Jordi Arquer i Saltor (19071981) was a Spanish communist politician and writer from Catalonia.
Arquer was born in Barcelona in 1907.
During the dictatorship of Miguel Primo de Rivera, he participated in the clandestine opposition, collaborating with the pro-Catalan independence groups of Francesc MaciÃÂ. He was a part of the Centre Autonomista de Dependents del Comerç i de la Indústria and the newspaper Lluita. In 1927 he was one of the founders of the CÃÂrculo de Estudios Marxistas (Circle of Marxist Studies), and in 1928 participated in the clandestine congress of the Partit Comunista Català(Catalan Communist Party), which attracted Marxist militants from the Estat CatalÃÂ.
Once the Second Spanish Republic was proclaimed, Arquer was one of the founders of a Communist "Right Opposition" party, Bloc Obrer i Camperol (BOC), and an advocate of the Working Alliance (Aliança Obrera). In 1931 he published Los comunistas ante el problema de las nacionalidades ibéricas, and after reviewing the history of Catalonia and the Catalan movement, was favorable to the recognition of self-determination of Catalonia and indicated the convenience of a Union of Iberian Socialist Republics.
1n 1935, BOC merged with the Trotskyist Communist Left of Spain (Izquierda Comunista de España; ICE) to form POUM, bringing together communists dissatisfied with the other communist and socialist parties in Spain. During the Spanish Civil War (1936âÂÂ1939), he was one of the organizers and heads of the POUM militia, which operated on the Aragon front.
Arquer went into exile in France in 1939. There he co-founded the Moviment Socialista de Catalunya (Catalan Socialist Movement). He continued to advocate for this organisation in publications and magazines such as Endavant, L'Insurgent, Quaderns de l'exili, La Nostra Revista (Mexico), Ressorgiment (Argentina), Germanor (Chile) and others, circulated in countries including the United States.
In 1977, Arquer moved back to Barcelona, where he resided until his death in 1981 in Perpignan.
Jordi Arquer assembled a substantial personal archive during his exile, consisting of over thirty boxes of correspondence between 1939 and 1976. This collection includes thousands of letters from hundreds of correspondents. A selection of 104 letters,including some from George Orwell, was later published.
The collection is held at the CRAI Biblioteca del Pavelló de la República, part of the University of Barcelona, and is part of the Centre dâÂÂEstudis Històrics Internacionals. The fund reflects ArquerâÂÂs dedication to preserving documents on the and the history of the .
In 2004, a critical edition of part of ArquerâÂÂs correspondence, titled Fons Jordi Arquer: correspondència (1939âÂÂ1981), was published by , under the direction of historian Josep Termes.
This edition highlights ArquerâÂÂs work not only as a political thinker and journalist, but also as a historian of the Catalan socialist movement and a bibliophile. His writings and letters provide a valuable resource for understanding , as well as the ideological debates among the Catalan left in exile.