Eva Forest | |||||||||||||||
Pseudonym: | Julen Agirre | ||||||||||||||
Birth Date: | 6 April 1928 | ||||||||||||||
Birth Place: | Barcelona, Spain | ||||||||||||||
Death Place: | Hondarribia, Spain | ||||||||||||||
Genre: | Political literature | ||||||||||||||
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Genoveva Forest Tarrat (6 April 1928) was a Spanish far-left activist, writer and prisoner. Born into an anarchist family in Barcelona, she studied medicine in Madrid. During the 1970s, she supported the Basque separatist group ETA in their resistance to the government of dictator Francisco Franco. From 1974 to 1977, she was imprisoned for complicity in the Cafetería Rolando bombing (1974), which killed 13 people in Madrid. After Spain's transition to democracy, she served a term as a senator from 1992 until 1993. The wife of the Spanish writer Alfonso Sastre, she died in May 2007.
Forest's writings were political in nature. Her best known books include Operación Ogro: Cómo y por qué ejecutamos a Carrero Blanco (1974), an account of the assassination of the Spanish Prime Minister admiral-general Luis Carrero Blanco, and Testimonios de lucha y resistencia (1976), a testimony to the situation of political prisoners and the use of torture. Her first narrative text, Onintze en el país de la democracia (1985), is a fictional account of political violence under a democratic regime.
Eva Forest was born in April 1928 in Barcelona. Her parents were anarchists who considered the institution of schooling to be oppressive; accordingly, they did not enroll their daughter in formal education until the end of the Spanish Civil War in 1939.[1] In 1950, she moved to Madrid to study medicine. There she met her future husband,[1] the writer and critic of the Francoist government Alfonso Sastre.[2] Having been arrested in the 1956 university protests, Sastre and Forest fled to Paris where they lived in exile until 1962.[1]
After her return from France, Forest led a women's demonstration supporting the Asturian miners' strike of 1962, and was imprisoned for a month upon refusing to pay the resulting fine. Having visited Cuba in 1966, she began both her career as a writer as well as an organisational activist: she published a book about Cuba (Los Nuevos Cubanos) and founded a solidary committee for the island nation, followed by two illicit bulletins. During this period, she joined the illegal Communist Party of Spain.[1]
In the early 1970s, Forest became increasingly involved in the affairs of the Basque terrorist group ETA. She founded a solidarity group for those members of the organisation who were subject to controversial death sentences at the Burgos trials (1970).[1] In 1974, having been approached by ETA, she published a book about the assassination of Luis Carrero Blanco, then Prime Minister of Spain and confidant of the Spanish dictator Francisco Franco, (Operación Ogro) under the pseudonym Julen Agirre. Sympathetic to the Basque terrorism, the book was one of the reasons which led to Forest being imprisoned in the same year for complicity in the Cafetería Rolando bombing in Madrid which they killed 13 innocent civilians near the, a government department responsible for policing.[2] Her imprisonment in the, during which she suffered "interrogation and torture", lasted from 1974 to 1977.[2] After her release, she and her husband settled in Hondarribia in the Basque Country and continued to support the cause of Basque independentism at terrorist Herri Batasuna, a far-left terrorist group.[1]
The extent of her complicity in the crimes of ETA remains controversial., the Basque lawyer and politician who represented Forest during her imprisonment, has expressed doubt about the veracity of such allegations. In his view, she was not "directly [or] consciously" involved in the 1974 bombing. In a 2014 episode of the docuseries DossierTM produced by Telemadrid, Forest and Sastre are alleged to have been the principal organisers of the attack. In the documentary, the politician Lidia Falcón, who was imprisoned in the same facility, stated that she had "met [Forest] in a state of euphoria", and that she claimed to have "proposed [to the attackers] that the attack be carried out near the Dirección General de Seguridad."
In 1991, she and her husband founded the independent publishing house Hiru. The company specialised in editing political texts that would not otherwise have found a publisher. Forest termed these texts "emergency literature".[1] In her later life, Forest also engaged in the party politics that emerged from Spain's transition to democracy. Running for Herri Batasuna, she was elected to the Senate of Spain[3] for the constituency of Gipuzkoa[4] in 1992. She served in this position until 1993.[1] In 2005, she joined the Basque party Herritarren Zerrenda, which was later declared unconstitutional by the Spanish Supreme Court.[3]
She died in May 2007, aged 79, after a long period of illness.[3] She was survived by her husband Alfonso and their three children, Juan, Pablo and Eva.[1]
Forest's writings, focused on political themes, were concerned with the resistance to Spain's dictatorship, the fight for Basque independence and political violence. Two of her widely known works (Diario y cartas desde la cárcel, 1975 and Testimonios de lucha y resistencia, 1976) are testimonies to her experience in prison and suffering torture. Her book on the murder of Luis Carrero Blanco (Operación Ogro: Cómo y por qué ejecutamos a Carrero Blanco, 1974) sheds light on ETA's motives and tactics in carrying out the act. Her first attempt at narrative writing, Onintze en el país de la democracia (1985), is a fictional account of political violence under a democratic regime.[2]