Colette Durruti
Colette Durruti Morin was a Spanish-French businesswoman and activist. The daughter of the Spanish anarchist Buenaventura Durruti and the French anarchist Émilienne Morin, she grew up in poverty and constantly moving. After her father was killed in action in the Spanish Civil War, her mother took her to France, where she lived for the rest of her life. She involved herself in campaigns to preserve the historical memory of her father and later moved to Brittany. There she ran a dairy business, raised her family and provided primary sources about her father to historians until she retired to Northern Catalonia.
Biography
Colette Durruti Morin was born in Barcelona, on 4 December 1931, the daughter of the Spanish anarchist Buenaventura Durruti and French anarchist Émilienne Morin. Her family lived in poverty at the time of her birth, with her father having to charge a former employer an indemnity to buy her essential items. When Durruti was only two months old, on 10 February 1932, her father was arrested and deported to Africa for his involvement in an anarchist insurrection. To provide for her without her father, her mother took a job as an usher at a cinema and left her in the care of the trade union activist Teresa Margaleff. By the time her father was able to return home and stay there, following the proclamation of an amnesty in 1934, Durruti had grown and learnt to walk and speak without her father's presence. He returned to caring for his daughter, singing her revolutionary songs as he bathed and fed her.Following the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, Durruti's parents went to fight on the Aragon front and left her in the care of Margaleff. She was only five years old when her father was killed in action, but she remembered him affectionately. Her father's friend Joan Garcia Oliver held Durruti up as an example of "all the children whose parents have perished". Her mother returned to Barcelona to care for her, seeking to raise her in accordance with her anarchist ideals. Not long after her father's death, Durruti left Spain together with her mother and went into exile in France.
Durruti grew up in France, becoming a French citizen after she married Roger Mariot in the 1950s. Together they had two children, Yvon and Rémi. Durruti rarely participated in any anarchist campaigns, whether by Spanish exiles or local French activists. Her activism was largely dedicated to preserving the historical memory of her father. Anti-Francoist activist Octavio Alberola, who met Durruti during the 1950s, described her approach to activism as "tokenistic". By the 1970s, she was living in the Breton city of Kemper. There she managed a dairy company until her retirement. Durruti provided letters written by her father to Abel Paz, who used them as primary sources while writing the biography Durruti in the Spanish Revolution. On 29 May 1971, she was interviewed about her father by the German writer Hans Magnus Enzensberger. She told him that:
Durruti retired to Northern Catalonia, where she died on 19 April 2025.