FlyingSquid,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

For a country that both established the transatlantic slave trade and was one of the last to continue reaping its profits – it was still using de-facto slave labour in its colonies in the 1960s – Portugal has been slow to reckon with its past.

The national school curriculum, museums and tourism infrastructure all amount to a grandiose rendering of the country’s 15th to 17th-century “discoveries” in Africa, Asia and the Americas, and a selective recollection of its 20th-century colonial exploits in Angola, Mozambique, Guinea Bissau, Cape Verde, São Tomé & Principe, Goa, Macau and East Timor.

There are monuments and statues up and down the country dedicated to navigators, missionary priests responsible for the conversion of Africans and Indigenous people to Catholicism, or soldiers who fought against African independence in the colonial wars. Meanwhile, it is often said that “Portugal is not a racist country”, despite enormous structural inequalities and decades of documented discrimination. “There has been a silencing here of centuries of violence and trauma,” says Kia Henda.

aljazeera.com/…/how-portugal-silenced-centuries-o…

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • world@lemmy.world
  • DreamBathrooms
  • magazineikmin
  • everett
  • thenastyranch
  • khanakhh
  • Youngstown
  • slotface
  • Durango
  • ngwrru68w68
  • rosin
  • kavyap
  • PowerRangers
  • InstantRegret
  • vwfavf
  • Leos
  • mdbf
  • cisconetworking
  • osvaldo12
  • tacticalgear
  • ethstaker
  • hgfsjryuu7
  • tester
  • GTA5RPClips
  • modclub
  • cubers
  • normalnudes
  • anitta
  • provamag3
  • All magazines