getting to bring Elena to such an event. She had just turned three a few weeks ago, and they figured it was as good of a time as any to introduce her to the environment of a larger game, still safe with the two of them. 
And as it turned out, Mapi was the one who got Elena as her mascot that day. Which meant that early in January, the center back stood in the starting eleven lineup with her daughter on her hip, bouncing her lightly as they waited to walk out onto the pitch. 
Elena was slightly overstimulated, the roar of the crowd outside of the tunnel and the sheer size of the place around her slightly overwhelming for the young girl, so she was happy to cling to her mother’s side. She looked around at everything for a while, before settling on waving back at her Mama, who was standing in line behind her, holding the hand of another little boy. 
Mapi waved forward at Misa Rodríguez and Marta Cardona, who were both pointing at Elena with excitement. The Barcelona defender smiled, rubbing her daughter’s back up and down softly as she nodded - confirming that the two players would get to meet the little girl today. 
But it’s an exchange Elena misses entirely, only focusing fully back on her Mami when the players begin to walk out to the stadium properly. 
It’s an early evening game, the sun just beginning to set as Mapi tickles Elena’s stomach as they walk out, pointing at all the fans and explaining everything to her daughter. The little girl tucks herself into the smaller defenders side, happily pressed up against Mapi as she takes everything in, curious if not a little anxious. 
It’s the biggest environment she’s ever been in, but Mapi finds that their daughter settles quite quickly, waving at all the people as they stand in a line. 
“Hola!” Elena calls out happily, and the brunette smiles as many of the fans wave back, well aware of who was in the defender's arms. 
“I love you mi sol,” Mapi murmurs, pressing a kiss to her daughter's temple before she passes the little one to Irene, who would not be playing in the match, but rather resting. Ingrid comes over to kiss Elena’s forehead once before she runs toward the backline, leaving Mapi to jog after her, still looking at their daughter. 
“Adios Mami, good luck!” Elena called out as Irene carted her away, remaining happily placed in the older defender's arms for the remainder of the game. 
The game doesn’t end up being too hard of a match for Barcelona, with a scoreline of 5-0 in their favor. Ingrid had even scored one of their goals, a header off of a corner set piece they had played. 
When the final whistle blew, Irene released Elena and watched carefully as she ran straight to Ingrid, who was closer to the little girl than her wife. The Norwegian turned easily, opening her arms as she crouched down, scooping the toddler up into her arms and pressing kisses all over her head. 
“You won!” Elena cheered as she giggled, and Ingrid nodded, sweaty and tired but excited nonetheless. It had been a good match, and the crowd was rowdy and roaring around them, clearly equally as elated with the win. 
“We did!” Ingrid responded happily as she bounced her daughter on her hip, clapping her hands together as best as she could as she held her daughter, looking around at her teammates with a big smile on her face. 
The Norwegian headed toward the bench, intent on getting some water, when she was intercepted by one of the staff members. 
“They need you for media,” she explained with a grimace, her voice urgent, and the dark haired woman nodded her head in understanding as she looked quickly toward her wife. The Spaniard was standing off toward their bench, talking to some teammates. 
“Of course, let me just do a hand off real quick,” Ingrid explained, rushing over to place Elena down a few paces from where Mapi’s back was turned to them, as she hears her name being called more urgently. “You go over to Mami, okay Elena?” Ingrid explained as she brushed the little girl's sandy blonde curls back, and she received a small nod in response from her daughter. 
“María!” Ingrid called out as she turned around, running over to where they needed her for media. But just as she called out and turned away, Mapi started walking forward, away from her daughter as she was called to meet with one of the staff members. Ingrid’s call for her wife is lost in the crowd, and suddenly Elena is left standing on the sidelines of the pitch, with neither of her parents really in sight. 
The little girl looks around, hoping that someone in her Mami and Mama’s team will notice her standing all alone, but everyone is distracted. And the loud, rambunctious crowd that she didn’t mind so much when her Mami was by her side, suddenly seemed much scarier than it had a minute ago to the toddler. 
Elena doesn’t know this stadium like she does Johan Cryuff, but there are similarities. She turns around, eyeing the tunnel that she finds similar to the one in Johan, and she makes a run for it, weaving through legs in her quest to get to somewhere a little more quiet and contained. 
Once she gets there, she realizes that she’s maybe made a bit of a mistake. Because suddenly nothing really looks familiar, and the young girl struggles with what to do. At Johan, you turned right to get to the Barcelona changing room, so that’s exactly what she does. 
The little girl is near close to tears, and desperately hoping that she’ll stumble across the locker room, or one of the Barcelona players that she knows. She’s simply kept walking, going down hallway after hallway, trying to find something or someone familiar. By the time she decides that she should turn back around, she’s so lost she doesn’t know how to get back out to the field, and there are tears beginning to brim in her eyes. 
