GRACA MACHEL BILA UKAKASI
Huyu ndiye
Graça Simbine Machel
Name:
Machel, Graça Simbine
Born: 17
October 1945, Gaza, Mozambique
In summary:
Deputy Director of the Frelimo Secondary School in Tanzania, member of
Frelimo's Central Committee and the Minister of Education and Culture in
Mozambique, Chairperson of the National Organization of Children of Mozambique,
Expert to Chair the Study on the Impact of Armed Conflict on Children and
President of the Foundation for Community Development.
Graça Simbine Machel was born on 17 October 1945, in Gaza,
Mozambique, the last in a family of six children. Her father, a Methodist
minister who had died three weeks before she was born, left explicit
instructions that her older siblings were to see her through high school. After
that, a church-based scholarship made it possible for her to attend Lisbon
University (Portugal) in 1968, to major in languages.
Under surveillance from the Portuguese secret police, she
was forced to abandon her education and flee to Switzerland to escape the
prison sentence that was almost certainly waiting for her due to her political
activities as a student.
In 1973, while she was in Europe she joined the
Marxist-based Mozambican Liberation Front (FRELIMO), an organised resistance
movement that was steadily gaining ground in the struggle against colonialism
from the Portuguese.
When Machel arrived in Tanzania from Europe, she found an
efficiently run FRELIMO headquarters operation, as well as storage facilities,
supply routes, and two training camps, one run by Chinese instructors, the
other by Russians. She underwent military training and learnt how to take an
assault rifle apart and put it back together. Subsequently, she spent a short
period in Mozambique's Cabo Delgado Province, where she met Samora Machel, the
FRELIMO commander who later became her husband.
In September 1975, she married Samora Machel, the first
president of newly independent Mozambique. She also became a willing stepmother
to her husband's five children by his first companion, Sorita, and his first
wife, Josina, who had died of leukaemia in 1971, after scarcely two years of
marriage. Samora and Graca Machel have two children of their own.
During the war for independence from the Portuguese rule,
FRELIMO set up schools in liberated territories and within their training camps
in neighbouring Tanzania. Machel participated in the armed struggle, and she
was appointed Deputy Director of the Frelimo Secondary School at Bagamoyo,
Tanzania, in 1974.
When Mozambique became independent and FRELIMO formed the
country’s first government in 1975, Machel became a member of Frelimo's Central
Committee and the Minister of Education and Culture. As Minister for Education
until 1989, Graça Machel worked to implement FRELIMO's goal of universal
education for all Mozambicans. From 1975 to 1985, the number of students
enrolled in primary and secondary schools rose from about 40 percent of all
school-aged children to over 90 percent for males and 75 percent for females.
Machel is recognised for her dedication to educating the
people of Mozambique, and for her leadership in organisations devoted to the
children of her war-torn country. She has been a major force in increasing
literacy and schooling in Mozambique and has spoken of the needs and rights of
children, families and community, from platforms all over the world.
Following President Machel’s death in a plane crash on 19
October 1986, she resigned her post as Minister of Education, leaving behind a
sterling record-1.5 million children in school, as against 400,000 when she had
arrived. As Minister of Education to the new government, she was able to reduce
the illiteracy rate by 72%.
Machel has striven for peace and reconciliation in her
country, and has attempted to further Mozambique's reconstruction and
development efforts. As President of the Foundation of Community Development,
she has facilitated greater community access to knowledge and technology and
patterns of sustainable human development.
In recognition of the particular devastation of war on
children, Machel became Chairperson of the National Organization of Children of
Mozambique, an organization that places orphans in village homes while
reinforcing the role of the family and community in the healing process. Machel
worked closely with families in her efforts to rehabilitate children, and to
empower Mozambican women.
Machel has also participated in international fora, as a
delegate to the 1988 UNICEF conference in Harare, Zimbabwe, and as the
President of the National Commission of UNESCO in Mozambique. In addition to
her many contributions, Machel also served on the international steering
committee of the World Conference on Education for All, held in 1990.
As chair of Mozambique's National Organization of Children
and president of the country's UNESCO commission, Machel was asked to chair a
study to assist young victims of Mozambique’s civil war that was published by
the United Nations (UN) on 11 November 1996. Machel's recommendations for
rehabilitation called on UNICEF to begin resettling all displaced children, and
to start funds specifically for their re-education. Machel's report also
focused on landmines. Her report endorsed the idea that humanitarian mine
clearance should become a routine part of all peace agreements, and that the
countries, which have profited from the manufacture and sale of these lethal
weapons should bear the huge cost of their removal.
She was appointed by the Secretary General of the United
Nations as an Expert to Chair the Study on the Impact of Armed Conflict on
Children. The Study on the Impact of Armed Conflict on Children, the first of
its kind in the history on the United Nations, demonstrated to the world
community the necessity of adopting effective measures for the promotion and
protection of the rights of the children who are victims of armed conflicts,
and to stimulate much greater international action to this end.
Machel is President of the Foundation for Community
Development (FDC), a not‐for‐profit organisation,she founded in 1994. FDC makes
grants to civil society organisations to strengthen communities, facilitate
social and economic justice and assist in the reconstruction and development of
post war Mozambique.
In the 1990s, the friendship between Graca and Nelson
Mandela, President of South Africa, whom Machel has known since her husband's
death deepened. The couple married on 18 July 1998.
Over the years, Machel has gained international recognition
for her achievements. Her many awards include the Laureate of Africa Prize for
Leadership for the Sustainable End of Hunger from the Hunger Project in 1992
and in 1995 the Nansen Medal in recognition of her contribution to the welfare
of refugee children. She has received the Inter Press Service’s (IPS)
International Achievement Award for her work on behalf of children
internationally, the Africare Distinguished Humanitarian Service Award and the
North-South Prize of the Council of Europe, among others.
In 2008, the University of Barcelona, Spain, awarded a
Doctor Honoris Causa to Machel. She has served on the boards of numerous
international organisations, including the UN Foundation, the Forum of African
Women Educationalists, the African Leadership Forum and the International
Crisis Group. Among her many commitments, she is Chair of the Global Alliance
for Vaccines and Immunization Fund, Chancellor of the University of Cape Town,
South Africa and a Panel Member of the African Peer Review Mechanism.
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