Abstract

On April 14, 1931, two days after the municipal elections won by the anti-monarchist coalition, Spain inaugurated a Second Republic. Among other very important reforms, the left Republicans sought to secularize the state. But although left-wing Republicans yearned for a completely secularized country, these measures were accompanied by discrimination. In a historical perspective and with the explanatory and dialectical method, this analysis will try to show that, if the treatment of the religious question was intended to secularize the State, the radical republicans consciously or unconsciously touched a freedom: freedom of worship. That is ultimately discrimination.

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