Elena comes to a halt in one of the intersections of a hallway as she realizes that she just wants her Mami and Mama, and she doesn’t know what to do. She isn’t the type to wander off, and she’s never been lost like this before. Armed with exactly no experience or skills in coping with such overwhelming feelings, the little girl can do nothing but burst into tears, which stream down her cheeks at a rapid pace as she stands there helplessly. 
Misa had been pacing up and down an abandoned hallway in Lluís Companys, staving off tears of her own, her face red as tears brimmed in her eyes. She was frustrated with her performance, with her team's performance, and she needed a second to calm herself down before talking to her teammates or the press, she had decided. 
What she didn’t expect, however, was to hear someone else burst into tears, in what sounded like the hallway down from her. Misa pauses, confused by how high pitched and small the noise sounded. It didn’t sound like one of her teammates, and when she rounds the corner, she is entirely unprepared for what she finds. 
There is a toddler, a little girl standing alone in the completely empty hallway, her shoulders heaving with the force of her cries, her hands covering her face. She has a little Barcelona kit top on, with the number 23 on it but the last name León across it. The Madridista immediately knows who it is, but what she doesn’t quite understand is why Mapi León and Ingrid Engen’s daughter is sitting in the middle of a hallway on the away side of the stadium. 
“Niña? Elena?” Misa calls out softly, walking toward the little girl, who looks up at her when she hears her name called. 
Elena looks up, finding a woman she doesn’t know walking toward her, and the first emotion that pours through her is fear. The woman is tall, like Mama, but her face is flushed and she’s wearing an alarmingly bright red jersey and shorts that the young girl doesn’t recognize. Her hands are large, considering that they are encased in goalkeeper gloves, but Elena doesn’t quite realize they are just gloves in her stressed state. 
All she registers is that there is a large, unknown woman walking toward her with big, scary hands, and if she was panicked before, it was nothing compared to now. She lets out a fearful squeak as she cowers from Misa, taking several unsteady steps back. 
“Hey, it’s okay, I am not going to hurt you niña,” Misa promises, even though she herself is cringing at her words. She’s never felt more like a child predator than in this moment, despite her intentions being more than pure. The goalkeeper had been excited to meet Elena, even more so after the loss, honestly. All of the girls often spoke about how much they adored the little girl, how smiley and kind she was. Misa felt like she could use just a little bit of that energy after the frustrating loss. 
And here the smiley little girl was, trying to get away from Misa because she was scared of her. It cracked the Spaniard’s heart right in half, and if she wasn’t upset before, she most definitely was now. 
Elena looked behind herself, finally and thankfully spotting a familiar face that had just turned toward the hallway toward the two of them. The Spaniard and Norwegian’s daughter ran as fast as her little legs could carry her, beelining for the Barcelona player who had just turned the corner with Marta and Olga next to her. 
Salma had just been coming back to talk to Misa with Marta when all the sudden she felt something slam into her legs, nearly sending her toppling over. 
“What the hell—o Elena!” Salma quickly corrected, trying to take in the scene in front of her with complete confusion. The little girl was cowering behind Salma’s legs, holding onto the forward for dear life, practically shaking. Salma instinctively placed her hand over the little girl’s hair, smoothing her curls as she looked up to see Misa walking slowly toward them. 
“Elena? What’s going on?” Salma asked helplessly, lost on what to do as she looked between the three Real Madrid players for some semblance of guidance. 
Elena had always loved Salma, from when she was a baby. The forward never knew what to do with the little girl, especially when she was younger. She had no experience with children, and she found herself often stunted and awkward in her interactions with Mapi and Ingrid’s daughter, but Elena’s love for her transcended any superfluous worries or awkwardness Salma expressed. 
“Scary,” Elena whispered as she pointed toward Misa timidly, her grip on Salma tightening as she tucked her head behind the young Barcelona player's legs. Salma looked up with a heartbroken expression, watching as Misa bit her lip to keep from crying, keeping her distance. 
The goalkeeper knew that some people thought she was scary. She got it, she really did. She had an RBF that could probably win an award, and a very intense personality. But it was one thing for a conscious adult to call her scary, and another for a little girl who she had been so excited to meet to call her that. The goalkeeper's heart sank at the realization that this was how Elena was always going to remember her, as the scary woman who tried to kidnap her when she was three years old. 
Salma looked between Olga and Marta, silently begging for help. She still had no clue what to do, and appeared to be rather paralyzed by indecision. 
It’s Olga who crouches down so that she’s level with the little girl, her voice soft and kind. 
“Are you lost niña?” The defender asked gently, and Elena poked her head out from its spot against Salma’s calf, nodding slightly. Her lower lip wobbled heavily, but she wasn’t actively crying, so they all took it as a win. 
