Aquino de Bragança

At Panjim, Goa, April 2011, during the launch of the book on Aquino de Bragança.

Tomaz Aquino Messias de Bragança (born April 6, 1924 in Bardez (then Portuguese India), died October 19, 1986, Lebombo Mountains, on the South African side) was a Goan physicist, journalist, diplomat and Mozambican social scientist at the Eduardo Mondlane University. He played a leading intellectual and political role in the campaign for the decolonialisation of Mozambique from its colonial power Portugal.

Biography

Aquino's parents were João Paulo Proença Bragança and Ana Carlota Praxetes Antónia do Rosário Sousa. Both lived in the former Portuguese colony of Goa on the west coast of the Indian subcontinent. He spent his childhood in Goa, where he attended school. The high school he studied at was the Liceu Nacional de Afonso de Albuquerque in the town then called Pangim (also Nova Goa, later called Panjim then Panaji). In 1945 he took part in a training course for Chemical Engineering in Dharwad, in what was then British India.

Professional and political development

As a young adult, Aquino de Bragança was in Portuguese East Africa in 1947, there to look for work. During this time he was confronted with the effects of the Portuguese colonial policy, which exercised a decisive influence on him for the rest of his life.

Aquino de Bragança moved to Portugal by 1948, where he later met the writer Orlando da Costa, who was also from Goa, and who studied philosophy at the University of Lisbon. Here Aquino de Bragança also came across the physician Arménio Ferreira and the Casa dos Estudantes do Império, a centre for students from the African and other colonies of Portugal.

At Panjim, Goa, April 2011, during the launch of the book on Aquino de Bragança. From left, Miguel Braganza (a relative), historian Prajal Sakhardande, littérateur Dr Maria Aurora Couto, former Indian federal minister Eduardo Faleiro, author Silvia Bragança and Portuguese Consul-General in Goa Dr Antonio Costa Sabido.

In 1951, Aquino de Bragança headed for France. In Grenoble and Paris, he studied physics. In both places, he met students who were aware of the role of Portugal as a colonial power, and had negative and critical positions on the same, including Mário Pinto de Andrade, Frantz Fanon, and Marcelino dos Santos. Aquino de Bragança developed at that time a strong political consciousness of the Marxist variety and lived with the hope that the colony of Goa could be independent from Portugal. On the basis of his shared ideas with other activists from various Portuguese colonies, he created personal bonds.

Within such political activists, he developed a Paris-Casablanca Algiers group designated as an informal alliance, as a result of the Confederação das Organizações Nacionalistas das Colonias Portuguesas (CONCP, Conference of Nationalist Organisations of Portuguese Colonie).

In 1957 Aquino de Bragança emigrated to Morocco in Algeria to take to teaching science. Here he married his first wife Mariana. Both the couple's children were born in Morocco. During this time he worked as a journalist and increasingly wrote for the Simon Malley-founded Afrique-Asie magazine in Paris.

With the consent of King Mohamed V, he acted as the secretary of the editorial group of the Moroccan newspaper Al Istiklal and the private secretary of Ben Barka, a Moroccan opposition leader, whom he had met in Paris.

When the PAIGC and the MPLA in 1961 set up an office of CONCP in Rabat to coordinate the political work of the independence movement of Portuguese colonies, together with the trade unionist and campaigner George Vaz, he represented the Goan People's Party within the new organization. His participation in this umbrella organization led to a growing influence in CONCP Secretariat and expanding contacts with leading figures in the liberation movements on the African continent.

The Bragança family lived until 1962 in Morocco. In the same year they moved to Algiers in Algeria. During this time he worked under simple conditions and his journalistic activities offered only a modest living. He is co-founder of the weekly newspaper Révolution Africaine,[1] and wrote for the daily newspaper El Moudjahid.

By this time, the government of the dictator Salazar had become aware of his political activities and therefore sought an arrest warrant for the Portuguese secret police (PIDE) dated March 14, 1962. All his activities were monitored by the PIDE and recorded in regular reports.

In 1965, he is found as a participant of 3 to 8 October at the second CONCP conference in Dar es Salaam, which had Agostinho Neto as Secretary and was organised by Mário Pinto de Andrade (MPLA) and Amalia de Fonseca and Aquino himself. He participated as an author and co-author along with Pascoal Mocumbi and Edmundo Rocha of the conference documents (for example, "The political situation in Portugal" and "Liberation struggle in the Portuguese colonies").

