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Family’s 90-year search for answers after father vanished in Francoist uprising – photo essay | Spain
They took everything from my great-grandfather Silvestre Indias Carvajal and left us with nothing but his story, which was buried at the bottom of a 30-metre-deep well in south-west Spain for 87 years.
Silvestre worked as a municipal clerk in his small home town of Feria in Extremadura. He was given the job in recognition for his service in the war in Morocco, a conflict to which he was dispatched by lottery.
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Feria is a small town in the south-eastern Spanish region of Extremadura, which sits atop a mountain range. It had barely 4,000 inhabitants in 1936 when it was occupied by Gen Franco’s rebel troops. The subsequent repression was swift and merciless and anyone deemed an enemy of the coup was eliminated. The estimated death toll in Feria is 97, making it one of the hardest-hit towns in the region.
He was living a quiet life – married with three children and another on the way – when Gen Francisco Franco began his coup against the Republican government on 18 July 1936.
One of his duties as town clerk was to guard imprisoned Franco sympathisers who might have joined the uprising.
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‘I was three years old when they took my father, and my sister was born seven months later,’ my grandmother Silvestra Indias told me four years ago. She added: ‘My brothers, who were only nine and six years old, had to go to work even though they were just kids. My mother would say, “Oh my little ones, I don’t know where your father is. They took him and I don’t know where he is”’.
But when Franco’s forces took Feria, finding very little opposition, his destiny swiftly changed. In August that year, a few weeks after the Spanish civil war began, word reached Silvestre that they were coming for him, so he and two colleagues fled to the countryside. He was found and taken prisoner a few days later and nothing more was known about what happened to him beyond the rumours that ran around the town. Silvestre was 39 years old.
“My cousin says she heard her mother say they’d shot him and thrown him down a well,” my grandmother Silvestra Indias told me three years before her death last July. She was named for the father who disappeared when she was three.
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Silvestre’s wife, María Sánchez González (my great-grandmother and Silvestra’s mother). ‘My mother went through a lot because her husband was murdered all of a sudden, leaving her with four kids,’ my grandmother told me. ‘Up until then, they’d had a decent life because he worked for the council. When they took her husband, they took everything. My mother was left with nothing.’ Right: Serafín Indias Carvajal, son of Silvestre. ‘My grandmother Silvestra couldn’t remember what her father looked like, but her mother always told her he was the spitting image of his son Serafín. Neither I, nor any other member of the family, have ever been able to find a photograph of my great-grandfather.’
Silvestre’s fate was not unique. It is thought that between 120,000 and 150,000 people were “disappeared” during the war and the subsequent dictatorship and that their bodies were thrown into 2,567 mass graves. From 1939 to 1975, the Franco regime hid their resting places, condemning their families to silence, humiliation and oblivion.
My great-grandmother María Sánchez was left widowed and pregnant with my great-aunt, María Indias. No one told her what had happened to her husband, nor where his remains were. As a single-parent family in postwar rural Spain, life was limited and bleak for those the dead left behind.
“I remember my mum coming to take me out of school,” María Indias told me four years ago. “I said, ‘But Mum, I don’t want to go. I’m happy here and I’m learning to read and write’. But she told me I had to go and work as a nanny.”
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My grandmother Silvestra showing me a photograph of herself with her four children, including my father. The process of recovering her father’s remains allowed her to reconstruct her family history.
Psychologists say that enforced disappearances can cause generational trauma that can echo down at least three generations. They say the descendants of the “disappeared” inherit or absorb the unconscious burden of the suffering of their parents and grandparents. I don’t know how much this tragedy has affected my father and me. But what I do know is that my grandmother’s life would have been a lot easier if she’d at least been able to lay flowers for her father.
But the return to democracy after Franco’s death, known as the Transition, was built on a pact of silence and on an amnesty that covered all the crimes committed during the civil war and the dictatorship. The newly democratic Spain offered no help to families searching for their dead until the year 2000, when, under pressure from historical memory associations and relatives, things began to change.
