The Socialist Agronomist Who Helped End Portuguese Colonialism

Peter Karibe Mendy

Before his assassination in 1973, Amílcar Cabral was one of Africa’s leading anti-colonialists — a brilliant agronomist and socialist whose leadership of the armed struggle against Portuguese rule brought the empire to its knees.

Amílcar Cabral in February 1964. (Wikimedia Commons)

Interview by
Sa’eed Husaini

Born in 1912, Amílcar Lopes de costa Cabral was a prolific Marxian theorist who not only led the war of independence that toppled Portuguese rule in Guinea Bissau and Cape Verde but influenced the fight for decolonization across the continent.

The first battle — a thirteen-year war of liberation that came to be known as “Portugal’s Vietnam” — pitted ten thousand members of Cabral’s African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) against thirty-five thousand Portuguese troops and mercenaries. For decades, the Portuguese had run a deeply exploitative, deeply repressive colonial regime. Then on August 3, 1959, colonial authorities killed fifty dockworkers striking under the PAIGC’s leadership. The massacre convinced many in the liberation movement that a peaceful path to national independence was impossible. They would have to take up arms.

An agronomist by training, Cabral was a committed pan-Africanist and socialist — advocating independence for all of Portugal’s African colonies, while also working to create a socialist bloc by unifying Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde. In the areas liberated during the war, Cabral set about building a quasi–social-democratic economy that featured state planning, state-owned enterprises, cooperatives, and small private enterprise. While Cabral didn’t live to see a free Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde — he was killed on January 20, 1973, likely by a Portugal-backed assassin — the liberation struggle he led helped spark the fall of Portugal’s fascist dictatorship and its colonial empire.

In his new biography, Amílcar Cabral: A Nationalist and Pan-Africanist Revolutionary, Bissau-Guinean scholar Peter Karibe Mendy provides an accessible introduction to the life of one of Africa’s most original thinkers and statesmen. Sa’eed Husaini recently spoke with Mendy about Cabral’s work as an agronomist, his views on economics and armed struggle — and what advice he would have for democratic struggles today.


Sa’eed Husaini

Why did you decide to write a new biography of Amílcar Cabral?

Peter Karibe Mendy

From a young age, I was aware of the importance of Cabral in the armed liberation struggles of the peoples of Guinea-Bissau (then called Portuguese-Guinea) and Cabo Verde. I grew up hearing and reading a lot about the bloody war against the Portuguese colonizers. Cabral’s effective leadership played a central role in the outcome, which culminated not only in independence for the two West African nations formerly ruled from Lisbon, but also served as a vital catalyst for the downfall of almost half a century of fascist dictatorship in Portugal and the collapse of the Portuguese empire in Africa.

Although much has been written about Cabral in the past four decades, his remarkable accomplishments have remained confined to a small group of Africanist scholars and general readers. In the context of neoliberal triumphalism, knowledge of Cabral’s visionary leadership qualities and progressive ideas have remained largely unknown in the world generally, and in postindependence Africa in particular, while in Guinea-Bissau and Cabo Verde, it has significantly faded.

Hence my strong motivation for writing the biography.

Sa’eed Husaini

Your book documents Cabral’s remarkable journey from an agronomy student to a leader of a successful liberation movement — as well as one of the foremost social theorists of his generation. What aspects of Cabral’s early upbringing set him on such a life path?

Peter Karibe Mendy

Cabral was of humble origins, growing up in a colonial setting characterized by brutal exploitation and oppression. He suffered hardships and witnessed firsthand “folk die from flogging” in his land of birth (Portuguese Guinea) and “folk die of hunger” in his ancestral homeland (Cabo Verde).

As a university student in Portugal, and as a trained agronomist, he experienced racism — which he found “nauseating” in its settler-colony manifestation in the case of Angola, where he worked as a young African agronomist.

Sa’eed Husaini

Is it correct to say that Cabral first encountered revolutionary ideas in cultural and literary form?

