By 1940, a "Jewish department" was established, alongside the "Freemasonry department", under the direction of
Eduardo Comín Colomer. Both were incorporated into the anti-Marxism section of the Directorate of General Security, headed by
José Finat y Escrivá de Romaní, Count of Mayalde. Mayalde was "a representative of the fascistised Catholic Right who previously held the post of national delegate for information and investigation in the Falange and was very close to the
cuñadísimo Ramón Serrano Suñer". Furthermore, a so-called "Special Brigade" was created, at whose head Mayalde named the virulent anti-Semitic
Mauricio Carlavilla. Its primary objective was to monitor Jews living in Spain as requested by
Heinrich Himmler,
Reichsfuhrer-SS and
Chief of German Police in
Nazi Germany. Mayalde had met Himmler in Berlin in September 1940, along with other senior SS personnel, including the
Reich Security Main Office head,
Reinhard Heydrich, and the
Ordnungspolizei head,
Kurt Daluege. The next month, Himmler visited Spain, where he met with Franco as well as Mayalde and Serrano Suner. It was on that occasion that Himmler expressed his variance with the way the
Falange treated political enemies as racial enemies. Further arrangements were made for the exchange of exiled Republicans to Spain for persons wanted by Germany. The Jewish Archive was compiled covertly by the "Special Brigade" and consisted of police records provided by the provincial governors on "activities of Jewish character" that occurred in their jurisdictions. According to José Luis Rodríguez Jiménez, the Spanish police were usually able to hand over to Germany wanted persons. That collaboration came to a halt, as the tide of the Second World War changed. In May 1941, Mayalde stepped down as Director of General Security to take up the post as Spanish Ambassador to Berlin. Mayalde had issued the following circular to the provincial governors on May 5, his final day in the former post: The
Archivo Judaico came about as a result, the abbreviation AJ appearing in the records. One of them concerned a woman in Barcelona with no known political affiliation: "
Se le supone la peligrosidad propia de la raza judía (sefardita)". The word "Jew" would be written in red ink on permits. ==Jewish victims==