Elena regarded Olga kindly, if not a bit shyly. The two women with Salma were wearing white, nowhere near the angry red that the other, larger woman was, and the little girl didn’t find them nearly as frightening, all things considered. 
“Come on, why don’t we take you back to your Mamis,” Olga decided, holding her hand out for the young girl. Elena took it carefully, but not before reaching for Salma’s hand, making sure that the forward was still holding onto her. 
Salma sent the little girl what she hoped was an encouraging smile as they began to walk out toward the pitch. The Barcelona forward wound them down the confusing hallways, with Olga holding Elena’s other hand while Marta carefully wrapped her arm around the goalkeeper. Misa was fighting to keep it together as they all ventured back out to the stadium pitch together. 
After a few minutes of walking, Elena let out a small whine, looking up at Salma with big, wet eyes. 
“Carry?” She asked, letting go of Olga’s hand in favor of staring up at the tall forward hopefully, tugging lightly on her kit top. Salma looked around at the other girls, terrified and scared of disappointing the little girl. They all looked back at her expectantly in that moment, and she was struck with the fact that she was the one with the most experience with Elena, of the group. It both calms her and terrifies her at the same time, somehow. 
“Uh…sure!” She laughed nervously, reaching down to pick Elena up, gripping her under her arms. The forward was used to dealing with the toddler when she was planted firmly on the ground, and she hadn’t carried the sandy blonde girl since she was a baby. She had been so scared to drop the baby that she had shook anxiously the whole time, until Mapi took pity on her and took her daughter back. 
But she tries to remember how Mapi and Ingrid do it, settling Elena on her hip as she clings to the little girl for dear life. She would never forgive herself if she dropped her, and she knew she would never hear the end of it from the rest of the team if she did. They were all highly protective of her, a fact that they all prided themselves on. 
As the five of them walked out toward the pitch, they had no idea the chaos that was awaiting them out on the field. 
After her interview had ended, Ingrid had walked back over to her wife with a pep in her step, still overjoyed at the win and the goal she had scored. 
Mapi wasn’t hard to find, standing with the assistant coach, discussing a few tactics from the game after he had called her over to talk about some of their defensive lapses. Their daughter was nowhere in sight, so the Norwegian assumed that Mapi had passed her off to one of their teammates, but when she looked around, she couldn’t see Elena anywhere. 
“Who did you give Elena to?” Ingrid asked, a crease appeared in her forehead as her eyebrows furrowed together. Mapi looked back at her with equal confusion, shaking her head. 
“You have Elena, not me. She went to you after the game,” the Spaniard insists, now beginning to grow confused. Ingrid’s eyebrows flew into her hairline at that statement, shaking her head. 
“I gave her to you ten minutes ago, I sent her your way and called out to you,” Ingrid explains, and Mapi pales at the realization that she had never received her daughter. 
“I did not hear you, and she never came over to me!” Mapi cried, looking around wildly for her daughter. When she cannot see her anywhere on the pitch, her worry only balloons. “Oh my god, she is lost. She is not here!” The brunette cried out, panic washing over her in waves as she realized what this meant. 
The ironic thing was that generally, Ingrid was the anxious one between them. She was the one who worried for Elena, the one who baby proofed the house and took first aid classes and sat in the back of the car with her when she was the baby. 
But Ingrid was also exceptional in a crisis, and this was no different. 
Mapi, however? Not so good in a crisis, at least a non-football related crisis, that was. 
“Oh my god, Ingrid, she could be anywhere!” Mapi pitched as she clawed at her chest, her throat tightening with anxiety as she whipped her head around, looking for any sign of the little girl. 
“Do not panic Mapi, she has to be here somewhere. Come on, let’s go find her,” Ingrid insisted, forcing herself to remain calm as she pulled her panicking wife with her as she began to inform people, everyone scrambling to begin looking for the young girl. 
They alerted security, sent people all over the stadium to look for her as the Norwegian drug her wife back toward the Barcelona bench. 
“This was the last place I left her, so we should stay here. She’s around here somewhere, we just have to find her!” Ingrid insisted as she turned to Irene, who had come over as she got wind of the situation. Hot on the tails of the older defender is the Barcelona captain, looking close to tears herself. 
“Is Elena really lost? Where could she have gone? We must find her!” Alexia cried, baby hairs escaping her ponytail as she looked around, clearly frazzled and stressed at the news of the curly haired little girl being lost. 
“Yes she is gone–” Ingrid began, only to be cut off before she could even really start her sentence. 
“Well we must search for her then!” Alexia interrupted, looking around wildly, her own panic growing. 
“Alexia, this is not even your child! If anyone should be allowed to panic, it should be us!” Mapi interjected, her stress seeping into her tone as she gestured wildly with her hands. Alexia let out a huff of disapproval at that, clearly in disagreement. 
“She is my goddaughter, I love her too!” Alexia insisted, the two squabbling uselessly as Ingrid watched on with an unimpressed expression. 
