“It happens with few men, as it does with you, that life is so completely mixed up with the History of your People.”Footnote 1 Marcelino dos Santos offered these words in eulogy, as Mozambique buried Samora Machel, the country's first president and leader of Frelimo, the governing party that had fought Portuguese colonial rule and delivered an independent Mozambique in 1975.Footnote 2 Machel confidant and long-time Frelimo member, dos Santos spoke directly to the deceased leader, using the informal, intimate tu. Charting Machel's life course from his youth to his political maturation and entry into Frelimo's guerrilla forces, dos Santos continued, “To speak of you, from that moment on, is to tell the History of FRELIMO, the History of Mozambique.”Footnote 3 Seemingly still present, “you are the undying symbol of moçambicanidade” (Mozambicanness).Footnote 4 To be sure, for many, Machel's personal magnetism had made flesh so expansive an assertion, conflating the man and the nation.Footnote 5 Many, but not all; some who lived in Mozambique saw themselves neither in this history nor in this expression of moçambicanidade, and they could not imagine themselves belonging to, or in, this community. In this misalignment, dos Santos's words exemplified Frelimo's attempt to imagine a nation, a project laid to rest alongside Machel.
The attempt foundered, because Frelimo's style of imagination excluded too many of the idioms of identity and belonging that might have allowed Mozambicans to see themselves reflected back from Frelimo's vision of the nation. Footnote 6 The nation Frelimo summoned had no place for obligations and rights derived from established notions of authority, such as chieftaincy, or familiar ideas of connection between self and other, such as spiritual belief and practice. Those beliefs and practices, so central to how people inhabited the surrounding world, had roots in the past, even as their everyday expression included sometimes recent deflections from earlier forms. In its relentless forward orientation, Frelimo rejected the past, along with many associated present beliefs or practices, unless they could be tied to Frelimo's origin story. (One such exception: precolonial leaders who had fought Portuguese encroachment or invasions, earning the status of anticolonial resisters avant la lettre.Footnote 7) Frelimo sought to unmoor people from these known relations and attach them to others that were largely unfamiliar.
For those so inclined, the unmooring could be an unburdening, but for others, to jettison what was known and familiar in favor of the strange required either a proverbial leap of faith or at least a powerful exercise of imagination. It meant to see themselves, in their mind's eye if not their surroundings, belonging in communities and engaged in relations that for the most part did not yet exist. In this, Frelimo's nationalism was marked by a unity it sought to create that was rooted not only in place, but in time. Like many others, Frelimo's nationalism posed a spatial commonality among those who lived between the Maputo and Rovuma rivers (at the country's southern and northern borders, respectively), a territorially defined nation-state like any other. While many people could imagine themselves among others who lived in the nation's territory, the time in which Frelimo summoned them see themselves was another matter. Frelimo not only looked to a future horizon, a common enough stance among nationalists, but insisted that people live as if they already were beyond that horizon. It was a demand to live “the future now—as imperative rather than subjunctive.”Footnote 8 The nation Frelimo imagined existed in a moment that had not yet arrived, and to join that nation, Mozambicans faced the tremendous challenge of attempting to live in the future tense.
As one member of a village-level group charged with carrying out the endeavor told me, “it was not easy to remove ideas that existed, and replace them with others, of a future that was not there.”Footnote 9 In step with revolutionary movements elsewhere (Angola, Cuba, China, the Soviet Union), Frelimo's nation included a figure to guide people in making this imaginative leap: the Homem Novo (New Man).Footnote 10 The Homem Novo was a personification of the future's potential, at once an object Frelimo targeted for individual change and the subject expected to carry out collective social transformation. For actual, as opposed to notional, new men, it meant to act as if the future had already arrived, requiring them to turn away from the world they knew and live in a future one.Footnote 11 That many Mozambicans were unable or unwilling to embrace this unstable duality in time doomed Frelimo's nationalism.
Through a close reading of the language used to style its nation, I examine how Frelimo framed the imaginative act Mozambicans were to make. I focus on watchwords, the language Frelimo used to inform, mobilize, and orient the population at large. Watchwords — in Portuguese, palavras de ordem — were the expression of thinking among leadership, and cascaded outward and downward in spoken, written, and graphic forms. My analysis follows their trajectory from their origins at the heights of leadership, to their broadcast dissemination in print media and other publications, and their use and implementation in village- and district-level settings. In reconstructing the chain of use and transmission, I show how different categories of people used them, in different settings, and how their meaning and effect evolved accordingly.Footnote 12 The focus is on how people used watchwords in the middle ground, the territory where Frelimo's topline goals, and their corollary strategies, became specific, concrete tactics. The middle ground — a vital space between elite vision and grassroots reception — is where local officials, cadres, and others transformed ideas into actions, determining just how ordinary Mozambicans encountered the vision of Frelimo's nation. The view shows how cadres put watchwords into the operational terms, becoming — as one person explained to me more than three decades later — “our daily bread.”Footnote 13 In examining how Frelimo sought to style the nation as a cultural formation, its political project of nationalism, and it unimaginability, comes clearly into view.Footnote 14
I write of Frelimo's nationalism, and not Mozambican nationalism, for two reasons.Footnote 15 First, Frelimo's vision of national community was inseparable from the self-understandings, both individual and collective, held among its leadership — something quite different from popular nationalist sentiment that may exist parallel to and even in tension with state-promoted forms.Footnote 16 Frelimo's idea of the nation imagined Mozambicans not as they were, but as they might become, and with its watchwords, Frelimo summoned them to enter its nation or face exclusion from it. In this, Frelimo engaged in a struggle “over the form and meaning of nationhood,” a struggle that had started before and continued on after formal independence.Footnote 17 Second, while Frelimo leaders believed their understanding of national community was, or at least could become, coequal with the population living within the country's borders, they were wrong, and the skew of the mismatch left their idea of the nation unimaginable.
