What Actually Happened at Guernica?

The real bombing behind the famous Picasso painting

Ryan Fan
Frame of Reference

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Photo of Guernica — Public Domain

Guernica is one of the most famous paintings in world history. It is Picasso’s most famous work, a masterpiece representing an act of unprecedented cruelty during wartime.

In the painting, we see body parts of people dying, screaming for help. There’s a woman carrying her dead child. There’s a horse that looks like it has just been stabbed.

All around, the painting deals with atrocity at a seemingly unprecedented level.

That’s what Guernica symbolized to Picasso, but that’s also what Guernica symbolized to the world — a reshaping of the rules of warfare, a declaration in Europe that all of a sudden, civilians were fair game.

It was one of the first bombings of civilians by an enemy air force, and after Picasso’s painting, the bombing at Guernica captured significant international attention.

On April 36, 1937, German allies of the fascists in the Spanish Civil War bombed Guernica, with some believing it killed or injured almost a third of the population of the town. It was a test for the German Luftwaffe and their new test of warfare that would years later, terrorize Europe like it terrorized Spain.

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Ryan Fan
Frame of Reference

Believer, Baltimore City IEP Chair, and 2:39 marathon runner. Diehard fan of “The Wire.” Support me by becoming a Medium member: https://bit.ly/39Cybb8