On the recommendation of Simon Malley, he took on the task of commentator on issues in the Portuguese colonies since 1969 for Africasia, which later became Afrique-Asie. Together with Immanuel Wallerstein and Melo Antunes, the three-volume work Quem é o inimigo ("Who is the enemy?") came about. It dealt with key issues of colonialism, and first appeared in 1978 in Lisbon.

His work in Algeria reflects a stage of comprehensive journalistic activities with the objectives of promoting the African liberation movements and participation in logistical support, building their international profile and promoting the training of journalists. In this way, Aquino de Bragança was founder of the Algerian School of Journalism, where he taught courses in the sociology of journalism. During his varied activities he met leading figures of the liberation movements, was their counselor and was friends with a number of these people. From this group of people are Mário Pinto de Andrade, Ben Bella, Amílcar Cabral, Samora Machel, Agostinho Neto and Eduardo Mondlane.

After the Carnation Revolution of 1974 in Portugal, Aquino de Bragança decided to step up further engagement in Mozambique. This event had changed the balance of power in southern Africa completely. At the beginning of this new chapter of life, he was commissioned by Samora Machel in May 1974 with a political mission in Lisbon, in order to figure out the new negotiating partner for the FRELIMO in a situation where the power in a state of flux in the colonial capital, Lisbon.

This led to a meeting with Ernesto Melo Antunes and first official contacts with Mário Soares, whom he had met earlier in Paris, and with the Portuguese Minister for inter-territorial contacts, António de Almeida Santos. Aquino de Bragança introduced the first official talks on behalf of his future homeland of Mozambique with the new political forces of the former colonial power, Portugal. As a result there developed intense working contacts between the two sides, which were largely driven by Victor Crespo for the Portuguese government and by Joaquim Chissano and Aquino de Bragança for Mozambican negotiator. In September 1974, representatives from both sides met in Lusaka for further negotiations. In this context, there were discussions between Samora Machel and Ramalho Eanes, who later became President of Portugal, a longtime General in Angola and a member of the Movimento das Forças Armadas.

Cover of the English-language version of the Aquino biography.

After the victory of FRELIMO in Mozambique, Aquino de Bragança waived aside a possible ministerial post in the government of Samora Machel. Instead, he took over the position of his adviser, founded in 1975 the Center for African Studies at the Eduardo Mondlane University in Maputo. The following year he was appointed director of this research area. The studies were concerned with development issues within Mozambique and the situation in the neighboring country of Rhodesia. The South African journalist and sociologist Ruth First took over as Director of Research here in 1977. She had previously taught at the University of Durham, UK. Together, they put together an international group of social scientists. The first project of its collaboration dedicated under the title "The Mozambican Miner", focussing on the Mozambican miners in South Africa.[2] In the assassination of Ruth First in 1982 in the university premises by the use of a South African-sourced letter bomb, Aquino was seriously injured, while Ruth First died of this attack.

The amicable relationship of trust with Samora Machel gave him a special place in post-colonial Mozambique. Within the government, Aquino de Bragança was nicknamed "the submarine", apparently because of his ability to work behind the scenes. Asked about his political creed, he described himself as an "anti-anti-communist."

Aquino de Bragança died on 19 October 1986 in a much-publicized plane crash in the Lebombo Mountains, near the border between Mozambique and South Africa. With him on board the plane were President Samora Machel and 33 other senior officials of the country he chose to live in and be part of. The causes of the crash were still unclear. Before his death, Bragança worked on the preparations for a meeting between South African President Pik Botha and Samora Machel, which could have resulted in a reduction of conflicts between the two countries.

Family

Radek, son of Aquino de Bragança, at Panjim during a visit to Goa. Circa 2011.

Aquino de Bragança was married to Mariana Bragança. From his first marriage two children, daughter Maya (March 1, 1962) and son Radek (November 30, 1959) were born. On 23 May 1979 his first wife died after a battle with cancer. His second marriage to Silvia do Rosário da Silveira was on 22 September 1984. Both for a year had previously met in Lisbon.

Honours

Selected writings

Sources

References

Further reading

Sílvia Bragança, widow of Aquino de Bragança, photographed in Santo Estevam, Goa.

External links

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