Samora Machel's Ideology of the ‘New Man’ on Mozambican Nation Formation

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Arnaldo Pinto Teixeira Caliche

Resumo

Samora Machel became President of the Front for the Liberation of Mozambique (FRELIMO) in 1970 and the first President of the People’s Republic of Mozambique in 1975. He waged a determined fight against the so-called “enemies of the people,” as well as alleged “infiltrators” and “traitors” of the revolution. Central to his political vision was the ideology of the “New Man,” conceived as the foundation for building a Mozambican nation committed to social justice and equality, and free from exploitation, tribalism, racism, discrimination, and poverty. This paper examines the “New Man” both as a theoretical political concept (1970–1974) and as a practical governing ideology (1975–1986). It argues that Samora used methods of military command, developed during the liberation struggle, to enforce this vision. Civil society, however, often saw these methods as a form of military dictatorship and authoritarianism, which undermined the broader project of creating a “New Man” and a new society in the post-colonial period. The analysis is based on a close reading of selected speeches in which Samora addressed the idea of the “enemies of the people.” These are compared with his deliberative and judicial addresses before and after the signing of the Lusaka Agreement in 1974. The study further includes speeches delivered between FRELIMO’s adoption of Marxism–Leninism in 1977 and Samora’s death in 1986. These primary sources are examined alongside Samora’s own writings, published by FRELIMO’s Department of Ideological Work between 1976 and 1983, as well as a growing body of secondary literature on his political biography.

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Pinto Teixeira Caliche, A. (2025). Samora Machel’s Ideology of the ‘New Man’ on Mozambican Nation Formation. AbeÁfrica: Revista Da Associação Brasileira De Estudos Africanos, 11(11), 706–738. https://doi.org/10.36942/abe-africa.v11i11.1510
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