#PAIGC

2024-11-21

📻 Victor Barros foi entrevistado pela RFI acerca do livro "O Mundo de Amílcar Cabral".

As questões focaram-se nas ligações internacionais de #AmílcarCabral, nomeadamente com a #França, e no reposicionamento da investigação histórica numa perspectiva Sul-Norte e Sul-Sul.

Para ler e/ou ouvir:
rfi.fr/pt/programas/artes/2024

#Histodons #Colonialism #AntiColonialism #GlobalSouth #PAIGC #LiberationStruggle #GuineaBissau #France #MovimentosDeLibertação #AntiColonialismo #Colonialismo #GuinéBissau

Inkani Books, a publishing house from South Africa, has released a number of remarkable titles in recent years. These books include Tell No Lies, Claim No Easy Victories; a collection of the writings of Amilcar Cabral, as well as other books which correlate with the Zulu and Xhosa concept of Inkani – a stubborn determination, here, particularly the resolve of the oppressed to fight for liberation. The aforementioned text includes speeches and articles delivered by Amilcar Cabral; some of which are being translated into English for the first time. These articles, speeches, and communiqués are required reading for revolutionaries today who are struggling with the agrarian question and the current wave of revolts and revolutions in the peripheries of the capitalist world system. Cabral was a Cape Verdean revolutionary who played a pivotal role in founding the PAIGC, along with other forums and institutions dedicated to the overthrow of Portuguese colonialism in Guinea Bissau, Cape Verde, Angola, and Mozambique. Although he was assassinated before the brief unification of Guinea and Cape Verde could be realized, his ideas continue to resonate with relevance and potency today.

Economic, cultural, political, and armed resistance are themes explored in the majority of Cabral’s essays and speeches. All of these types of resistance revolve around a central axis: the question of land. Cabral knew that people do not fight for ideas alone, it is the resolution of the immediate contradictions and struggles in their lives that drives them toward revolution. In a speech delivered in London, someone asked Cabral if PAIGC is a Marxist-Leninist party. Cabral’s answer was revealing of the kind of revolutionary he was:

People here are very preoccupied with the questions: ‘Are you Marxist or non-Marxist? Are you a Marxist-Leninist’. Just ask me, please, whether we are doing well in the field. Are we really liberating our people, the human beings in our country from all forms of oppression? Ask me simply this and draw your own conclusions.

While this brilliant answer cuts away at ideological dogmatism and fanaticism, Cabral also knew that theory is a weapon in the hands of the oppressed. In an interview with a Portuguese journalist, Cabral puts forward a clear analysis of why his people are determined to resist. He relates the struggle of the people of Guinea and Cape Verde to the revolution in Cuba, Vietnam, and Palestine while also highlighting the clear distinctions in strategies and tactics of struggle in each locale. Many of the answers given by Cabral in this interview are relevant even today.

When asked about Palestine, Cabral had a more lucid analysis than most contemporary analysts, presenting Palestine as a key element of the Arab struggle, rather than constructing Palestine as a black-box nation state separate from the region. “We want the Arab peoples to seek the freedom of the people of Palestine, to free the Arab nation of imperialist disturbance and domination: ‘Israel’.” When asked about Che Guevara’s theory of guerrilla struggle and its applicability to the Guinean struggle, Cabral further elucidated the importance of marrying theory and practice.

Cabral points to the importance of understanding armed struggles as one facet of national liberation, while arguing that the people of Guinea must start from their own conditions as a launching point. The people of Guinea could not copy every tactic and strategy of the heroic Cuban people or the Vietnamese, but they could view these struggles as different terrains in the same fight. In this way, the beauty of Cabral’s statement on the Guinean struggle shines through: “Our people are our mountains,” he said. While Vietnam had thick jungle cover, and the Cubans fought in the Sierra Maestra mountains, the conditions in Guinea were such that the people became the stand-in for the environment, which was not favorable for clandestine armed struggle, according to the accumulated knowledge of guerrilla movements. This is why, according to Cabral, the Guinean War of Independence was a ‘centrifugal’ struggle. They started in the large cities and then moved outward toward the countryside. This is an inversion of the Chinese, Vietnamese, and Cuban struggles where the guerrilla forces started in the countryside and moved toward the city. Cabral and the PAIGC were master tacticians in that sense, understanding that they could not blindly copy the blueprints of other peoples, but rather could see those people as an inspiration while building a uniquely Guinean revolution.