“If I were not more aware I would assume that these two were the mothers, and not me,” Ingrid mumbled under her breath to Irene, who couldn’t resist letting out a small peal of laughter that she quickly masked as a cough when Mapi and Alexia looked toward her pointedly. 
“Who knew that all it took to reduce La Reina and the fearless Mapi León into a puddle of stress was losing a toddler one singular time,” Irene joked back, where she was promptly met with more unimpressed looks from her teammates, and a chuckle from Ingrid. 
But even the Norwegian, who was generally cool in a crisis, was beginning to grow worried as time stretched on. Her eyebrows remained furrowed together, her foot beginning to tap nervously as she looked around, letting out a nervous sigh. 
“She’s going to be fine, Ingrid. She’s just wandered off somewhere, kids do it sometimes. We lost Mateo in the store once, and found him in the freezer aisle cuddling with some old lady's little dog,” Irene soothed, and Ingrid sent her a grateful smile, even if she didn’t look convinced. She knew the stories, she knew it was normal, but it didn’t make it any easier when it was her own child. 
She just wanted Elena back in her arms, proof that she was safe and sound, and to not let her daughter out of her sight until she was twenty seven years old. 
“How about we go check the locker room again?” Irene suggests, and the dark haired woman jumps at the opportunity to do something, nodding insistently. 
“That’s a good idea,” Ingrid confirmed, and she was just about to head back with her fellow defender when she heard it. 
“Mami! Mama!” Elena called out from her spot in Salma’s arms, and both Ingrid and Mapi were booking it toward their daughter as soon as they heard it. The forward was entirely unprepared for both the Spaniard and Norwegian to plow into her, raining kisses down onto her head as they plucked her from Salma’s arms. Mapi hugged Elena tightly to her, as Ingrid pressed into her space, both of them crowding their daughter with an abundance of love and relief, the panic washing off of them at the sight of their precious little girl back safely in their arms. 
The forward flipped her braids over her shoulder in relief at the hand off, nearly stumbling over when Ingrid stepped away from her wife and daughter, pulling her younger teammate into a tight hug as Mapi cradled Elena to her chest. 
“Thank you so much Salma,” Ingrid murmured in the space above the forward’s shoulders, and despite accepting the hug, the younger woman shook her head. 
“It was Misa who found her,” Salma promised, and the dark haired woman wasted no time in moving toward the Real Madrid player, stepping into her space and immediately hugging the goalkeeper, regardless of the fact that they hardly knew one another. Elena looked up from her spot against Mapi to see her Mama moving toward the scary woman, and she let out a whimper as she turned, burrowing her face into Mapi’s sternum with fear. 
As the panic subsides from her chest slowly, Mapi takes stock of the whole situation. Elena seemed scared of the Real Madrid players, cowering into her arms as Ingrid hugged Misa tightly. Everyone else seemed focused on Misa, with Salma, Olga, and Marta watching her wife and the Real Madrid goalkeeper. The goalkeeper seemed on the brink of tears, something that the center back assumed was because of the game. 
She was informed otherwise when Marta approached her carefully, her voice soft as came close to the Barcelona defender. 
“Misa found her in the hallway, but I think she caught the little one in a bad spot, and now I think she’s a little scared of her,” Marta explained, looking toward the Spanish goalkeeper with worry before looking back at the Barcelona center back. Misa was getting a pep talk from both Ingrid and Irene, to what appeared to be little avail, if the tears in her eyes were any indication. 
Mapi nods slowly, rubbing her hand soothingly over Elena’s back, up and down softly. Her daughter is already a hundred times calmer, having regulated herself well in her Mami’s arms. That being said, Mapi knew they needed a few moments to regather themselves before they reintroduced her to Misa, if they could. 
“Okay, thank you for letting me know. Give us a few minutes?” Mapi asked gently, and Marta nodded before leaving, heading back to her teammate's side. 
It was just a few moments later that Ingrid appeared at her wife’s side, the Spaniard wordlessly passing her daughter to the Norwegian, who held her close and rained kisses down on her. 
“It’s okay, we’re right here Elena,” Ingrid promised, her own worry and stress evaporating at the content little sigh their daughter let out as she was held tightly to the Norwegians side. It was after a few minutes of holding her that Elena leaned back, looking calmer, if not a little more worried. 
“‘M sorry, got lost,” Elena explained gently, her lower lip wobbling as tears brimmed in her eyes again. Ingrid shook her head slightly, her words soft and soothing. 
“You do not have to be sorry, Elena. Just try to stay close to me or Mami next time, or someone you know, si? We do not want you to get lost where we cannot find you, because that would make us very scared, okay?” Ingrid explained carefully, and when she finished Elena nodded, a small smile finally appearing on her face as she settled in her mothers arms, back to the happy little girl she normally was. That was something wonderful Ingrid and Mapi both loved about their daughter being so small, how resilient she always was in situations like this. 
