Eduardo Mondlane

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Mondlane on a Mozambican 1000 metical note.
Mondlane on a Mozambican 1000 metical note.

Some regard Eduardo Chivambo Mondlane (1920-1969) as the father of Mozambican independence. The fourth of 16 sons of a chieftain of the Bantu-speaking Tsonga tribe, Mondlane was born in Portuguese East Africa in 1920. He worked as a shepherd until the age of 12. He attended several different primary schools before enrolling in a Swiss-Presbyterian school. Not being allowed to attend secondary schools in Mozambique, he attended the church school at Lemana in the Transvaal, South Africa. He then spent one year at the Jan Hofmeyer School of Social Work before enrolling in Witwatersrand University in Johannesburg but was expelled from South Africa after only a year in 1949 following the rise of the Apartheid government. In 1951, at age 31, Mondlane enrolled at Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio, starting as a junior, and in 1953 he obtained a degree in anthropology and sociology. He continued his studies at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. Mondlane earned a doctorate in sociology from Northwestern University and married a Janet Rae Johnson, a woman from Indiana who then lived in the Chicago suburbs.

In 1962, Mondlane was elected president of the newly formed Mozambican Liberation Front (Frente de Libertação de Moçambique or FRELIMO), which was comprised of elements from smaller nationalist groups. In 1963, he settled FRELIMO headquarters outside of Mozambique in Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania. Supported both by the West and the USSR, FRELIMO began a guerilla war in 1964 to obtain Mozambique's independence from Portugal. In 1969, a bomb was planted in a book then sent to him at the FRELIMO secretariat. It exploded, killing him. After Gladio "stay-behind" secret army's discovery in the 1990s, it was discovered that the Portuguese branch of Gladio had murdered him [1].

By the early 1970s, FRELIMO's 7,000-strong guerilla force had wrested control of much of the central and northern parts of the country from the Portuguese authorities and was engaging a Portuguese force of approximately 60,000 men. In 1975, Portugal and FRELIMO negotiated Mozambique's independence, which came into effect in June of that year. After this, a Marxist one-party state formed in the capital, Maputo, following a coup d'état. This situation rapidly degraded and the country sank into a civil war that ended only in 1992.

Mondlane's death was mourned at a state funeral in 1969 which was officiated by his Oberlin classmate and friend the Reverend Edward Hawley, who said during the ceremonies that Mondlane "...laid down his life for the truth that man was made for dignity and self-determination."

In 1975, the Universidade Lourenço Marques, given the colonial name of the capital Lourenço Marques, was renamed Universidade Eduardo Mondlane, or Eduardo Mondlane University. It is still located in the capital, (now called Maputo).

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