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Geopolitics

50 Years Of Portugal's "Carnation Revolution" — It All Began In Africa

It all started on April 25, 1974, when some frustrated military officers — who had seen with their own eyes the effects of colonization in Western Africa — decided to overthrow the military regime. And over the past half-century, Portugal has gone from an archaic dictatorship to bona fide cool corner of the Western world.

Photo of a hand brandishing a carnation flower in a crowded square in Portugal

Carnations, a symbol of the 1974 revolution in Portugal

Pierre Haski

-Analysis-

It was 00:20 in Lisbon on April 25, 1974, when the forbidden song "Grandola, Vila Morena" was broadcast on Catholic radio. It was the signal the putschists had been waiting for to take action.

In a matter of hours, 50 years ago, Europe's oldest dictatorship fell; the regime established in 1932 by Antonio Salazar, and continued by Marcelo Caetano, collapsed in the face of the determination of the Armed Forces Movement, a collective of officers bent on putting an end to Portugal's colonial wars.

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It was in Africa that the dictatorship sealed its fate, not in Portugal, where its fearsome political police, the PIDE, prevented any dissent. In Guinea Bissau, Angola and Mozambique, Portugal ignored the winds of decolonization that swept across most of the continent in 1960. Fourteen years later, its unwinnable colonial wars produced their most astonishing result: the "Carnation Revolution", the democratization of the metropolis.

Why did it all start in Africa?


Letters from Angola

To understand this, it's necessary to read the Letters from Angola that future writer Antonio Melo Antunes wrote to his wife while serving as a military doctor in Africa's main Portuguese colony in the early 70s. They reveal the life experience and disillusionment of young officers sent to fight guerrillas that had motives they understood.

Portugal was an anachronistic colonial power.

For some officers, it was even the occasion of their conversion to Marxist ideas that had been banned by their regime, but which were permeating the main nationalist movements during the Cold War. This politicization was reflected in the "Carnation Revolution".

This revolution would take at least two years to settle down, between right-wing attempts to save the empire and extreme left-wing dreams of a proletarian dictatorship, before transforming Portugal into a democracy compatible with the rest of Western Europe. Portugal joined the European Community with post-Franco Spain in 1986.

Portuguese daily Publico lended its Thursday front page to the 50-year anniversary of the Carnation Revolution and the "path to freedom" that it opened.

Publico

A radical change

This revolution has left Portugal with a strong relationship with Portuguese-speaking Africa, despite a hasty and botched decolonization process, particularly in Angola, which suffered a terrible civil war. As the poorest country in Western Europe, Portugal was an anachronistic colonial power: this enabled it to avoid the neo-colonial temptation of Gaullism, since it didn't have the means to do so.

In half a century, this country has gone from archaic dictatorship to cool tourist destination.

But it was in building a modern country that Portugal legitimized its revolution, which today has won consensus. There are hardly any people nostalgic of Salazarism, and if the far right made a breakthrough in the last elections, it's because Portugal is joining the European norm — no country is immune to this today.

It's remarkable that in half a century, this country has gone from archaic dictatorship to cool tourist destination, from land of emigration to envied country. Despite the debt crisis 15 years ago, despite property prices, despite climatic uncertainties... Portugal has normalized, in the best meaning of the word. And it owes this primarily to a handful of officers who returned frustrated from their military missions in Africa.

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Society

The Perilous Gurus Of Online Psychology, From Reiki To "Touch Therapy" As Sex Abuse Cure

Social networks are full of false gurus who claim to be experts in mental health and well-being. Do we need new laws against these kinds of charlatans to restore credibility to professional psychology?

The Perilous Gurus Of Online Psychology, From Reiki To "Touch Therapy" As Sex Abuse Cure

Many unqualified practitioners accumulate large numbers of followers and work with influencers who sponsor their services.

Loola Pérez

-Analysis-

The dangers of the internet spreading pseudo-therapies for mental health illness accelerated with COVID-19: not only did the pandemic increase mental health awareness, but the sudden arrival of lockdowns also the increased the digitalization of psychology services.

Social networks are full of false gurus who, with or without a university degree, claim to be experts in well-being. Often they don't go beyond advice like "live in the present" or "notice your breath" or "try to contact with others to overcome trauma."

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To identify with generic advice like this is absolutely normal. Who wouldn't like to focus on the here and now? Who wouldn't find it relaxing to take a short walk or do some meditation exercises and put their life on pause for a few minutes? But it tends not to last, and you find yourself quickly back to a sense of frustration, or even the feeling of having an all-around shitty life.

This tends to send us going in circles, lost in though rather than taking responsibilities, breaking with victimhood or unlearning dysfunctional behavioral patterns. Because the problem, most of the time, does not reside in thinking too much, but in not thinking correctly.

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