In a break from his past service in the International Brigades, Fraser expressed support for the reintegration of Spain under Franco into the international community following the Second World War. During a speech in Dublin in the early 1950s, Fraser also praised what he called, "the heroic stand of General Franco against Soviet barbarism".[4] He argued that the Red Terror by the Servicio de Información Militar during the Spanish Civil War presaged the similar use of political terror throughout the Eastern Bloc during the early Cold War.[5]
In 1954, Fraser published the memoir Fatal Star, an account of his journey from Stalinism to Catholicism.[6] In 1956, he organized protests against a visit to Great Britain by Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev and Nikolai Bulganin.[7]
Later life
Fraser was critical of the liberalising reforms of the Second Vatican Council (1962-1965) and of the contemporaneous emergence of liberation theology in Latin America.[8] In 1965, he left his teaching position to devote himself full-time to his periodical Approaches. The publication reflected Fraser's traditionalist Catholic views and his uneasiness about the changes within the Catholic Church in the 1960s.[9]
Death and legacy
In the 1970s, Fraser served as a Scottish Conservativecouncillor in the town of Saltcoats, Ayrshire.[10] He died on 17 October 1986 and was survived by his wife, Kathleen Fraser, and his seven children.[8] His son Anthony Fraser edited the Catholic magazine Apropos, a successor of Approaches, until his death in 2014.[11]
Works
The Intelligent Socialist's Guide to World War II (1943)
The Truth about Spain (1949)
Spain and the West (1952)
Fatal Star (1954)
Civil rights, yes! : civil war, no! (1971)
Ireland 1971 : is civil war inevitable? (1971)
Saltcoats: anatomy of a socialist 'rotten borough' (1971)
The Scandal of Maynooth: A Dossier on Episcopal Policy in Contemporary Ireland (1973)
Freemasonry and the Church: are they compatible? (1973)
^ abTom Gallagher (1987),Glasgow, the Uneasy Peace: Religious Tension in Modern Scotland, 1819-1914, p. 230
^Bernard Aspinwall, 'The Transatlantic Catholic Conservatism of Colm Brogan', Innes Review, 53:2 (2002), p. 214.[1]
^Andrée Sheehy-Skeffington (1991),Skeff: The Life of Owen Sheehy-Skeffington, 1909-1970, pp. 153-154.
^Rob Stradling, 'English-speaking Units of the International Brigades: War, Politics and Discipline', Journal of Contemporary History, October 2010, Vol.45(4), p. 765.[2]