The family of Bob Doyle, an Irish combatant on the Republican side in the Spanish Civil War who passed away last month, is to hold a commemoration in Dublin this St Valentine’s Day.
The commemoration will begin at 12 noon at the Garden of Remembrance, Parnell Square, before heading to Liberty Hall where a wreath will be laid at the plaque with the names of 60 Irish Brigadiers who died in Spain.
A celebration of the lives of all Brigadiers will then be held in Liberty Hall with speakers from Spain and musicians, including Christy Moore, attending.
Dublin-born Mr Doyle (92) passed away in London on January 22nd following a short illness.
Born in February 1916, Doyle grew up in the tenement slums in North King Street and became politically active in the 1930s. He joined the IRA after being beaten up in street fights with the Blueshirts which left him with permanent damage to one eye.
He quickly became more interested in social issues and in 1937 decided to volunteer for the International Brigade, motivated in part by the fact that his friend and IRA veteran Kit Conway had been killed in action in the Battle of Jarama on Doyle’s 21st birthday.
His initial attempts to get to Spain ended in failure when, after stowing away on a boat, he was arrested and expelled from Valencia. He made it back to Spain later that year, crossing the Pyrenees and reporting to a battalion at Figueras.
Assigned to train new volunteers because of his IRA training, Doyle disobeyed orders and joined a group heading for the front.
After fighting at Belchite, he was captured at Gandesa by Italian fascist troops in 1938, along with Irish International Brigade leader Frank Ryan.
He was imprisoned for 11 months in a concentration camp near Burgos. There he was once brought out to be shot and he was regularly tortured by Spanish fascist guards and interrogated by the Gestapo before being released in a prisoner exchange.
He enlisted in the British merchant navy during the second World War before settling in London with his Spanish wife, Lola. He became active in the Fleet Street print trade unions.
A regular visitor to Spain and Ireland for International Brigade commemorations, he published an account of his experiences in Spain in Brigadista: An Irishman's Fight Against Fascism.
His funeral will be held at 11.00am on Tuesday 10th February next, in Golders Green crematorium, north London.