Finally, in writing of an abandoned nationalism and unimaginable nation, I mean something different from the understanding that all nationalisms are, inevitably, incomplete struggles that cannot achieve closure. Noting the pivot Frelimo made in the later 1980s, Alice Dinerman writes of an “ideological reorientation,” a process that began around the time of Machel's death and continued to the country's first multiparty elections in 1994. At that point, the party's stance differed hardly at all from positions held by its mortal enemy, Renamo, the group it had battled since 1977.Footnote 18 In letting its nationalism go by the wayside, Frelimo abandoned the demand that people live in the future tense, offering a more easily imagined vision of the nation. A new path ahead beckoned, and Frelimo invited any Mozambican who lived in the national territory — no matter their sense of self and belonging — to choose a future with Frelimo.
Watchwords
From the first years after its formation in 1962, Frelimo developed hallmark phrasing to signal the sharply drawn boundaries of its politics. After all, for an armed insurgency that recruited from urban settings surveilled by the secret police, operating in rural areas increasingly occupied by the Portuguese military, it was crucial to determine who was in and who was out. Leadership relied on such phrasing to express the affinities they sought to establish and often closed with “Independence or Death” over their signature, irrespective of their proximity to battlefield action. When, in 1966, Pascoal Mocumbi — a future prime minister — sent a hastily penned letter from Baku to Dar-es-Salaam, tracing his itinerary from Cairo to Moscow and thence to Leningrad and onward (seeking to shore up support from Frelimo's Soviet allies), he ended with a truncated “Indep. or Death!”Footnote 19 The knife's-edge imagery was characteristic of Frelimo's watchwords, the language it used to style the contours of the nation.Footnote 20
Watchwords have their origins in armed conflict, but they may also cross into other terrain. For Frelimo, watchwords call to mind its military struggles as a guerrilla force, when lines were not clearly drawn and friend and foe not easily distinguished, either owing to poor visibility or lack of clearly observable differences between opposing forces.Footnote 21 On the battlefield, a watchword allows passage, admitting the person who speaks it behind the frontline, entering a privileged space of security and trust. In the decade-long fight with Portugal's military, Frelimo's strategy depended on alliances with and support from the rural population — one subject to forced concentration in strategic villages (villagization, or aldeamento) as the Portuguese military sought to deny Frelimo guerrillas access to a vital resource and also pursued counterinsurgency “hearts and minds” tactics.Footnote 22 To know one's allies was, without exaggeration, a matter of life and death. As a kind of encoded speech, watchwords guarantee identity and a common allegiance.
Away from the battlefield context, a watchword serves political, rather than military, ends, signaling shared purpose and loyalty between trusted allies. Watchwords may also be spoken to a newcomer — someone otherwise unknown or not yet accepted as a fully vested member of the community. For these people, it is as much an invitation to join as it is a key that provides access. In a fundamental sense, watchwords ensure that each party to a conversation speaks the same language, with the familiarity and sense of common experience that comes with a shared lexicon. A common vocabulary can also shape a single political vision, with exclusive and inclusive purpose, recognizing allies and enemies alike.Footnote 23 In this context, the watchword possesses a heuristic quality that projects the speaker's position, anticipating the mindset of those to whom it is proffered. To usher them into the political community, a watchword must allow them to imagine other, not-yet-met, members of the group they may join at a future moment.Footnote 24
From 1975, the context for Frelimo's watchwords was more political than martial, yet still summoned the battlefield origins, a legitimating source for those newly experiencing popular political participation under a revolutionary leadership. “The struggle continues,” “Independence or death,” “Unity, work, vigilance” all drew upon everyday language, with a potential to resonate for a broad audience, and readily expressed no matter who was speaking: “Independência ou morte!”, exchanged between those who had attended Christian mission schools and used Portuguese, just as easily as “Uhuru ao kufo!”, among Kimwani-speakers, the Swahili variant that prevails along the country's neglected northern coast, where opportunities for formal schooling were scarce under the Portuguese.Footnote 25 Watchwords were a repertoire from which cadres could select certain elements, and which they expressed with a symbolic tone tuned to the middle-ground terrain on which they worked.Footnote 26 Delivered with the right voicing, they could achieve the desired resonance — uniting or dividing, purging or welcoming — and allow people to imagine the nation Frelimo aimed to create.Footnote 27 By the time Frelimo took power, some of its watchwords had been in use for a decade or more, making them familiar to anyone who read its newsletters, saw the banners at its rallies, or heard Machel speak. In their ready transfer from the martial to the political context, watchwords also showed a modularity, carrying their symbolic resonance from one arena of action into another. As Frelimo made the transition from fighting force to government, this quality could ensure continuity, bringing forward past loyalties and affinities.Footnote 28
