First days of the 1936 Spanish revolution. A catholic photographer and a militiawoman anarchist cross path in the Barcelona’s Rambla. He takes a photo. She allows him to take it. The result, the most reproduced picture of the Iberian Anarchism’s history, besides one of the most iconic pictures of the Spanish Civil War. A secular virgin? Freedom guiding the people? None, upon today, knew who the photographer was either the militiawomen. Now, we know that they were Antoni Campañà and Anita Garbin, who have never seen each other before, either they will not see each other again. Their meeting in the Rambla was fleeting. However, that click conveys Catalonia’s, Spain’s and Europe’s history of the 20th century. This documentary tells in parallel their lives, concerns and aspirations, tied to the concerns and aspirations of Europeans in the first half of the 20th century.