Samora Machel

Miscellaneous

Popular As Samora Moisés Machel

Birthday September 29, 1933

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Gaza Province, Portuguese Mozambique

DEATH DATE 1986-10-19, Mbuzini, Transvaal, South Africa (53 years old)

Nationality Mozambique

#22004 Most Popular

1933

Samora Moisés Machel (29 September 1933 – 19 October 1986) was a Mozambican military commander and political leader.

1940

However, Machel's father was a successful farmer: he owned four plows and 400 head of cattle by 1940.

Machel grew up in this farming village and attended mission elementary school.

1942

In 1942, he was sent to school in the town of Zonguene in Gaza Province.

The school was run by Catholic missionaries who educated the children in Portuguese language and culture.

Although having completed the fourth grade, Machel never completed his secondary education.

However, he had the prerequisite certificate to train as a nurse anywhere in Portugal at the time, since the nursing schools were not degree-conferring institutions.

1950

In the 1950s, he saw some of the fertile lands around his farming community on the Limpopo river appropriated by the provincial government and worked by White settlers who developed a wide range of new infrastructure for the region.

Like many other Mozambicans near the southern border of Mozambique, some of his relatives went to work in the South African mines where additional job opportunities were found.

Shortly afterwards, one of his brothers was killed in a mining accident.

Unable to complete formal training at the Miguel Bombarda Hospital in Lourenço Marques, he got a job working as an aide in the same hospital and earned enough to continue his education at night school.

He worked at the hospital until he left the country to join the Mozambican nationalist struggle in neighbouring Tanzania.

Machel was attracted to anti-colonial ideals and began his political activities in the Miguel Bombarda hospital in Lourenço Marques, where he protested against the fact that black nurses were paid less than whites doing the same job.

Machel decided to leave Lourenço Marques (Maputo), when a white anti-fascist, the pharmaceutical representative João Ferreira, warned him that he was being watched by the Portuguese political police, the PIDE.

He slipped across the border, and made his way to join FRELIMO in Dar es Salaam, via Swaziland, South Africa and Botswana.

In Botswana, he hitched a lift on a plane carrying recruits of the African National Congress of South Africa to Tanzania.

Impressed by the young Mozambican, a senior ANC official J.B. Marks (according to Joe Slovo) bumped one of the ANC recruits off the flight to let Machel on.

In Dar es Salaam, Machel volunteered for military service, and was one of the second group of FRELIMO guerrillas sent for training in Algeria.

Back in Tanzania, he was put in charge of FRELIMO's own training camp, at Kongwa.

1954

Machel started to study nursing in the capital city of Lourenço Marques (today Maputo), beginning in 1954.

1964

After FRELIMO launched the independence war, on September 25, 1964, Machel soon became a key commander, making his name in particular in the grueling conditions of the eastern area of the vast and sparsely populated province of Niassa.

1966

He rapidly rose up the ranks of the guerrilla army, the FPLM, and became the head of the army after the death of its first commander, Filipe Samuel Magaia, in October 1966.

1969

Frelimo's founder and first president, Eduardo Mondlane, was assassinated by a parcel bomb on February 3, 1969.

His deputy, Rev Uria Simango, expected to take over – but instead the FRELIMO Executive Committee appointed a presidential triumvirate, consisting of Simango, Machel and veteran nationalist and poet Marcelino dos Santos.

Simango soon broke ranks, and denounced the rest of the FRELIMO leadership in the pamphlet “Gloomy Situation in Frelimo”.

1970

This led to Simango's expulsion from the liberation front, and the election, in 1970, of Machel as Frelimo President, with dos Santos as Deputy President.

Like the late Mondlane, Machel identified himself with Marxism–Leninism, and under his leadership these positions became central to FRELIMO, which evolved from a broad front into a more Marxist party.

The new commander of the Portuguese army in Mozambique, Gen. Kaúlza de Arriaga, boasted that he would eliminate FRELIMO in a few months.

He launched the largest offensive of Portugal's colonial wars, Operation Gordian Knot, in 1970, concentrating on what was regarded as the FRELIMO heartland of Cabo Delgado in the far north.

Kaúlza de Arriaga boasted of destroying a large number of guerrilla bases – but since such a base was just a collection of huts, the military significance of such supposed victories was dubious.

Machel reacted by shifting the focus of the war elsewhere, stepping up FRELIMO operations in the western province of Tete.

This was where a massive dam was being built at Cahora Bassa, on the Zambezi, to sell electricity to South Africa.

Fearful that FRELIMO would attack the dam site, the Portuguese set up three concentric rings of defence around Cahora Bassa.

1972

This denuded the rest of Tete province of troops, and in 1972 FRELIMO crossed the Zambezi, striking further and further south.

1975

A socialist in the tradition of Marxism–Leninism, he served as the first President of Mozambique from the country's independence in 1975.

1986

Machel died in office in 1986 when his presidential aircraft crashed near the Mozambican-South African border.

Machel was born in the village of Madragoa (today's Chilembene), Gaza Province, Mozambique, to a family of farmers.

His grandfather had been an active collaborator of Gungunhana.

Under Portuguese rule, his father, like most Black Mozambicans, was classified by the demeaning term "indígena" (native).

He was forced to accept lower prices for his crops than White farmers; compelled to grow labour-intensive cotton, which took time away from the food crops needed for his family; and forbidden to brand his mark on his cattle to prevent thievery.