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Members of Catholic Trade Unionism

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Promoting RC socialist TUs, free from ... CNT (syndicalist) & UGT (socialist) Basque, Francoist, independent unions ... to counter revolutionary syndicalism ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Members of Catholic Trade Unionism


1
Members of Catholic Trade Unionism
  • Pedro Gerard José Gafo

2
Pedro Gerard
  • Saragossa 1871-1919 Madrid
  • Influence of Rutten
  • role setting up TU in Jerez Casa del Trabajo
  • Promoting RC socialist TUs, free from employer
    influence
  • Critical of RC approach to social question
  • 1913 Spanish bishops reported him to Rome for
    views
  • Supported by Rome OP Master told to work on
    Belgian model
  • 1916 had to retire from social action

3
José Gafo
  • Tiós 1881-1936 Madrid
  • Met Gerard while in high school
  • Christian democrat politics, following Maura
  • Initially supported Riveras dictatorship
  • appointed to Council of Corporations
  • MP for Navarre
  • shift to opposition on beginnings of fascism
  • Wanted RC non-confessional TUs to merge
  • Assasinated at start of Civil War

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Influences
  • Neo-Thomism
  • teachers Juan Gonzalez Arintero Matías García
    OP
  • Gafo edited journal La Ciencia Tomista
  • Alejandro Pidal y Mon
  • Party Unión Católica Christian democracy
  • traditionalism corporatism
  • Gerard made Ruttens Belgian Catholic Unions
    known in Spain,
  • became a reference point for free RC TUs
    1911-1919

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Uniting the Catholic Unions
  • Conflict between Spanish unions from 1912
  • CNT (syndicalist) UGT (socialist)
  • Basque, Francoist, independent unions
  • variety of approaches to social Catholicism
  • National Federation of Free Catholic Unions
  • founded Pamplona 1916
  • 126 members by 1920
  • 1923 became non-confessional, professional
    unions joined with Free Unions of Catalunya on
    Gafos suggestion
  • 1935 joined CESO Spanish Catholic Confederation
    of Unions all RC TUs finally brought together

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9
Integral Catholicism
  • Aim to restore traditional social order of
    Christian civilisation
  • to counter revolutionary syndicalism
  • free professional RC TUs an example of
    integrated social experience
  • Gerard Gafo approached this differently
  • Gerard worked to establish unions as part of
    society
  • Gafo wanted unions without Catholic titles as
    part of corporatist state
  • neither were integrist enough for many
    contemporaries
  • After their deaths, a more conservative integrist
    model took hold under Francos dictatorship

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Class Identity
  • Other unions accused Gerard Gafos unions of
    betraying their class identity
  • financed by conservative employers? No
  • Only Gerards Casa de Trabajo in Jerez was
    financed by local employers initially
  • Other unions were managed by employers these
    were not
  • Supported by authoritarian governments? Yes
  • 1920s collaboration with civil government of
    Barcelona
  • 1930-35 professional unions were right-wing
    traditionalist part of the 2nd republic

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Impact
  • Gerard Gafo were not alone
  • other Spanish OPs followed Arintero García
  • e.g. Blessed Urbano, Colunga, Alonso Getino
  • Models for workers rights, promoting social
    justice on a gospel foundation
  • conservative integrism clashed with their views
  • but their ideas found new resonance after Vatican
    II
  • Conservative, but constructive
  • pluralism into Spanish Catholic trade unionism
  • reaction to contemporary revolutionary processes
  • proposing a just, non-sectarian model of social
    organisation

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15
Faith in Society
  • Gerard Gafo raise a relevant question for
    today
  • a model of Christian service in an advanced
    industrial society
  • unions are non-confessional again since the 1960s
  • but Catholic confessional social organisations
    are reappearing
  • What role might Christians play in todays social
    movements?

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