For reasons he says he never understood, he was spared that fate. He celebrated his 100th birthday in November.
“I should
have died then — but here I am, feeling well enough to remember clearly all
that I’ve endured,” said Mr. Moreno, with a big grin. “I still don’t really
know why I wasn’t killed and instead sent to prison, so it’s very hard to
believe that I have managed to live so long.”
Mr. Moreno
was only a teenager when the civil war started, but it is a chapter of his life
that he has not tried — or perhaps managed — to close.
While he watches
the news in color these days, his views remain black and white, shaped by his
wartime experience and his ardent support for Basque nationalism.
His latest
concern is the resurgence of the far right. In December, Vox, a nationalist,
anti-immigrant party, won its first parliamentary seats in an election in the southern
region of Andalusia.
Mr. Moreno
now shares an apartment with his daughter, Manuela, in the Bilbao suburb of
Portugalete, close to the shipyards where he once worked. The apartment is
filled with Basque memorabilia, including photos of Mr. Moreno meeting local
politicians.
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