In 2007, the socialist government of José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero passed the historical memory law, which formally recognised Franco’s victims and compelled local governments to fund efforts to unearth mass graves. Fifteen years later, another socialist government built on that legislation with the 2022 democratic memory law, which ordered the creation of a census and a national DNA bank to help locate and identify the remains of the tens of thousands of people who still lie in unmarked graves.
One day in October 2021, I got a call from my aunt Rosi. She told me she had seen a TV programme about archaeologists who were searching for the remains of the disappeared in a well on a country estate on the outskirts of Feria.
Backed by the Extremaduran regional government, archaeologists and forensic specialists from the Aranzadi laboratory had descended on the farm. After pumping the water out of the well and then painstakingly digging through five metres of rock, they came across a tangle of bones.
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Once the remains were exhumed, they were transported 500 miles to the Aranzadi laboratory in San Sebastián in the Basque Country. As the skeletons were disarticulated, experts decided to separate the remains by type of bone to make the work easier.
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An archaeologist from the Aranzadi scientific society cleans fragments of bones. The fact that the skeletons were disarticulated made the identification and return of the remains a long and difficult process. Many of those awaiting the returns of their loved ones’ remains are now elderly, so time is of the essence.
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These are the remains that were in the box given to my grandmother Silvestra. Only the central bone, from which the forensic experts cut a small piece for analysis, belongs to my great-grandfather Silvestre. The identity of the others is unknown, but they were also in the well. These bones were given to my grandmother to fill up the box and to mitigate the psychological effects that receiving only one bone may cause. Right: Bullets found in the vicinity of the well on the Salamanco Chico country estate, on the outskirts of Feria.
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The archaeologists who exhumed the well discovered a number of objects belonging to the missing, including this shoe, which had not decomposed. The bones of its owner’s foot were still inside the shoe. Right: The jawbone of one of the people found exhumed from the well of the Salamanco Chico country estate on the outskirts of Feria.
“Rising and falling water levels had broken the skeletons apart,” says Lourdes Herrasti, who oversaw the recovery. “In other exhumations, the skeletons are articulated, so you can say, ‘This is the arm, this is the head, this is the torso,’ etc. But not in this case.” By sorting and analysing the remains, they eventually discovered that 20 people had lain forgotten at the bottom of the well. They then set about looking for descendants who might be able to provide DNA samples.
My great-aunt María Indias was 86 when she gave a saliva sample to determine whether any of the remains belonged to her father. Two years later, after an exhaustive effort, Javier Jiménez, the director of the Extremaduran regional government’s historical memory service, told us that the remains of my great-grandfather Silvestre had been found among the bones in the well. The only identifiable part of him to have survived was one of his thigh bones.
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The remains of my great-grandfather Silvestre Indias Carvajal are finally laid to rest in the same burial niche that holds the remains of his wife, María Sánchez; those of his daughter María Indias; and those of his son Serafín Indias. Last summer, they were joined by the remains of my grandmother Silvestra, who died in July at the age of 91.
At a ceremony held in the village in November 2023 and attended by relatives and those who had carried out the exhumation, my grandmother Silvestra was finally able to hug her father once again – albeit through the small coffin that contained what was left of him 87 years after he disappeared.
The reunion came too late for my great-aunt María Indias, who died a month before the remains were handed over. She never got the chance to embrace her father in life or death, but she left this world knowing that she had closed a wound that had been open for her entire life.
The issue of historical memory remains one of the most polarised debates in Spain. Although many families consider the two laws a basic matter of human rights and restitution, the right and the extreme right dismiss them as instruments that serve only to reopen the wounds of the past.
The Extremaduran regional government – now run by the conservative People’s party and their allies in the far-right Vox party – recently repealed the regional historical memory law and plan to replace it with a so-called “coexistence law”. They claim the new law will recognise “all the victims” of the civil war and the Franco dictatorship and avoid a “partisan” view of the past.
But historical memory groups have criticised it as a backwards step for truth, justice and reparation that will whitewash the dictatorship, remove explicit references to Francoism and equate victims with torturers.
