Abdias do Nascimento
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Abdias do Nascimento (b. March 14, 1914, in Franca, Sao Paulo state) is a prominent Afro-Brazilian scholar, artist, and politician.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Pan-African topics |
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General |
Pan-Africanism |
Kwanzaa |
Colonialism |
Africa |
Maafa |
Black People |
Academics |
African philosophy |
Black nationalism |
Art |
FESPACO |
African Art |
PAFF |
People |
Kwame Nkrumah |
Marcus Garvey |
Malcolm X |
W.E.B. Du Bois |
Haile Selassie |
Cheikh Anta Diop |
Muammar al-Gaddafi |
Stokely Carmichael |
Saad Gondal |
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Abdias attended public school as a child and joined the military in 1930, but was discharged for disorderly conduct a few years later. He received a B. A. in Economics from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro in 1938, and graduate degrees from the Higher Institute of Brazilian Studies (1957) and the Oceanography Institute (1961) . Nascimento travelled South America with a group of poets calling themselves the "Santa Irmandad Orquidea", or the "Holy Brotherhood of the Orchid" and developed an interest for the dramatic arts. Returning to Rio de Janeiro, he founded the Black Experimental Theater in 1944. He performed in Orfeu da Conceiçao, a play by Vinicius de Moraes which was later adapted into the motion picture Black Orpheus. He became a leader in Brazil's black movement, and was forced into exile by the military regime in 1968.
[edit] Life in Exile
From 1968-1981 Nascimento was very active in international Pan African Movement and elected Vice-President and Coordinator of the Third Congress of Black Culture in the Americas. For the next decade Nascimento held positions as a Visiting Professor at several universities in the United States including Yale University’s School of Drama (1969-1971), and University at Buffalo, The State University of New York, where he founded the chair in African Cultures in the New World, Puerto Rican Studies Program in 1971. He currently holds the position of Professor Emeritus at SUNY-Buffalo.
[edit] Return to Brazil
Nascimento returned to Brazil in 1983 was elected to the federal Chamber of Deputies. There his focus was supporting legislation to address racial problems. In 1994 he was elected to the Senete and served until 1999. In 2004 he was nominated for the Nobel Prize for Peace.
[edit] Selected Publications
- Africans in Brazil : a Pan-African perspective (1997)
- Orixás :os deuses vivos da Africa = Orishas : the living gods of Africa in Brazil (1995)
- Race and ethnicity in Latin America "African culture in Brazilian art" (1994)
- Brazil, mixture or massacre? essays in the genocide of a Black people(1989)
- Sortilege (black mystery) (1978)
- Racial Democracy in Brazil, Myth or Reality?: A Dossier of Brazilian Racism (1977)
[edit] Filmography
- Cinema de Preto (2005)
- Cinco vezes Favela (1962)
- Terra da Perdição (1962)
- Homem do Sputnik, O (1959)
[edit] References
- Joseph A. Page (1995), The Brazilians. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-201-44191-8.
- Abdias do Nascimento; The Only Brazilian That I'm Proud Of! (biography)
[edit] External links
Muammar al-Gaddafi · Molefi Kete Asante · Steve Biko · Edward Wilmot Blyden · Amílcar Cabral · David Comissiong · Cheikh Anta Diop · W.E.B. Du Bois · Frantz Fanon · Marcus Garvey · Sankofa Juba · Maulana Karenga · Kenneth Kaunda · Jomo Kenyatta · Akwatu Khenti · Patrice Lumumba · Bob Marley · Malcolm X · Thabo Mbeki · Zephania Mothopeng · Abdias do Nascimento · Kwame Nkrumah · Julius Nyerere · George Padmore · Dr Motsoko Pheko · John Nyathi Pokela · Runoko Rashidi · Walter Rodney · Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia · Robert Mangaliso Sobukwe · Burning Spear · Henry Sylvester-Williams · Ahmed Sékou Touré · Kwame Ture (Stokely Carmichael) · I.T.A. Wallace-Johnson · Omali Yeshitela ·
Philosophies and concepts: United States of Africa · Afrocentrism · Kwanzaa · Pan-African colours · Pan-African flag · Négritude · African nationalism · African socialism ·African Century · Africanization· African Code· Kawaida
Organizations and movements: African Union (preceded by the Organization of African Unity) · AAPRP · Uhuru Movement · UNIA-ACL · AllAfrica.com · African Unification Front · African diaspora