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Modern — 1800 to 1950
Noémia de Sousa 1926-2002 · Mozambique (Portuguese East Africa)
Noémia de Sousa was a Mozambican poet and journalist who is widely called 'the mother of Mozambican poetry'. She was born Carolina Noémia Abranches de Sousa Soares in 1926 in Catembe, a coastal village just across the bay from what was then Lourenço Marques and is now Maputo. Her father was of mixed race and her mother had Portuguese roots; she grew up between worlds, neither fully accepted by colonial European society nor straightforwardly identified with the African majority. The position shaped her writing. Her father died when she was eight. Two of her brothers were already studying in Lisbon. She finished her own studies at a commercial school in Lourenço Marques. By her late teens she was already writing poetry and political journalism for O Brado Africano, the most important pro-African newspaper in colonial Mozambique. She edited the women's pages. Her poems began to circulate in literary circles across the Portuguese-speaking world. She wrote her major poetic work in just three years, between 1948 and 1951, when she was in her early twenties. In 1951 the Portuguese colonial authorities exiled her to Portugal. She was 25. She would never live in Mozambique again. She lived in Lisbon from 1951 to 1964, then in Paris from 1964 to 1973, working as a translator and journalist throughout. She returned to Lisbon after the 1974 Carnation Revolution. Her single poetry collection, Sangue Negro (Black Blood), circulated in samizdat form for decades. It was finally published in book form by the Mozambican Writers' Association in 2001, when she was 75. She died in Cascais, Portugal, in 2002. Her body was returned to Mozambique.
"If you want to understand me, come and bend over my African soul."