Ángeles Flórez Peón


Ángeles Flórez Peón, known as Maricuela, is a Spanish activist and writer. She is the honorary president of the , and is considered to be the last living Spanish socialist militiawoman.

Biography

Ángeles Flórez Peón was born in Blimea on 17 November 1918. She began working at age 9, scrubbing floors. When she was 15, she lost her older brother Antonio, who was killed along with 23 other men during the suppression of the October 1934 revolutionary strike in. This event led to her joining the Socialist Youth in 1936, and after the July coup d'état, she became a militia member in Colloto. She was also a nurse in a field hospital in Gijón. Her nom de guerre, Maricuela, refers to the main character of a 1934 Jacinto Sánchez play entitled ¡Arriba los pobres del mundo!, which Flórez performed in at age 17, when the Spanish Civil War broke out.
Flórez was arrested in October 1937, and initially sentenced to 15 years of imprisonment, although this was later reduced to 9 years. In May 1938, she was transferred to Saturrarán prison in Gipuzkoa, where she remained until she was released on parole in August 1941. She lived for a time in Barakaldo, where her sister resided, and later left for Oviedo and L'Entregu, where she worked first in a, and later in a pharmacy.
In 1946, Flórez married Graciano Rozada Vallina, who participated in the reorganization of the Spanish Socialist Workers' Party and the Unión General de Trabajadores of Asturias. Due to his involvement in these processes, Rozada decided to escape to France in August 1947 at the risk of being arrested. Flórez and their daughter met him in March 1948, after being involved in the death of a group of guerrillas. She remained polically active in exile, and participated in the PSOE's 7th Congress in 1958.
She returned to Spain in 1960 to visit her family and was arrested at the border, although she was allowed to continue her visit to Asturias and then return to France. In 2003, her husband died in Saint-Éloy-les-Mines, and she returned to Asturias a year later, settling in Gijón, where she joined the in early 2013.
In 2014, at age 95, Flórez began using the social network Facebook to share her ideas and political opinions. In addition, to help preserve the history of that era and its generation, in 2013 she published Memorias de Ángeles Flórez Peón 'Maricuela, in which she compiled testimonies from the Revolution of 1934 and the Civil War. In 2018, she presented a book of her memoirs, Las sorpresas de Maricuela, at the Madrid Book Fair.

Recognitions

In October 2016, the Club of 25 paid tribute to Ángeles Flórez, presenting her with an award for "her defense of freedom and democracy," which she received from Diario 16 director Cristina Fallarás. The feminist association presents these awards annually with the objective of "making women and their problems visible". Other recipients included journalist Pepa Bueno and writer Almudena Grandes.
On 21 October 2017, Flórez received the Pozu Fortuna Award, an honor presented annually by the Pozu Fortuna Forum Association in collaboration with the Mieres city council to "those people, organizations, or entities that have distinguished themselves in the achievement of actions or works that enhance the values of humanity, freedom, solidarity, peace, and defense of human rights." The award ceremony took place around the Mieres well, site of one of the largest mass graves in Asturias.

Books