This is just one of many examples where forcing one people who want to go their own way to remain united is never a guarantee of a good relationship. On the contrary, a mutually beneficial, loyal and profitable relationship is usually built on the basis of respect and cooperation. That is exactly what could happen with Spain and Catalonia. Unlike Scotland, which willingly joined the United Kingdom and was allowed to vote on whether they wanted to leave with the full agreement of London, Catalonia was conquered and lost itsliberty. Now, after centuries of trying to find the right fit for Catalonia inside Spain, we Catalans want to vote on our political future, as the Scots just did.
Between 1936 and 1939 we went through the Spanish Civil War, and then endured 40 years of dictatorship when it was illegal even to speak our language in public. After General Franco died in 1975 we thought Spain’s transition to democracy would improve Catalonia’s situation. Indeed the 1978 Spanish Constitution established some autonomy for Catalonia, new institutions were created and the Catalan language was no longer forbidden. New hope was born, but was not to last long.
Read more:
Catalonia defies Madrid in move towards referendum Spain’s
nascent democracy advanced and in 2006 more powers were devolved to
Catalonia. Three-quarters of the population approved a new Statute of
Autonomy by referendum. However, over time many of the devolved powers
were recentralized in Madrid, and the very Statute of Autonomy that won
such broad approval was eviscerated by Spain’s Constitutional Court in
2010. Many believe this was the tipping point for Catalonia, the moment
when many Catalans gave up hope, and popular support for independence
grew from 14 percent to 50 percent, with 80 percent of the Catalan
people supporting their right to decide whether Catalonia stays or
leaves Spain. Ever since the 2010 ruling by the Constitutional Court
cancelled many of Catalonia’s devolved powers, there have been a series
of peaceful demonstrations with millions of Catalans calling for a
self-determination vote. The current Catalan government is committed to
this idea and also a majority of parties in the Catalan Parliament
supports this project.
The Spanish government argues that this vote is illegal and unconstitutional. The Catalan government and neutral legal experts believe that the vote is both legal andlegitimate. We have been calling for talks and negotiations with Madrid for years, but rather than talking Madrid prefers heavy-handed scare tactics and hides behind legal excuses rather than allowing a free and fair vote that the Catalan people are calling for. Constitutions are meant to be living documents, that adapt laws to the needs of the citizens via amendments. Unfortunately, the Spanish government has said it would block any amendments that would make our vote possible.
We Catalans wonder why Spain wants to prevent people from voting in a peaceful and transparent way. How could it be otherwise in a 21st century European democracy? Political issues are resolved through dialogue and negotiation in modern times. The era when a privileged few decided on behalf of the rest has ended. That is why we, a group of concerned Catalan citizens committed to democracy, decided to write this article to let the world know that Catalans just want to vote. Who can be afraid of democracy?
Signed by:
Mr. Josep Guardiola, former star player and coach at Barcelona FC and now coach of Bayern Munich FCMr. Josep Carreras, member of “The Three Tenors” with Plácido Domingo and Luciano Pavarotti and world-renowned opera star
Mr. Jordi Savall, viol player, conductor and composer, one of the major figures in the field of early music, largely responsible for bringing instruments of the viol family back to life on the stage and making medieval, Renaissance and Baroque music more widely known.
Dr. Joan Massagué, leading cancer researcher at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York
Dr. Pol Antràs, Professor of Economics at Harvard University, Boston
Dr. Xavier Sala i Martín, Professor of Development Economics, Columbia University, New York
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