Time to heal Free Members of the Islamic extremist gang that blew up trains in Madrid three years ago, killing 190 people, have been convicted and sentenced, and it has acted as a moment of healing for Spanish society, long used to living with bitter memories. Another possible moment of healing is at hand, different but strangely related - the revisiting of the murderous Spanish Civil War of the 1930s in order to lay to rest the era's many ghosts. The war cost some 500,000 lives, many of whom were massacred rather than killed in battle. On one hand the Spanish Church has just celebrated the mass beatification of hundreds of church members, mainly nuns and priests, who were killed simply because of their religion. On the other, Parliament is about to enact a "law of historical memory" designed to address grievances mainly on the Left. This was largely prompted by Republican groups who began to open some of the post-Civil War mass graves in Spain and exhume the bodies of the victims.
Spain's smooth transformation from a fascist dictatorship to a parliamentary democracy some 30 years ago seemed almost miraculous at the time. The key to its success was the agreement of both Left and Right, ideological descendants of the two sides who fought the Civil War, to what was called el pacto de olvido, "the pact of forgetting". The victors laid aside their triumph, and the defeated their grief. They transferred any future conflict to Parliament to be fought with words and ideas. What they were not to do was to look back.
This period of Spanish history is coming to an end, in the hope that Spanish society is mature enough now to revisit memories of that bloody conflict, deal with what can be dealt with, and move on. This is a delicate moment in Spain, therefore, and the centre-right opposition has warned of the possible consequences. The Socialist Government, which won a dramatic election victory as a direct consequence of the Madrid bombings, has tried to reach out to the ...
A welcome pastoral approach Free The joint statement on abortion from the two cardinals of the Catholic Church in Britain, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor of Westminster and Cardinal Keith O'Brien of Edinburgh, signals a welcome change of tone in the Church's treatment of this vexed issue. Speaking on behalf of their two bishops' conferences, the cardinals recognise much more explicitly than previous Church statements that the debate ...
Not a scientific question at all Free There is something peculiar about the current proceedings of the House of Commons Science and Technology Committee, which is taking evidence on whether there is a need for a change in the abortion law. Not only has the committee decided to disregard moral and ethical arguments and concentrate only on the "scientific evidence", but a sustained attempt has been made to discredit those expert witnesses who happen ...