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My grandmother Silvestra, right, and a friend during a visit to Feria – the town where her father was born, raised, and disappeared. Supporting the families of the victims of Francoist repression is crucial for healing the pain they continue to suffer after so many years of loss and uncertainty.
Their main fear is that the new law will undermine the public commitment to exhuming and identifying the bodies of the disappeared and returning them to their relatives.
Many families are still waiting to find out what really happened to their “disappeared” loved ones. To date, about 1,000 mass graves have been excavated and the remains of about 13,000 people have been recovered. But time has outrun the exhumation effort. Experts now believe that the construction of roads, buildings and cemeteries means that only a further 20,000 to 25,000 bodies may now be found.
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My grandmother sits in front of the well where her father’s remains were found. The search, exhumation and identification of the victims of Franco’s repression has dragged on for so long that many of their descendants have already died or are at the end of their lives.
An entire generation of the children of Franco’s victims is about to disappear. That’s why I hope this story will one day reach my five-year-old niece, Carla, and everyone else of her generation. They will never be able to hear these stories from the lips of those who survived them. But they need, more than ever, to know what happened so that this tragedy is never repeated.
“I think we need to dig them up, don’t you?” my grandmother Silvestra once told me. “Why would I want my father’s bones left underground when the family needs to know where he is – and that he existed? How many other bodies are there out there that have never been found?”
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French Open 2026: Kalinskaya v Chwalinska; Sabalenka v Shnaider as quarter-finals continue – live | French Open 2026
Key events
Chwalinska has fine hands but her racket must feel as if it weighs about 100kg as she steps up to serve. She still moves to within two points of victory at 30-15, before Kalinskaya lets go of some of her frustrations with a brutal return winner. So will it become match point or break point? Break point, as Kalinskaya again comes out swinging. Chwalinska is still able to think clearly enough to confound Kalinskaya with a body serve. Deuce. Advantage Kalinskaya. And Chwalinska goes well long with a clunky forehand! A fourth successive break! Sacre bleu!
But here’s a sudden, jarring shift in momentum as Kalinskaya, hitting slightly freer now she has nothing to lose, tears through Chwalinska’s serve, 0-15, 15-all, 15-30, 15-40 … and Kalinskaya gets one of the breaks back with a fizzing forehand winner! But no sooner does she give herself a glimmer, she slumps 30-40 down on her own serve, and she balloons a backhand long! Yet another break – the 10th of the match – and now Chwalinska will serve for the match!
Kalinskaya’s face hardly ever betrays emotion but she is clearly rattled here, and is now arguing with her coach about tactics. With her focus gone, she slips 30-40 down, and is totally wrong-footed as Chwalinska clobbers a forehand winner beyond her! Chwalinska has the comfort of a double break (which she’ll be thankful for given the way the first set went) and she’s potentially two games away at 7-6, 4-1!
Chwalinska’s first serve is slower than Kalinskaya’s second serve, but she shows great variation to back up the break by holding to 30. The qualifier, with one grand slam match win to her name before this tournament, is now three games away (!) from the semi-final. Words not even Chwalinska would have thought possible a couple of weeks ago. Or possibly even half an hour ago when Kalinskaya was making her comeback.
After that wildly see-sawing opener, a couple of straightforward holds get the second set under way. Kalinskaya then finds herself under a bit of pressure on serve, at 30-all, before dealing with Chwalinska’s loopy ball with a perfectly executed drop shot. 40-30. But Chwalinska comes straight back at her for deuce and advantage and game, or more accurately Kalinskaya self combusts with three errors, to hand Chwalinska the break! The qualifier leads 7-6, 2-1.
Fancy some post-set entertainment? Sure you do:
Chwalinska wins the first-set tie-break 7-3
Kalinskaya concedes another point on serve to drop 4-3 behind. A high-quality clay-court rally complete with moon balls, net charges and lobs ends in Chwalinska’s favour for 5-3. And having waited so long for a point to be won on serve, two come along at once! It’s 6-3, three set points, to add to the two it feels like Chwalinska had yesterday. And this time, after all of Kalinskaya’s resistance, the Russian fires long! It’s been tortuous at times and very tense, but Chwalinska finally has the first set after 69 minutes.