Mapi looked back over toward Misa, her heart breaking when she saw that the tears had broken through finally, her head buried in her hands. 
Elena looked from her mother to the Real Madrid goalkeeper, her little eyebrows worried together at the sight. 
“Mami, is she okay?” The sandy blonde girl asked as she looked toward Misa, recognizing the signs of someone crying. Mapi looked toward her wife for a moment, and after receiving a nod of approval from the Norwegian, the Spaniard took her daughter into her arms from her fellow center back. 
“That is my friend Misa,” Mapi explained to her daughter, her words slow and gentle. She stays where she is, but tries to convey her warmth to the woman regardless. “She has had a bad day, and I think she is just expressing that by crying, like you do sometimes too when you are upset,” Mapi continued, watching as her daughter stared at the goalkeeper with concern painted in her small face. 
“Friend? Tía?” Elena asked curiously, clearly trying to work everything out as Mapi nodded. 
“Yes Tía Misa, she is one of my very good friends. She is very kind and funny, just like you!” The Spaniard tried, and Elena looked over at her skeptically, but she chose to believe her Mami. 
“Maybe we cheer up?” The little girl asked, and Mapi raised her hand to run it over Elena’s cheek gently, in a soothing manner. 
“Are you sure, El? You do not have to, I know you thought she was scary earlier. I promise she is not though, she is one of Mami’s friends,” Mapi promised, not wanting to pressure her daughter to do anything she didn’t want to. 
“Cheer her up,” Elena decided, wriggling her body slightly to signal her mother to move. She stiffened suddenly as she looked from Misa to Mapi, with some fear clearly still present in her tone. “You come too,” she checked quickly, relaxing back into the Spaniard when Mapi nodded her agreement to the statement. 
Salma, Olga, and Marta had led Misa over to the Real Madrid bench, which was where Mapi brought Elena over to. The goalkeeper was sitting on the bench, her head in her hands as silent sobs wracked her shoulders. 
Marta looked over at Mapi with a hopeful expression as the Spaniard placed her daughter on the ground, taking Elena’s hand as she led her over to Misa. 
The young girl held her mothers hand carefully as she made her way up to the woman who had been wearing the angry red jersey. She was now wearing a white jacket over her kit top, and something about seeing her when Elena was in a calm state, and the lack of such an aggressive kit top helped to soothe the little girl’s initial concerns. 
“Hola,” Elena said softly, her voice small but fierce in its kindness as she stopped a few steps from the goalkeeper. Misa paused, looking up carefully, unable to keep the surprise off her expression when she realized who was in front of her, looking at her carefully. 
The goalkeeper looks up at Mapi in shock before she is wiping the tears from her eyes, offering a watery smile to the toddler. 
“Hola,” she responded, unsure of what else to say. Elena took another step toward her, offering a small smile. 
“My name is Elena,” she expressed quietly, watching as Misa rubbed the tears from her eyes. 
“Hi Elena, I’m Misa,” the goalkeeper repeated, trying not to burst into more tears. There was no fear in the little girl's eyes, only curiosity and kindness. Misa feels hope flying into her chest at the little girl's face, at the thought that maybe this whole situation was salvageable. Elena looks at the spot next to Misa, her eyebrows furrowing together in curiosity. 
“What are those?” Elena asked gently, pointing to the abandoned goalkeeper gloves that were sitting next to the Madridista. The Spaniard reached for them, holding them out to the little girl softly. 
“These are my goalkeeper gloves. Would you like to see them?” Misa asked gently, her voice hopeful. The little girl looked back at her mother for a second before releasing Mapi’s hand, nodding as she walked over to Misa, right up to where she was sitting, placing her hand on the goalkeeper's knee. 
“Here, you can put them on,” Misa said softly, everyone watching with relief as the goalkeeper slid her giant gloves onto Elena’s little hands, holding them on to help to keep them from falling off. 
The Real Madrid player was absolutely positive that Elena healed something within her when she giggled, leaning into Misa as she moved her hands with the gloves still over them, laughing happily at the sight. It was the goalkeeper's first real smile of the day, and her heart leapt into her throat when Elena climbed into her lap, beginning to talk her toddler nonsense to Misa, who held onto every single word she said. 
The Madridista carefully held Elena to her, making sure she was secure with no chance of falling. She looked up when the toddler gasped, seeing Pina and Jana still out on the field, passing the ball listlessly back and forth as they spoke about something. 
Elena turned back to Misa with excitement, the goalkeeper gloves falling off her hands in excitement. 
“Come play Tía Misa?” The toddler asked hopefully, her eyes big and filled with joy at the prospect of getting to play with all of her friends. Misa looked toward Mapi, who nodded her head in agreement before she smiled brightly, agreeing with Elena. 
