Jacques Rabemananjara

Jacques Rabemananjara
Born (1913-06-23)23 June 1913
Maroantsetra, Madagascar
Died 1 April 2005(2005-04-01) (aged 91)
Paris, France
Nationality Malagasy
Education Antananarivo
Known for Politics and poetry

Jacques Rabemananjara (23 June 1913 – 1 April 2005) was a Malagasy politician, playwright and poet. He served as a government minister, rising to Vice President.[1] Rabemananjara was said to be the most prolific writer of his negritude generation after Senghor, and he had the first négritude poetry published.[2]

Early life

Rabemananjara was born in Maroantsetra in Antongil Bay in eastern Madagascar on 23 June 1913[3] of Betsimisarakan origin.[2] He began his education on the island of Sainte Marie, but soon left to finish his studies at the seminary at Antananarivo, the capital of Madagascar.

In 1935-36 the Madagascan authorities prohibited any further publication of a monthly journal of young people of Madagascar, which he was responsible for. The magazine Revue des Jeunes de Madagascar had 10 issues.[3] The journal was an early example of political writing pre-dating later more well-known examples of négritude.[2]

Writing

Despite his leadership of the journal, Rabemanajara was chosen in 1939 to attend a commemoration in Paris for the 150th anniversary of the French revolution. Having travelled to Paris he was able to not only gain entry to the Sorbonne[3] and took courses in administration,[2] but also to get his first collection of poetry, On the Steps of the Evening, published. In Paris he met the Senagalese poet and politician Léopold Sédar Senghor and Alioune Diop who all participated in the important African studies journal Presence Africaine.[4]

His early work dealt in classical alexandrian metre with the early history of Madagascar.[2] His 1940 work Sur les marches du soir dealt with the forced exile of Queen Ranavalona III. She had been removed by the French colonial powers in 1897.[2] Rabemananjara published his play Les dieux malgaches, the first modern Malagasy play in French,[2] This play dealt with the pre-colonial past and with the coup that unseated King Radama II in 1863.

Politics

After the war he also met Raset Ravoahangy who was a partner with Rabemananjara in the creation of the MDRM (Democratic Movement for the Renovation of Madagascar).[3]

He was elected to represent the Tamatave region[3] in1946 as the third member of the National Assembly from Madagascar.[5] As a journalist at this time he interviewed Ho Chi Minh including his association with the Malagasy politician Jean Ralaimongo.[6] He was suspected of being involved in the instigation of the 1947 Malagasy Uprising, despite the fact that he had urged the rioters to be calm. He was arrested, and sentenced to life imprisonment with hard labour.[2]

During his captivity he wrote the poems Antsa, Lamba and Antidote. Rabemanajara was eventually pardoned in 1956. Rabemananjara's freedom allowed him to attend the first International Congress of Black Writers and Artists in Paris. He was one of the main speakers and earned a place at the top table of this important conference which was funded by UNESCO and was still celebrated 50 years later.[7]

He was exiled in France until Madagascar's independence in 1960. The new government under President Philibert Tsiranana asked him to join a number of ministries[3] and take the post of Vice President.[1]

Later years

Rabemanajara was again exiled after the 1972 revolution, but this was his choice and he was not to return for 20 years. He died in France on 1 April 2005.[3]

Major works

Poetry

Essays

Plays

Prizes

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Jack, Belinda (1996). Francophone Literatures. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 272. ISBN 0-19-871506-4. Retrieved 2008-11-26.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 European-language Writing in Sub-Saharan Africa, Albert S. Gérard, accessed 21 November 2008
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Jacques Rabemananjara, Lehman University English Translation
  4. The Surreptitious Speech, V. Y. Mudimbe, ISBN 0-226-54507-5, accessed 21 November 2008]
  5. The Cambridge history of Africa 8, Desmond J. Clark, J. D. Fage, Roland Anthony Oliver et al., p675, accessed 21 November 2008
  6. Ho Chi Minh, Pierre Brocheux, Claire Duiker, accessed 21 November 2008
  7. 50th anniversary of the first International Congress of Black Writers and Artists, Harvard.edu, accessed 24 November 2008
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