The first five points of the breaker go against the server, make that six, as Chwalinska’s vicious slice stops dead on the clay, leaving Kalinskaya with little chance. So they change ends at 3-all …
Kalinskaya, perhaps panicked, rushes the opening points on her serve, losing the controlled aggression she has found as the set has progressed, and she slides 15-30 down. Credit to her for the way she comes back for 30-all, 40-30 and game. So much of the narrative here is on the Chwalinska, the qualifier, that it’s easy to forget this is only Kalinskaya’s second grand slam quarter-final and she’ll be feeling the nerves. This will be a tense, tense tie-break.
Kalinskaya looks to be the favourite from here, with her greater experience and power, though having said that the key to her comeback has been staying a bit more patient in the rallies and not trying to pull the trigger so quickly. At 30-all on Chwalinska’s serve, the Pole pushes Kalinskaya deep before sprinting to the net to finish off the point. Smart play. And Chwalinska takes the next point too to staunch the flow of games against her and nudge 6-5 ahead.
Kalinskaya is never a player to show much emotion, and with her game face on, she works her way to 40-15 with minimal fuss. Before crunching away a winner to settle matters. From 5-1 down, they’re back on serve at 5-5! So who will feel the pressure now? Chwalinska, having conceded such a commanding lead and missed those two set points, or Kalinskaya, now she has something to lose again?
Kalinskaya holds to 30 to further reduce her arrears, to 5-3. But Chwalinska will get another chance to serve this out … and comes out on top after a lung-busting 27-shot rally, finished off with a drop shot/lob combination, for 30-15! Even Kalinskaya is applauding. Chwalinska delves into her box of tricks again to bring up 40-30, so here’s another set point to add to the one the Pole had at at 5-1. Some big, brave hitting from Kalinskaya saves it. The wind is really ripping around Chatrier now, just to add to the drama. And this goes exactly the same way as game seven, as Kalinskaya breaks on a second BP! Remarkably, they’re back on serve.
So Chwalinska is serving for the set … and she’s playing as if this is her 34th grand slam quarter-final rather than her first. From 30-all, she advances to 40-30 … but Kalinskaya saves the best for last, fending off the set point with a backhand winner! Chwalinska, perhaps still thinking about that SP, makes a total hash of a smash at deuce, giving Kalinskaya the chance to break. And while the Russian doesn’t on the first break point, she does on the second. Could the comeback be on? Kalinskaya trails 5-2 but at least she’s starting to ask some questions of Chwalinska.
Make that four, although the Pole is make to work for the hold, saving a break point at 30-40. Chwalinska is giving Kalinskaya so little rhythm and the Russian is totally befuddled in the next game as Chwalinska zips 15-40 ahead. Now Kalinskaya is trying to get in on the drop-shot act … but it’s not her natural game, it doesn’t work and Chwalinska charges forward before dispatching a winner into the open court! It’s now 5-1. Phew.
The 5ft 5in left-hander Chwalinska, who makes up for her lack of height and power with intelligence, is drop-shotting and slicing Kalinskaya into submission here, and it gives her a break point at 30-40. Kalinskaya saves it with a big backhand – but soon enough it’s break point again and after a nine-shot rally Kalinskaya’s forehand drifts wide! Chwalinska breaks for 3-1 and that’s three games on the spin.
Now it’s Chwalinska’s turn to recover from 40-15 down on Kalinskaya’s serve to break … and then she rattles through four successive points on serve to hold! The world No 114 is on the board and leads 2-1. This interview with Chwalinska and Swiatek as 15-year-olds is a good watch, btw. How good is their English, given their age?!?!