“Come on!” Elena cheered as she took Misa’s hand after being set on the ground by the goalkeeper, and dragging the taller woman toward the younger girls. 
Ingrid had come over to join Mapi, Salma, and Marta, as the right winger shook her head in disbelief. Misa was sitting criss-cross applesauce on the ground, rolling the ball toward Elena, cheering when the toddler tried to kick it. 
When Elena finally managed to hit the ball back with some semblance of accuracy, Jana and Pina immediately cheered loudly. Elena giggled at both of them, smiling before she ran over to Misa, collapsing into a hug as she wrapped her arms around the goalkeeper, who hugged her back just as fiercely, a huge smile pulling at both of her cheeks. 
“What is it about children that just…heals any wrongdoing?” Marta asked wistfully, and Ingrid chuckled as Mapi shook her head. 
“You can’t not love them,” she acquiesced, letting out a final sigh of relief as they all moved to join the girls in playing with the toddler, who happily giggled away at all the attention raining down on her. 
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harrystylesontour · 6 months
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Harry on stage at Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys in Barcelona, Spain - 12 July, 2023
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anastasiareyreed · 11 months
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dear world, you have the opportunity to show your support for Ukraine in real life! please share!
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you can support Ukraine and call on your authorities to help Ukrainians survive the ecocide and expel the russian invaders from our territories!
in the coming days, a peaceful march in support of Ukraine will take place all over the world! please join and show by your example that the world need to be on the side of good!
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please spread the word and look for cities where you can join the march, Ukrainians really need your support!
📍Bucharest, Parcul TNB 19:00 10.06
📍Sydney, Town Hall 14:00 11.06
📍Batumi, Europe Square 19:00 11.06
📍Paris, Place de la Republique 16:00 10.06
📍London, 10 Downing Street 16:00 10.06
📍Kraków, Rynek Główny 1 16:00 11.06
📍 Netherlands, Amsterdam, Dam Square 14:00-16:00 11.06
📍Danmark, Aarhus, Molleparken 13:00 11.06
📍Adana, Ataturk Park 16:00 10.06
📍Porto, Praça Aliados 13:00 11.06
📍Lyon, Pl. de la Comédie 18.00 10.06
📍Prague, Staroměstské náměstí 17:00 10.06
📍Wroclaw, plac Solny 18:00 11.06
📍Nottingham, Speakers Corner, 16:00 10.06
📍 Barcelona, Passeig de Lluís Companys 16:00 11.06
📍Strasbourg, Parlement européen 17:30 12.06
📍Brisbane, Australia, King George Square 14:00 11.06
added new cities and dates:
📍Stockholm, Norrmalmstorg, 12:00 11.06
📍Tel Aviv, HaYarkon St 120 18:30 12.06
📍UK, Bristol, College Green 12:00 11.06
📍Vancouver, Jack Pool Plaza 14:00 11.06
📍Poznan, Adam Mickiewicz Square 11:00 11.06
📍Warsaw, Ukrainian embassy, Szucha 7 18:00 12.06
📍Valencia, Monument Antoni Ferrandis 16:00 11.06
📍Brisbane, King George Square 14:00 11.06
📍Freiburg, Platz der alten Synagoge 18:00 10.06
📍Kassel, Deutschland 17:00 10.06
over time, new cities and dates will be added
more information here!
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pedripics · 19 hours
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📍 Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys
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hstourarchive · 10 months
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Harry on stage at Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys, Barcelona - July 12
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https://www.tumblr.com/didalexiabreakupwitholgayet/748272388014227456/carla-culers-segur-que-esteu-preparad%C3%ADssims-carla?source=share
Espero que valgui la pena matinar, assolinar-me i inhalar més fum que en ma vida malgrat ser de Barcelona. Visca el Barça i visca Catalunya (and everywhere the match will be seen)!
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these did not age well! 😭😭 i honestly cannot wait for camp nou to re-open because i only associate montjuïc with heartbreak now.
but this outfit was really the only good thing to come out estadi olímpic lluís companys this year, so we'll always have that at least.
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theworldisyonces · 11 months
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Renaissance World tour: Show 13, Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys Stadium - Barcelona, Spain (6/8/23).
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hldailyupdate · 10 months
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Estadi Olímpic Lluís Company
Capacity: 56,000
Love On Tour 2023: Barcelona. (12 July 2023)
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bellcza · 6 months
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aitana bonmatí presenting the ballon d’or féminin at estadi olímpic lluís companys
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kvetchlandia · 1 year
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David “Chim” Seymour     Lluís Companys, President of the Generalitat, or Autonomous Government of Catalunya Talking with Ilya Ehrenburg During the Spanish Civil War, Spain     1936
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November 4th 1934: Roc Boronat was arrested by order of the Goverment of the Republic of Spain.