Peter Karibe Mendy

Cabral’s encounter during his high school years with the Claridade literary movement — which aimed to define and affirm the specific creole identity of the people of Cabo Verde — motivated him to write poems and prose. While the poets and prose at the time focused on the existential crises generated by the recurring drama of drought, famine, poverty, insularity, and emigration, Cabral’s poems and short stories, as well as his critique of the emergent nativist literature, underscored the need to transcend hopelessness and escapism and engage in profound transformational change.

Cabral argued that the weaponization of culture was imperative because colonial domination entailed cultural oppression. National liberation, he concluded, “is necessarily an act of culture.”

Sa’eed Husaini

As the book documents, Cabral was among a group of African students studying in Europe in the 1940s who felt a pull toward socialism and even joined European socialist and Communist political parties. What attracted “culturally liberated” African students in Portugal to fight against Portuguese fascism?

Peter Karibe Mendy

The involvement of Amílcar Cabral and his fellow African students in the fight against Portuguese fascism preceded and to some extent paralleled the process of the “re-Africanization of the spirit” they underwent, or the “return to the roots” they undertook. As assimilados (colonized Africans considered sufficiently “civilized” to be “assimilated” into Portuguese society), they had the same legal rights and obligations as the citizens of Portugal.

However, notwithstanding their status as Portuguese citizens, some of the African students, like Cabral, were already conscious of the harsh colonial order established in their countries and firmly maintained by the fascist dictatorship in Lisbon called the Estado Novo (New State). These students identified with and engaged in anti-fascist activities as “patriots,” but they were particularly attracted to the Portuguese socialists and communists that had messages of equality and social justice. Their active engagement in the clandestine anti-regime activities enabled some of them — like Cabral, Agostinho Neto and Mario de Andrade from Angola, and Marcelino dos Santos from Mozambique — to have access to literature provided by the Portuguese Communist Party.

Sa’eed Husaini

Following his studies, Cabral returned to Africa in the 1950s to conduct an agricultural survey on behalf of the Portuguese colonial state. However, while pursuing this research, Cabral became aware of the ways in which the colonial economy was impacting the soil, the environment, and the livelihoods of African farmers. How did colonialism disrupt peasant livelihoods?

Peter Karibe Mendy

As an agronomist, Cabral was well aware of the negative impact of colonialism on land and the environment. He studied and reported on environmental degradation and especially soil erosion resulting from intense cultivation of export commodities in Cabo Verde, Portuguese Guinea, and Angola — impacts that adversely affected the lives and livelihoods of the colonized populations.

The colonial economy of Portuguese Guinea was basically a peasant agrarian economy that produced commodities such as peanuts, rice, palm kernels, and rubber for export. The landmark agricultural census conducted by Cabral in 1953 showed that these export commodities were cultivated and gathered without the introduction of advanced technology, without any fundamental dislocation of traditional institutions, without significant expropriation of land, and without major population displacements.

Nevertheless, peasant livelihoods were disrupted by the obligation to pay colonial taxes in cash, which necessitated engagement in an export economy and put food security at risk. Although rice was (and remains) the most important staple crop, it was also a major export commodity. The export of rice caused shortages in some parts of the colony. Cabral underscored the importance of rice cultivation for the food security of the indigenous population, and cautioned about the production of peanuts that caused soil degradation and undermined traditional farming.

Sa’eed Husaini

Further radicalized by his encounter with the realities of peasant life in Portuguese-Guinea and through observing the violence of the colonial state, Cabral gave up his job as an agronomist in 1960 to become a full-time political strategist and theorist of the liberation movement. What was Cabral like in the realm of politics, and when, for him, did violence become necessary?

Peter Karibe Mendy

Cabral’s firm abhorrence of what he called “gratuitous violence” is well-documented. He strongly condemned the Portuguese massacres in São Tomé and Príncipe in February 1953, Mozambique in June 1955 and December 1972, in Portuguese Guinea in August 1959, and Angola in February and March 1961.

He favored dialogue, but the Portuguese were intransigent. The use of violence was a last-resort measure, and the violence used was selective to avoid or minimize collateral damages.