This independence in our thought and action is relative. It is relative because in our thought we are influenced by the thought of others. We are not the first to wage an armed struggle for national liberation, or a revolution. We did not invent guerrilla warfare–we invented it in our land…we must be aware that no struggle can be waged without an alliance, without allies.

The invention of guerilla warfare on one’s own land, with unique means and ends, contains the final and critical element of struggle: culture. During the Guinean revolution, many people believed that embracing one’s own culture in contrast to the colonial culture meant uncritically reverting to pre-colonial cultural practices. Cabral highlighted the failure of this strategy and urged the peoples of Guinea Bissau and Cape Verde to forge a new, revolutionary culture through armed, economic, and political struggle. In this assessment, Cabral was not alone; the late Ghassan Kanafani was not only the spokesman of the PFLP but edited their magazine and produced cultural works himself. The revolution in Palestine—much like the one led by PAIGC in Guinea—has cultivated a people with a strong, resistant mentality and a revolutionary will that maintains cultural values and concretizes them through struggle.

Cultural symbols revolving around land animate the struggles of today. In Palestine, the watermelon, the olive tree, the koufiyyeh, and various tatreez symbols (embroidery) from each locale tie the people to the land and concretize the struggle in the subjective conditions of Palestine. This is the vision Cabral had of struggle in Africa, Asia, and Latin America; only through a profound understanding of one’s own conditions and the study of other revolutionary experiences can a movement advance toward liberation.

All of this is also intimately related to economic struggles against colonialism and imperialism. Cabral pushed for agricultural self-sufficiency, redistribution of land, and other economic forms of delinking from the capitalist world system. This, too, impresses the importance of charting an independent path toward revolution on those of us living in the shadow of Cabral and all the martyrs who came before us. The first task of national liberation, according to Cabral, is the reclaiming of the means of production, which have been usurped by external, colonial forces. From there, the revolutionary forces can take the lessons learned regarding culture and the question of land and go about building a new society, free from colonial domination. Although Cabral is no longer with us, the forces of revolution are alive in Palestine and the Sahel, shining a light on the path to liberation.

source: Al Mayadeen

https://abolitionmedia.noblogs.org/post/2024/09/01/amilcar-cabral-and-the-world-to-come/

#africa #amilcarCabral #AntiColonial #antiImperialism #guineaBissau #paigc

2024-07-25

🎧 Catarina Laranjeiro was one of the guests of the fourth episode of the Decolonial Dialogues podcast.

In the company of Inês Galvão, the conversations was centred on the role of women in the libetarion struggles of #PAIGC.

👉 open.spotify.com/episode/5GslK

@histodons
@anthropology

#Histodons #Anthropodons #AntiColonialism #WomensHistory #GuineaBissau #CapeVerde #LiberationWars #HistóriaDasMulheres #GuinéBissau #CaboVerde #GuerrasDeLibertação #HistoryInThePublicSphere #HistóriaNaEsferaPública

2024-03-10

« #GuinéeBissau, 1969. Une guerre violente oppose l’armée coloniale portugaise aux guérilleros du Parti Africain pour l'Indépendance de la Guinée. #Nome quitte son village et rejoint le maquis. Après des années, il rentrera en héros, mais la liesse laissera bientôt la place à l’amertume et au cynisme »

rfi.fr/fr/podcasts/tous-les-ci
#SanaNaNHada #cinéastes #cinéma #CinémaAfricain #PAIGC #GuerresColonialesPortugaises

2024-03-07

📖 A new issue of Práticas da História is out today!

Edited by Sérgio Neto and Clara Serrano, it is a special issue dedicated to the theme "Identity and Otherness: Images and Representations in History Teaching Materials in Portuguese-speaking countries"

It also includes an interview with Mário Cabral and Pansau Cabral.