Chwalinska looks anything but stressed as she swiftly moves 40-15 ahead on serve in the opening game. But Kalinskaya comes back at her for deuce. Despite this being only a second grand slam quarter-final for Kalinskaya, the 22nd seed knows this match is on her racket, and she’s trying to stamp her authority from the off. She has the greater firepower, which she demonstrates to get to her advantage. Chwalinska craftily works Kalinskaya around the court and saves the break point. But the next two points go Kalinskaya’s way and the Russian breaks in the opening game.
The qualifier Chwalinska (pronounced Hfa-leen-ska in case you were wondering) is having the time of her life in Paris, having won all but one of her seven matches in straight sets, upsetting Zheng Qinwen, Elise Mertens and Maria Sakkari along the way. Her solitary grand slam match victory before this tournament came at Wimbledon four years ago, after she’d taken a break from tennis because of depression. She has said she associated the sport with “pressure, stress and crying” but now has a more balanced approach: “The results don’t define me as much as they did before. I just couldn’t differentiate Maja and tennis player. I was just one.”

Tumaini Carayol
Marta Kostyuk was her own toughest rival for so long during the early stages of her career. As she tried to navigate the pressure that accompanied her status as a teenage prodigy, she often struggled to think clearly on the court without her emotion, fears and desperation to succeed torpedoing her form.
The path towards unlocking her potential has been tough, requiring the Ukrainian to be honest with herself and encounter the right people to help take her forward. That work continues to pay off. Kostyuk made another significant breakthrough by ending the Ukraine derby as the victor, holding her nerve to defeat Elina Svitolina 6-3, 2-6, 6-2 and reach a grand slam semi-final for the first time in her career.
Although Kostyuk has broken new ground in Paris, this is simply a continuation of the form she has put together during what is looking increasingly like a career-defining clay-court season. She is now on a 17-match winning run, having secured titles in Rouen and Madrid in the buildup to Paris. Considering the clarity and temperament she is playing with each time she steps on the court, she can clearly go further.
After firing down a final unreturned serve, Kostyuk struggled to hold back her emotions as she digested such a significant result. Still, even in her personal triumph, she started her speech on the court by referencing the war back home, earning a long, standing ovation.
“I want to start with this historical match that we played today with Elina,” she said. “We had a very difficult night again in Ukraine, especially Kyiv. So many people dead. I want to give this match to Ukrainian people and to their resilience.”
This tournament has provided ample reminders of the horrors still unfolding in Ukraine. It started with Kostyuk waking up to the news that Russia had fired a missile within 100 metres of her family home, where her sister, mother and great aunt were staying, yet she had to compose herself and play her first-round match. Meanwhile, their compatriot Oleksandra Oliynykova has levelled stinging criticisms of the sport’s handling of Russian players.
Another duel between a Russian and Ukrainian player beckons. Kostyuk will next face the 19‑year‑old Mirra Andreeva, who produced a stellar performance to dismantle Sorana Cirstea 6-0, 6-3 and reach her second Paris semi-final. It will be a rematch of their recent final at the Madrid Open. Asked what it is like to play a Ukrainian player in these matches, Andreeva said: “For me it doesn’t matter who I play. I really try to play against the ball that is coming at me. Usually it doesn’t matter to me who I’m playing against, so I’m trying to really focus on the game and on the game plan that I have to use on the court.”
The full report:

Tumaini Carayol
For at least a few fleeting moments, it appeared that something significant might be unfolding on Tuesday beneath the Court Philippe-Chatrier roof. Rafael Jódar had started his first grand slam quarter-final desperate to make his mark and he spent the first 40 minutes eviscerating the ball off both sides, lasering groundstrokes that seemingly struck every line. He built a 5-2 lead over Alexander Zverev, a game away from starting with a statement in the biggest match of his career.
Normalcy resumed quickly. Jódar’s attempts to serve out the set ended in a break to love for the second seed, who quickly took control and refused to relinquish his position until the end of the match.
Zverev offered Jódar minimal breathing room for the rest of the encounter, serving extremely well and striking his forehand freely. In the process, the German took another step towards winning an elusive first grand slam title as he returned to the semi-finals of the French Open with a 7-6 (3), 6-1, 6-3 win.
