The BBC program “The Travel Show” is this week-end devoted to Catalonia. The main message is that behind the touristic façade, there is a strong cultural identity.
The narrative of the program is simple: four features
symbolize the Catalan identity today, the football club FC Barcelona (Barça),
the human towers (castells), a food tradition (calçots), and a political desire
for Independence.
Reality is more complex and richer than that. I don’t have
much to say about castells and calçots except that they are great.
About Barça, I recommend that anyone interested reads the
book “Barça” by Simon Kuper, especially the chapter connecting the complex
political reality of Catalonia with the history of the club. It is true that
there is a connection between Barça and the resistance to Francoism, although
some Barça officials (as many members of the Catalan bourgeoisie and upper
classes) supported General Franco’s dictatorship.
Not all football fans in Catalonia are Barça fans (I am).
And not all Barça fans have the same political preferences. Barça also has many
fans in the rest of Spain (and increasingly in the rest of the world).
On the desire for Independence, things are much more complex
than the simplistic narrative of the program suggests. Unfortunately, the only local
expert and politician to talk in The Travel Show is Rafael Ribó, a
controversial politician that as regional ombudsman, failed to prevent or
criticize the erosion of institutions that characterized the Independence drive
between 2014 and 2017 (the years of the Scottish referendum, the Brexit referendum and the first Trump victory).
Catalonia is much more diverse than suggested in the
program. The regional official statistical office (Idescat) has an excellent
document called “Catalonia in figures.” It explains that our community has
gained 2 million inhabitants in the last 25 years. Its today more than 8
million inhabitants include 18% of foreign people, many children of foreign
people, and many people that descend from families born in other Spainsh
regions. The most mentioned as “first language” is Spanish, although 80% of the
population are at least bilingual (Catalan and Spanish, with an increasing
proportion of people knowing English and many people speaking other languages,
such as Arabic).
Another official body, the Centre d’Estudis d’Opinió, in
charge of sociological studies, in its last barometer, says that 38% of the population
are in favor of Independence, and 54% against. If several options are offered
in addition to Independence (such as federalism, or centralism), support for Independence drops to 28%.
It’s not true, as the presenter says in the progam, that on
2017 a majority of Catalans voted in favour of Independence. There was an illegal
referendum (organized by the pro-independence parties), where those against Independence
largely refused to participate. This kind of referendums are illegal in all
developed countries with a written Constitution. Although there was no neutral official
body in charge of counting the votes, everybody accepts that participation was
less than 50%.
Catalonia is a plural, diverse society. In addition to
castells and calçots (and beaches, the Ramblas, Gaudí, Dalí, and many famous authors writing
in Spanish such as Cercas, Mendoza or Vila-Matas), we have an open community
that shares many of the problems of a developed region or country today.
I believe that a great majority are in favour of a tolerant society that
wants to preserve its language (shared with other regions) in the context of an
increasingly multilingual, multi-ethnic, and well connected and interdependent
community. The most famous Barça players of yesterday and today (Messi, Lamine
Yamal) are immigrants or children of immigrants that reflect better the
complexity of our society than travel shows on TV.
The program says that Independence today has taken a back
seat. This is true.
So, what does it mean to be Catalan today? As the
democratically elected current President of the Catalan government, the
socialist and federalist Salvador Illa said, a Catalan is anyone that lives
here and wants to improve Catalonia.