Roc Boronat was a Catalan independentist who was known for having collaborated in founding the Blind People’s Union of Catalonia (in Catalan, Sindicat de Cecs de Catalunya). This was the first union of blind people in our country and it had a great impact in the living conditions of blind people.
He was working in the Barcelona City Hall when a group of blind people approached him with the proposal to create the union. He immediately helped them create it with the resources needed, and the union also received support from Lluís Companys (president of Catalonia) and Carles Pi Sunyer (mayor of Barcelona). Up to that point, the immense majority of blind people lived in extreme poverty and made a living begging for charity. Roc Boronat had the idea of creating “el cupó del cec” (the blind’s coupon), so that it would be blind people who would be in charge of selling lottery. Thanks to this, blind people could make a living for themselves and gain funds for the union.
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[ID: a “blind people’s coupon”. It’s a small paper printed in black and orange and in the Catalan language. It has the lottery number 074 written in numbers and letters, a Catalan shield with a torch, it says “10 cents”, “Blind People’s Union of Catalonia”, “October 9th 1936″, and the phone number and street address of the union in Passatge de la Pau 7, Barcelona.]
The union used this money to organize lessons and workshops for blind people, so that they could learn a variety of trades, and created a library.
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[ID: black and white photo of a group of people in a room, some of them wearing sunglasses, sitting at desks and typing on a typewriter. A woman, probably a teacher, is the only one standing up. She’s standing next to one of the men and looking over his shoulders, as if helping him or instructing him.]
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[ID: a group of 8 people sitting in an approximate circle weaving baskets. They’re wearing the characteristic overall of 1930s Catalan workers, except for one wearing a shirt.]
Roc Boronat was also involved in other progressive politics, most involved in the movement for Catalonia’s independence, as he was a member the pro-independence party Estat Català and was one of the founders of Esquerra Republicana de Catalunya, the anti-monarchy leftist party of Catalonia. He was first arrested in 1926 for having collaborated in the Prats de Molló Plot, an attempt of militarily freeing Catalonia from Spanish occupation by “invading” Catalonia to proclaim the Catalan Republic. Later, in 1934, the Spanish police arrested him again “for having prepared the food for the forces of Estat Català” in the October Events, an insurrection from the progressive government of Catalonia which tried to declare independence from Spain to avoid obeying the conservative Spanish government’s oppressive laws. For this, Roc Boronat was sentenced to prison for “assistance to rebellion”.
In 1936, the fascists did a coup d’etat to gain power in Spain, but failed in the areas were workers were more organized and resisted, such as Catalonia. In the resisting antifascist areas, there was an amnesty for political prisoners, so Roc Boronat could leave prison and go back to working for better living conditions of working people.
In 1939, the war ended with the victory of the fascists, and a fascist dictatorship was established which would last until the dictator Franco’s death in 1975. The persecution of Catalan culture and language, leftism, trade unions, and all progressive social causes was brutal.
In 1938, a fascist and Nazi-sympathizer called Ramón Serrano Suñer who lived in the area already under fascist control, copied the idea and founded ONCE (which stands for the Spanish “National Organization of Spanish Blind People”). When the fascists took over Catalonia, they immediately illegalized the Blind People’s Union of Catalonia and gave all its assets to ONCE.
ONCE became a very important organization in Spain, in big part thanks to the fact that it’s them who run the lottery. Despite its origins, ONCE does a great work and is nowadays is considered the world leading organization for blind people in both giving service to blind people and creating jobs for them.
If you visit Catalonia or Spain, you will see outside supermarkets or in little cabins that it is still blind and visually-impaired people who sell the lottery.
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[ID: two photos of lottery sellers. They wear a green vest with lottery tickets hanging from them. In the first photo, he is sitting next to an open portable desk which holds all the different types of lottery tickets. In the second photo, the seller is standing next to a glass cabin that serves as his little shop. The cabin has the words “ONCE” on each side and the organization’s logo, a stick figure with a guidance stick.]
Sources: BTV, El Nacional.
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peregrinatioblog · 7 months
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29.09.2023 FC Barcelona - Sevilla Futbol Club 1:0 Estadi Olímpic Lluís Companys (41.116)
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no-passaran · 11 months
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hi! I'm visiting Spain in a couple days, flying into Barcelona! I'll there a few days -- anything important/cool you recommend seeing? I'm real interested in learning more about the civil war/marxist/anarchist history and the catalonian independence movement. I'm going to museums etc but I wanted to ask if you had thoughts :)
Hi! I hope you enjoy your stay in Catalonia and all your trip ^^
Okay, more or less in historical order:
I recommend visiting the el Born Centre de Cultura i Memòria (you can find it shortened to el Born CCM) which is an archaeological site from a part of the city that was forcefully destroyed after the Spanish invasion in 1717, you can see it from above for free or you can get a guided tour (they're very cheap) to go down to the site, which I recommend.