#OpenAccess 🔓: praticasdahistoria.pt/issue/vi

@histodons

#Histodons #HistoryTeaching #Identities #Colonialism #CapeVerde #GuineaBissau #Mozambique #Angola #Brazil #PAIGC

2023-09-14

🇬🇼 The programme of the international conference "The Unilateral Proclamation of Independence of Guinea-Bissau: Fifty Years Later (1973-2023)", which we will host on 22 and 23 September, is now available on our website.

The conference will be hybrid.

ℹ️ ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/en/events/unil

@histodons

#Histodons #Colonialism #AntiColonialism #GuineaBissau #PAIGC #StateBuilding #ColonialHistory #ColdWar #AfricanColonies

Poster of the international conference "The Unilateral Proclamation of Independence of Guinea-Bissau: Fifty Years Later (1973-2023)”. 22 and 23 September 2023. ColégioAlmada Negreiros, Auditorium A14 and A224 and via Zoom. The poster includes a photograph of the First People's National Assembly of Guinea-Bissau, in the liberated region of Madina de Boé, showing the audience sitting on chairs (with their backs turned) and Aristides Pereira giving a speech. Behind Aristides, you can see a banner with the text "The People's National Assembly is the first in the history of our land", a photograph of Amílcar Cabral, a Guinea-Bissau flag and a second banner with the text "The People's National Assembly is concrete proof of the sovereignty of our people and their degree of national consciousness".
2023-06-23

⚠️ Este é o último fim-de-semana da exposição #AmílcarCabral, que assinala os 50 anos do assassinato do fundador e líder histórico do #PAIGC através de 50 objectos, num percurso biográfico e pós-biográfico, da vida às "vidas póstumas".

A curadoria é de José Neves e Leonor Pires Martins.

📍 Está patente no Palácio Baldaya com entrada gratuita.

ℹ️ bit.ly/3JreGow

#50Anos25Abril #25A50 #Histodons #HistoryInThePublicSphere #AntiColonialism #LiberationWars #HistoryExhibitions

Cartaz da exposição “Amílcar Cabral”, patente no Palácio Baldaya, no número 701 da Estrada de Benfica, entre os dias 16 de Março e 25 de Junho de 2023. Organizada pela Comissão Comemorativa 50 anos 25 de Abril. O cartaz inclui uma foto de Amílcar Cabral.
2023-06-14

📰 Esta semana, a série "O Mundo de Amílcar Cabral", no @Publico, traz-nos mais um testemunho nórdico sobre #AmílcarCabral: o finlandês #MikkoPyhälä visitou as zonas libertadas da Guiné-Bissau em 1970 munido de um gravador, uma câmara fotográfica e outra de filmar. Os registos dessa aventura disseminaram a luta do #PAIGC na #Finlândia. 🇫🇮

#histodons #50Anos25Abril #25A50 #GuineaBissau #AntiColonialism #HistoryInThePublicSphere #SciComm #SciComPT #Finland

publico.pt/2023/06/11/mundo/no

2023-06-06

📖 Num capítulo publicado no livro "Modos de Fazer, Modos de Ser", na secção "Modos de Ver", Catarina Laranjeiro analisa uma foto de Milicianos do PAIGC encontrada no Arquivo Amílcar Cabral, reportando-se à Luta de Libertação na Guiné-Bissau.

No seu texto, a investigadora explora como a fotografia foi um poderoso pilar da experiência colonial.

🔓 O texto pode ser lido em #AcessoAberto aqui: books.openedition.org/etnograf

#histodons #AntiColonialism #LiberationWars #PAIGC #VisualSources

Fotografia de grupo de milicianos  do PAIGC numa formação militar, alinhados em fila indiana, com as mãos retas ao longo do corpo e os pés paralelos e fixos. Terá sido tirada entre 1963 e 1973, na Guiné-Bissau. Estão numa clareira de floresta, o chão está coberto de palha e vêm-se árvores ao fundo. Não usam farda militar, pelo que a foto deverá ser do início da luta armada. Fonte: Casa Comum / Fundação Mário Soares e Maria Barroso.
2023-06-05

📰 Não será um facto tão conhecido, mas o #PAIGC era o movimento africano que recebia mais apoio da Suécia.

