Abstract

In 1952, Cabral obtains his degree in agronomy, with a dissertation on peasants in the South of Portugal, Alentejo, and moves to Guinea-Bissau, as the director of an experimental farm. From 1952 to 1959, Cabral will be involved in various subversive activities against Portuguese colonialism without relinquishing his official position in the colonial administration. It is in fact as an agronomist, working mainly for colonial agricultural farms that Cabral visits Angola a couple of times and becomes the main point of contact between nationalists in Lisbon and other parts of Europe and those who were in the Portuguese-dominated African countries.

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