African
Revolutionary Writers, Part 4b
Agostinho Neto
Agostinho Neto, the first President of MPLA and the first
President of the independent republic of Angola, was a great writer - a poet -
as well as a great revolutionary leader.
The attached
document, also linked below, is as good an example as could be found of how,
through radio, speech, and eventually through the translation and compilation
of the same into a pamphlet by the solidarity movement, the kinds of words
which held the liberation movement together, and also publicised it, were made
and multiplied.
Now, in 2012, it may be thought that the propagation of such
words was easy in those days, or automatic. Nothing could be further from the
truth. The liberation movements were outsiders. Their supporters in other
countries, whom Neto here mentions and acknowledges, were not in the
mainstream. The countries which now parade as “the international community”, as
“NATO”, the “ICC”, and in other guises - in other words the governments of the
metropolitan Imperialist countries - in those days were solidly and quite openly
supporting colonialism. Portugal, for example, was then (and has never since
ceased to be) a leading member of NATO, which is actually the armed wing of
imperialism.
In these particular writings Neto does not, as the linked
writings of Mondlane and Cabral did, reflect explicitly on the place of
intellectual work in the national democratic revolution.
Instead, this set of three items, presented together as a
pamphlet, directly exemplifies such intellectual work in practice.
It is hard not to be moved by these words even after the
passage of 40 years. They still have the immediacy and the urgency that they
had when they were spoken by Agostinho Neto and when they were heard by the
three different audiences to which they were addressed.
These words carry truths and lessons that still need to be
learned and re-learned.
In a different mood, some of Agostinho Neto’s poems,
translated into English, can be read if you click here.
- The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: Agostinho Neto, Messages to Companions in the Struggle, 1972, Part 1, and Part 2.
- To download any of the CU courses in PDF files please click here.
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