Agostinho Neto

Miscellaneous

Popular As Agostinho Antonio Neto

Birthday September 17, 1922

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace Ícolo e Bengo, Portuguese Angola

DEATH DATE 1979-9-10, Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union (57 years old)

Nationality Portuguese

#42152 Most Popular

1922

António Agostinho Neto (17 September 1922 – 10 September 1979) was an Angolan communist politician and poet.

Neto was born at Ícolo e Bengo, in Bengo Province, Angola, in 1922.

Neto attended high school in the capital city, Luanda; his parents were both school teachers and Methodists; his father, also called Agostinho Neto, was a Methodist pastor.

After secondary school he worked in the colonial health services, before going on to university.

The younger Neto left Angola for Portugal, and studied medicine at the universities of Coimbra and Lisbon.

1946

Agostinho Neto's poetic works were written chiefly between 1946 and 1960, largely in Portugal.

He published three books of poetry during his lifetime.

Several of his poems became national anthems.

1951

He combined his academic life with covert political activity of a revolutionary sort; and PIDE, the security police force of the Estado Novo regime headed by Portuguese Prime Minister Salazar, arrested him in 1951 for three months for his separatist activism.

1952

He was arrested again in 1952 for joining the Portuguese Movement for Democratic Youth Unity.

1955

He was arrested again in 1955 and held until 1957.

He finished his studies, marrying a 23-year-old Portuguese woman who was born in Trás-os-Montes, Maria Eugénia da Silva, the same day he graduated.

1956

In December 1956, the Angolan Communist Party (PCA) merged with the Party of the United Struggle for Africans in Angola (PLUAA) to form the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola with Viriato da Cruz, the President of the PCA, as Secretary General and Neto as president.

1959

He returned to Angola in 1959, was arrested again in 1960, and escaped to assume leadership of the armed struggle against colonial rule.

1960

The Portuguese authorities in Angola arrested Neto on 8 June 1960.

His patients and supporters marched for his release from Bengo to Catete, but were stopped when Portuguese soldiers shot at them, killing 30 and wounding 200 in what became known as the Massacre of Icolo e Bengo.

At first Portugal's government exiled Neto to Cape Verde.

Then, once more, he was sent to jail in Lisbon.

After international protests were made to Salazar's administration urging Neto's release, Neto was freed from prison and put under house arrest.

From this he escaped, going first to Morocco and then to Congo-Léopoldville.

1962

In 1962, Neto visited Washington, D.C., and asked the Kennedy administration for aid in his war against Portugal.

The U.S. government turned him down, because it had oil interests in colonial Angola, choosing instead to support Holden Roberto's comparatively anti-Communist National Liberation Front of Angola (FNLA).

1965

Neto met Che Guevara in 1965 and began receiving support from Cuba.

He visited Havana many times, and he and Fidel Castro shared similar ideological views.

1974

Following the Carnation Revolution in Portugal during April 1974 (which deposed Salazar's successor Marcelo Caetano), three political factions vied for Angolan power.

One of the three was the MPLA, to which Neto belonged.

Poems included collections like Sacred Hope, which was published in 1974 (Titled Dry Eyes in the Portuguese Version).

1975

He served as the first president of Angola from 1975 to 1979, having led the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) in the war for independence (1961–1974).

Until his death, he led the MPLA in the civil war (1975–2002).

Known also for his literary activities, he is considered Angola's preeminent poet.

His birthday is celebrated as National Heroes' Day, a public holiday in Angola.

When Angola gained independence in 1975 he became president and held the position until his death in 1979.

On 11 November 1975, Angola achieved full independence from the Portuguese, and Neto became the nation's ruler after the MPLA seized Luanda at the expense of the other anti-colonial movements.

He established a one-party state and his government developed close links with the Soviet Union and other nations in the Eastern Bloc and other Communist states, particularly Cuba, which aided the MPLA considerably in its war with the FNLA, the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA) and South Africa.

Neto made the MPLA declare Marxism-Leninism its official doctrine.

1977

As a consequence, he violently repressed a movement later called Fractionism which in 1977 attempted a coup d'état inspired by the Organização dos Comunistas de Angola.

In December 1977 at their first congress, they changed their name to MPLA-PT (MPLA Partido do Trabalho) officially adopting the Marxist-Leninist ideology, requested by Nito Alves.

Tens of thousands of followers (or alleged followers) of Nito Alves were executed in the aftermath of the attempted coup, over a period that lasted up to two years, although Agostinho Neto only ratified the death sentence of Nito Alves.

After corresponding with several relatives of the disappeared, Neto decided to dissolve the Directorate of Information and Security for the "excesses" they had committed.

According to his sons, President Neto never assigned business or privileges to them, suggesting that despite a controversial presidency he never forgot his humble origins.