The past 10 days in Paris have been unlike any in the recent history of men’s tennis, with so many of the top players suffering early upsets. As the dust has begun to settle on the early defeats for Jannik Sinner and Novak Djokovic, the central question surrounding the men’s draw in the final rounds is simple: can anyone beat Zverev?
After being repeatedly blocked by Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz, Djokovic and others, the door is clearly wide open. Beyond him, the world No 6, Félix Auger-Aliassime, is the only remaining top-10 player. There are still some shooters left in the draw, quality players with big enough weapons to take him out, but while Zverev has navigated his section with few problems, reaching the semi-finals without facing a player ranked inside the top 25, the rest of the field has been in a frantic rush to take advantage of an opportunity that may never come again.
So many players have already worn themselves out in multiple five-set matches as they have battled to get through.
Jódar was a perfect example of this. Seeded 27th, he has been one of the revelations of the clay-court season. He entered the match leading the ATP with clay-court wins this year, compiling a record of 19 wins and three defeats, with quarter-finals in Madrid and Rome before his run at Roland Garros. But he navigated consecutive five-set matches for the first time in his career to reach the quarter-finals. After squandering his opportunity in the opening set, he quickly ran out of steam.
The top half of the draw, meanwhile, now more closely resembles a wrestling match than anything like tennis. So many players in the top section have been embroiled in marathon matches, not least Italy’s Matteo Arnaldi, whose 17 hours and 54 minutes on court to reach the last eight is an open era record by, astoundingly, over two hours.
You can read the rest here:
Yesterday’s showers have departed, there’s even a bit of sunshine in Paris and the Philippe Chatrier roof is off as Kalinskaya and Chwalinska arrive on court. While we wait for the action to begin, here’s Tumaini’s take on what happened yesterday …
Today’s singles order of play
COURT PHILIPPE CHATRIER – 11am (10am BST)
Anna Kalinskaya (22, Russia) v Maja Chwalinska (Poland)
Aryna Sabalenka (1, Belarus) v Diana Shnaider (25, Russia)
Felix Auger-Aliassime (4, Canada) v Flavio Cobolli (10, Italy)
Not before 8.15pm (7.15pm BST)
Matteo Berrettini (Italy) v Matteo Arnaldi (Italy)
Preamble
Bonjour et bienvenue au jour onze de Roland Garros, where there’s something of an eastern European and Italian takeover on Philippe Chatrier.
First it’s the qualifier Maja Chwalinska – not the Pole who everyone thought would still be standing – against the 22nd seed Anna Kalinskaya. Chwalinska, who came through the junior ranks with Iga Swiatek before their careers went in very different directions, had won only one grand slam match before this tournament, but the 24-year-old is now in the quarter-finals – a stage the 27-year-old Kalinskaya has admitted she didn’t expect to reach either, having got this far at a major only once before, at the 2024 Australian Open.
This, of course, is anything but uncharted territory for Aryna Sabalenka, who has remained utterly unaffected by the chaos around her, as the only grand slam champion left in one piece in the women’s and men’s draws, on her way to a meeting with another surprise quarter-finalist, Russia’s Diana Shnaider. Sabalenka laid down the biggest of markers in the red dirt with her blistering win over Naomi Osaka in the previous round – prompting even Shnaider to concede that today’s match is most likely a chance to “get experience for the future”.
Sabalenka knows her time is now – while it could be now or never for Felix Auger-Aliassime, the former wonderkid who is, for the first time in his slam career, the highest-ranked player left in his half of the draw that may have lost the greatest Italian of all in Jannik Sinner but still features three others in Flavio Cobolli, Matteo Berrettini and Matteo Arnaldi. Auger-Aliassime faces Cobolli in a much-anticipated match that is so hard to call (Auger-Aliassime has the big-match experience; Cobolli is such a fine talent) – before in the night session the renaissance man Berrettini, back after his injury hell, meets the marathon man Arnaldi, who’s already played 18 sets to get this far.
Play begins: à 11h ( 10am BST). On y va!
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