Born CCM is very close to el Fossar de les Moreres (right next to Santa Maria del Mar), which is the most symbolic place for Catalan independentists. It might not seem like an impressive place just for what it looks like, but it's a place that's near the heart for many of us. It's just a small square with a monument, but it's the location of one of the main cemeteries during the Siege of Barcelona, where many of the inhabitants who died fighting against the Bourbonic army were buried. It's where Catalanist demonstrations have been celebrated since the late 1800s and people still go pay homage nowadays.
For the time period right after the War of the Spanish Succession and until the Franco dictatorship, I recommend the Castell de Montjuïc (Montjuïc castle). It's a military fortress on top of a mountain overlooking the city, where Barcelona was bombed from many times. Inside the fortress, there's a small exhibition you can visit where they explain the history of working class revolts in the city in the 19th century and their repression, which I think is very interesting. What the Montjuïc Castle is most famous for is for being a jail after the civil war and during the dictatorship, and a place where many dissidents were killed, including Lluís Companys (president of Catalonia and founder of the antifascist committee during the Civil War). The Fossar de la Pedrera right next to it is a common mass grave where more than 4,000 antifascist prisoners who were kept in the fortress were buried. If you go to the castle, I recommend getting a bus there (or a cable-car, if you're up to spending more money). You can catch the bus at Plaça Espanya.
For more of the Civil War, you can visit one of the air raid shelters (Refugi 307) but I think you can only visit it in guided tours, though I'm not completely sure, but I know on Sundays the tours are free.
If you read popular places to visit, you'll see visitors also like going to the anti-air defence on the Turó de la Rovira in the Carmel neighborhood (mistakenly called the "Carmel bunkers"). It's where the anti-aircraft batteries to block fascist attacks were located during the Civil War, but most tourists go there because it has great views of the city (from the opposite side of what you'll see from Montjuïc). Honestly I'd say if you have few days in the city, you can skip this one. Between this and Montjuïc castle, I'd sooner recommend Montjuïc Castle because of its history and because you can see the fortress there, while the anti-aircraft batteries visible are less impressive.
You can see the remains of the bombs on some walls of the city, too. I think where you can see it the best in plaça Sant Felip Neri (next to the Cathedral). It was where refugee children from Franco-occupied areas were staying and it was hit by one of the (many) bombs that were dropped by the fascists during the war.
Also right next to the Cathedral (facing the Cathedral, it's the building on the left in the corner with Via Laietana avenue), you can take a look at the building that used to be the CNT's headquarter during the civil war. If you've seen pictures from back then, sometimes they're taken in front of there. Sadly you can only see it from outside because nowadays it's the headquarters of the employer's association 😵‍💫
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Another civil war location that you'll surely walk by sooner or later is Plaça Catalunya square, it's where there's the Telefonica building that was collectivised by the CNT and which sparked the May Events of 1937. (My great-grandfather was in the CNT and was working there in the Telefonica building so I confirm from what he explained that it's true that the anarchists used to barge in the government's private conversations to make fun of them, one of the reasons that sparked the May Events, it's not a rumour he said he did it too lol). Also in Plaça Catalunya there used to be Hotel Colón where the famous Marina Ginestà photo was taken.
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For museums, the Museu d'Història de Catalunya (Catalonia's History Museum) gives a general view from prehistory to the modern-day. It used to be a very fun museum because it had more interactive things but sadly they're very underfunded and haven't been able to replace them when some of them were damaged, so now there's less interactive things. Still, it's a good place to get an idea of all the history, at least to take a walk though it. The top floor is the one that has the civil war and the dictatorship. Otherwise, the MNAC (Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya) is an art museum from the Middle Ages to the 1940s I think so it's also a nice way to walk through history in a more aesthetic way.
And unrelated to the war, if you're visiting the Sagrada Família remember to book the tickets online in advance. They're a bit expensive but it's because the Sagrada Família is an expiatory temple so it can only be built with the money from donations (and tickets count as a donation), not public funding or anything, so at least you know the money is being well spent. Personally I think the inside is very beautiful but the outside is a bit ugly lol, so I recommend going inside.
Besides that, mostly I'd recommend walking in the old city centre (Gothic quarter), starting near Santa Maria del Pi and the Cathedral, down Carrer del Bisbe to Plaça Sant Jaume, oh also Temple d'August is there which is a part of the Roman forum inside a building, and Plaça del Rei, and walk all the way to Santa Maria del Mar in the Born area, and then you can end at the Ciutadella Park.
Also, I'll link you to a post by @useless-catalanfacts from a while ago about places to visit in Barcelona:
I'll answer this publicly because I have some followers who are also from here so maybe they have something else to add!
I hope you have a great time in your trip! ☺️
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