Em mais um texto da série "O Mundo de Amílcar Cabral", no @Publico, Lars Rudebeck, que esteve com #AmílcarCabral tanto na Suécia como na Guiné, dá o seu testemunho sobre essa relação. 🇸🇪

#histodons #50Anos25Abril #25A50 #AntiColonialism #Sweden #GuineaBissau #HistoryInThePublicSphere #SciComm #SciComPT

publico.pt/2023/06/04/mundo/no

2023-06-02

Sugestão de serão / fim-de-semana:

Até 22 de Junho, não percam a oportunidade de visitar, gratuitamente, a exposição #AmílcarCabral, patente no Palácio Baldaya, em Benfica.

50 objectos (materiais e imateriais) ajudam-nos a conhecer melhor a vida e as "vidas póstumas" do líder do #PAIGC, 50 anos após o seu assassinato.

#50Anos25Abril #25A50 #histodons #AntiColonialism #LiberationWars #GuineaBissau #CapeVerde #HistoryInThePublicSphere

50anos25abril.pt/iniciativas/a

2023-05-29

📰 “Eis o primeiro dia da nossa criação como nação” — Estas palavras de Amílcar Cabral são o mote para o décimo texto da série "O Mundo de Amílcar Cabral", no @Publico.

Da autoria de Vincenzo Russo, aborda a relação entre o PAIGC, as esquerdas italianas e o Vaticano.

#histodons #50Anos25Abril #25A50 #AmílcarCabral #AntiColonialism #Vatican #Italy #PAIGC #HistoryInThePublicSphere #SciComm #SciComPT

publico.pt/2023/05/28/mundo/no

2023-05-17

Sobre a visita e a conversa de ontem com Mário Moutinho de Pádua e Jerónimo de Sousa, moderada por Maria Alice Samara, após a visita à exposição #AmílcarCabral no Palácio Baldaya.

#histodons #HistoryInThePublicSphere
#50Anos25Abril #25A50 #PAIGC #AntiColonialism #LiberationWars

50anos25abril.pt/noticias/conv

2023-05-16

📰 No oitavo artigo da série "O Mundo de Amílcar Cabral", no @Publico, Catarina Laranjeiro escreve sobre Cuba e a luta de libertação da Guiné-Bissau, uma ligação tão ou mais marcante do que a existente com a China e a URSS. 🇨🇺

Na exposição #AmílcarCabral, patente no Palácio Baldaya, podem encontrar outros elos desta ligação cubana.

#histodons #AntiColonialism #Cuba #PAIGC #SciComm #SciComPT #50Anos25Abril #25A50 #HistoryExhibitions #HistoryInThePublicSphere

publico.pt/2023/05/14/mundo/no

2023-05-15

🗣 The IHC and CEIS20 are organising an international conference on the proclamation of Guinea-Bissau independence, through the lens of connected histories, considering its local, regional, international and transnational dimensions.

We will host it in Lisbon, in September, and the call for papers is now open! 🇬🇼

@histodons
#histodons #AntiColonialism #PAIGC #GuineaBissau #CFP #LiberationWars #UnitedNations

ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/en/events/unil

2023-05-08

📰 No sétimo artigo da série "O Mundo de Amílcar Cabral", no @Publico, Victor Barros escreve sobre o Comité de Apoio a Angola e aos Povos das Colónias Portuguesas e, de forma mais abrangente, sobre a solidariedade anti-colonial francesa. 🇫🇷

#50Anos25Abril #25A50 #AmílcarCabral #PAIGC #AntiColonialism #France #histodons #SciComPT #SciComm #HistoryInThePublicSphere #HistoryOnTheMedia

publico.pt/2023/05/07/mundo/no

2023-04-17

📰 O quarto artigo da série "O Mundo de Amílcar Cabral", no @Publico, é assinado por Julião Soares Sousa, biógrafo de Amílcar Cabral, e explora as relações entre a China, Amílcar Cabral e o PAIGC. 🇨🇳

#histodons #AmílcarCabral #ColonialHistory #AntiColonialism #China #PAIGC #SciComm #SciComPT

publico.pt/2023/04/16/mundo/no

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