From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Amílcar Cabral, with the flag of
Guinea-Bissau in the background, on a
DDR stamp
Amílcar Lopes Cabral (Portuguese
pronunciation: [ɐˈmilkaɾ ˈlɔpɨʃ kɐˈbɾal]; 12 September
1924(1924-09-12) – 20 January 1973) was an Guinea-Bissaunian
agronomic engineer, writer, Marxist and nationalist guerrilla and politician. Also known by
his nom de guerre Abel
Djassi, Cabral led African nationalist movements in Guinea-Bissau and
the Cape Verde Islands and led Guinea-Bissau's
independence movement. He was assassinated in 1973 by Guinea-native
agents of the Portuguese
colonial authorities, just months before Guinea-Bissau declared
unilateral independence.
Early
years
He was born on September 12, 1924 in Bafatá, Portuguese Guinea, son of a Cape Verdean father and
Guinean mother. Cabral was
educated at a licéu in
Cape Verde and later in Lisbon
(the capital of Portugal
which was the colonial power that ruled over Portuguese
Guinea) at the Instituto Superior de
Agronomia. While an agronomy student in Lisbon he founded
student movements dedicated to African liberation.
He returned to Africa in the 1950s, and was instrumental in
forming a number of independence movements on the continent. He was
founder (in 1956) of the PAIGC or Partido Africano da Independência da Guiné e Cabo
Verde (Portuguese for African Party
for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde) as well as the
Movimento Popular Libertação de
Angola (MPLA) (later in the same year), the later with Agostinho Neto
whom he met in Portugal.
War for
independence
Beginning in 1963, Cabral led the PAIGC in a guerrilla movement which evolved into a
military conflict against the Portuguese ruling authorities of Portuguese
Guinea. The goal of the conflict was to attain independence for
both Portuguese Guinea and Cape Verde. Over the course of the conflict,
as the group captured territory from the Portuguese, Cabral was
made the de facto leader of a large portion of Guinea-Bissau.
Even before the war for liberation began, Cabral set up training
camps in neighboring Ghana with
the permission of Kwame Nkrumah. Cabral trained his
lieutenants through rigorous mock conversations to talk with their
tribal chiefs and convince them to support the PAIGC and the
independence movement before he trained them in military tactics.
Later in the war, Cabral found that members of the PAIGC who
successfully converted their own tribe to the cause of the PAIGC
would not leave to help convince and gather the support of other
tribes, he instituted a rotation program where his trainees would
no longer be sent to their home tribe.
As an agronomist, he realized that his troops needed to be fed
and live off the land alongside the larger populace. He taught his
troops to teach local crop growers better farming techniques, thus
raising the productivity of the farms to feed their own family and
tribe, as well as the soldiers in the military wing of the PAIGC.
During down time, PAIGC soldiers would till and plow the fields
alongside the local population.
Cabral and the PAIGC also set up a trade-and-barter bazaar
system that moved around the country and made staple goods
available to the countryside at prices lower than that of colonial
store owners. During the war, Cabral also set up a roving hospital
and triage station to give medical care to wounded PAIGC's soldiers
and quality-of-life care to the larger populace, relying on medical
supplies garnered from the USSR and Sweden. The bazaars and triage stations were at
first stationary until they came under frequent attack from
Portuguese forces.
In 1972, Cabral began to form a People's Assembly in preparation
for an independent African nation, but disgruntled former rival
Inocêncio Kani shot and killed him with the help of Portuguese
agents operating within the PAIGC. The Portuguese enjoined the help
of this former rival to bring Amílcar Cabral to meet Portuguese
authorities to sign a document stating the independence of
Guinea-Bissau. The assassination took place on 20 January 1973 in
Conakry, Guinea. His half-brother, Luís Cabral,
became the leader of the Guinea-Bissau branch of the party and
would eventually become President of Guinea-Bissau.
Tributes
Amílcar Cabral
International Airport, Cape Verde's principal international
airport at Sal, is named in his honor. There is
also a football competition, the Amílcar Cabral Cup, in zone 2, named
as a tribute to him. In addition, the only privately owned
university in Guinea-Bissau is named after him—Amílcar Cabral
University—and is in Bissau.
Sources
Further
reading
- Bienen, Henry. "State and Revolution: The Work of Amilcar
Cabral", Journal of Modern African Studies, 15 (4):
555–568 (1977).
- Chabal, Patrick. Amilcar Cabral: Revolutionary Leadership
and People's War. New York and Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press,
1983. ISBN 0521249449.
- Chailand, Gérard. Armed Struggle in Africa: With the
Guerrillas in "Portuguese" Guinea. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1969. ISBN
0853451060.
- Dhada, Mustafah. Warriors at Work. Niwot, Colorado,
USA: Colorado University Press, 1993.
- McCollester, Charles. "The Political Thought of Amilcar
Cabral." Monthly Review, 24: 10–21 (March
1973).
Films
- Cabral's political thought and role in the liberation of
Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde is discussed at some length in Chris Marker's film,
Sans
Soleil. He is also the subject of a Portuguese documentary
released in 2000.
External
links