Cabral was not a trained soldier, and nor did he attend a military academy. But he had a sharp mind that approached problem resolution with critical analysis and deep reflection on constructed scenarios and possible outcomes. He was a strategic thinker, and a very articulate and skillful diplomat who made compelling arguments for the cause of national liberation.

From his decision to dedicate his life to liberation struggle until his untimely death, Cabral sacrificed his relatively privileged position in the metropole and in Portuguese colonial society as a “civilized,” “assimilated,” university-trained agronomist in favor of identification with his oppressed and exploited fellow colonized people. That was consistent with his notion of “class suicide.”

Sa’eed Husaini

Right, in the book you explain: “Acknowledging the leadership role of the nationalist petty bourgeoisie in the armed struggle, Cabral emphasized the need for it to ‘commit suicide as a class’ and ‘be reborn as revolutionary workers’ in order to avoid the ‘betrayal of the objectives of national liberation’ and prevent a transition from colonialism to neocolonialism.”

Is it correct to say that Cabral helped trigger the fall of the Estado Novo in Portugal?

Peter Karibe Mendy

Cabral’s revolutionary ideas and conduct of the armed liberation struggle influenced some of the Portuguese soldiers fighting against his army. The “movement of the captains” that later became the Armed Forces Movement (MFA) was born in Bissau in August 1973 and was led by war-fatigued junior officers who admired Cabral and accepted the radical idea that Portuguese colonialism in Africa must end.

The MFA staged a coup d’état on April 25, 1974, which toppled the forty-eight-year-old Estado Novo dictatorship, restored liberal democracy to Portugal, and facilitated the dismantlement of the Portuguese empire in Africa.

Sa’eed Husaini

You point out that the areas that were liberated under Cabral’s PAIGC during the liberation struggle saw marked economic gains. However, many of these gains were ultimately lost in the years following his death. Why is that?

Peter Karibe Mendy

In the areas of Portuguese Guinea liberated by the PAIGC, a system of People’s Stores emerged in response to Cabral’s urge to “destroy the economy of the enemy and build our own.” The peasant agricultural economy was reorganized to benefit the basic needs of residents, with the People’s Stores serving as outlets for surplus products that were exchanged for imported goods.

As an agronomist, Cabral knew that the destiny of agrarian societies like his country was very much tied to the development of agriculture, and that for agricultural production to increase or be sustained at a high level, rural producers and farmers had to be incentivized with attractive producer prices. His economic development strategy emphasized agriculture as the basis of the economy of the emerging independent nation and predicated national development and industrialization upon it. The strategy implied significant state intervention.

However, during the first decade of independence, in its drive to consolidate sovereignty over the national economy, the PAIGC ruling party implemented an urban-biased development plan that reinforced rural-urban disparities. With a disincentivizing price system and poor transport infrastructure, agricultural production declined.

The resulting economic crisis compelled the ruling party to abandon Cabral’s strategy and adopt liberal economic reforms, including structural adjustment programs advised and largely funded by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank. Efforts to restructure the Bissau-Guinean economy in favor of “free market economics” had little impact on the profound crisis of development, which was characterized by decaying physical and social infrastructure.

Sa’eed Husaini

Cabral’s revolutionary theory was aimed at dismantling colonialism and dictatorship. What would Cabral say to citizens in Africa’s nominally independent emerging democracies today?

Peter Karibe Mendy

Cabral’s revolutionary theory was aimed at ending colonial domination, but he believed that this objective would only achieve “flag independence.” He made a distinction between the struggle for independence that ends in neocolonial dependency and national liberation struggle that entails mental decolonization and profound socioeconomic transformations that favorably impact the lives of people.

Cabral’s message to citizens in contemporary Africa’s illiberal democracies would be: A luta continua — the struggles continues.

Sa’eed Husaini

What might he say to citizens in Western democracies today, as they battle with the possibility of democratic recession?

Peter Karibe Mendy

Given the prevailing paradoxes and contradictions of Western democracies, Cabral may feel vindicated by his concept of “revolutionary democracy” — which put an emphasis on popular participation in decisions that affect lives and livelihoods, popular control over state institutions, empowerment through education and training, and the establishment of an efficient economy to satisfy fundamental needs and aspirations.