In his June 1975 independence speech, Machel sounded a familiar theme, speaking of the unity imperative and of the need to draw “an ever firmer dividing line between us and the enemy.”Footnote 29 Easily excluded were allies or enablers of Mozambique's enemies, as Frelimo saw them: white supremacists in South Africa and Rhodesia; agents of imperialism, largely in western Europe and the United States; and bourgeois capitalists, wherever they might be found. The enemy within was less easily identified but no less a threat. Seeking to make the lines clear, a year after taking power Machel warned his compatriots that the enemy would not betray himself by “mere words, his color, or his clothing.” Vigilance was a guiding watchword, and Machel urged a scrutiny to penetrate appearances, for while “the enemy can use our words, can use our clothing,” he “cannot adopt our way of being.”Footnote 30
The language of unity and enemies would grow in importance, as Frelimo soon found itself pitted against an armed group — supported initially by the white supremacist regime in Southern Rhodesia and later by South Africa's apartheid state — in a conflict that eventually became a fully-fledged civil war.Footnote 31 The emphasis on unity, to the exclusion of diverse, let alone dissenting views, went hand-in-hand with defining who would be in, and who would be out, of Frelimo's nation. Within the single-party system Frelimo created, exclusionary messages and practices fostered, for some, a sense of being unserved by Frelimo's government. Others have written of Frelimo's missteps of governance (ill-planned state farms, misbegotten efforts of urban renewal) and even more of the war; my interest lies not in Frelimo's errors and still less the war, fueled by the decolonizing tensions of Southern Africa's Cold War crucible.Footnote 32 Rather, I trace ideas that underpinned Frelimo's vision of the nation, looking at their use in the hands of local officials and village-level cadres who carried Frelimo's ideas into the middle ground.
Watchwords is the title Frelimo gave to one of its signature publication series, Palavras de Ordem. The series was a repository for the messages that emerged from the tight circle drawn around Machel and his interlocutors. Ideas in the series enjoyed a double or even triple life: delivered in one form and at one time, reappearing in another form and a later time, a deliberate repurposing of what Frelimo saw as its “most powerful weapons.”Footnote 33 Some first emerged in speeches Machel delivered in internal Frelimo settings in the early 1970s, taking written form for distribution, and published after independence — with some also serialized or excerpted in the national daily newspaper, Notícias (News), or the weekly news magazine Tempo (Time), the illustrated weekly news magazine that chronicled many Frelimo endeavors.Footnote 34 Certain titles in the series came out in pamphlet form — some with watchwords broken out as bullet points on the inside cover, for easy referenceFootnote 35 — intended for close study with party cells and other groups, at times leading discussions within their communities.Footnote 36 Frelimo's Department of Ideological Work, responsible for their reissue, called them “indispensable elements of study,” above all for those who had not lived through the earlier years of armed struggle.Footnote 37
Frelimo ensured that those who carried its ideas of the nation into the middle ground had a broad and varied repertoire at their disposal, of which the Watchwords series was but one.Footnote 38 My focus is on the written texts used to circulate Frelimo's ideas, yet these were simply some among the instruments Frelimo used. Radio Mozambique, the state broadcaster, ran “This Day in History,” a program that recounted signal moments in the country's history, closely scripted around events and people who had significant roles in Frelimo's self-narration.Footnote 39 Other ways included newer versions of longstanding vernacular expression in dance and music. Frelimo relied on some, such as the musically accompanied dance form makwayela, to spread its watchwords in schools, neighborhoods, and churches.Footnote 40 Other such forms of popular culture, including the masked dance practice (mapiko) that prevails among Makonde communities in northern Mozambique, had a recent history during Frelimo's war with the Portuguese, when its guerrillas used mapiko performance to convey watchwords in sung and embodied ways. After 1975, Frelimo drew mapiko and other performative practices into its campaign to mobilize existing cultural forms in service of its vision.Footnote 41
Frelimo's watchwords rang out in Machel's speeches and limned public spaces — on banners affixed to building façades and hung along major thoroughfares — through which people passed every day. In closing his speeches, Machel would recite up to two dozen watchwords, acknowledging “the People,” the party, workers, students, youth, and others. Machel was without doubt Frelimo's principal herald, and its watchwords were often associated with his tone and style of speech.Footnote 42 Even when there was internal disagreement, Frelimo's commitment to consensus, above all in public discourse, meant that “The party had to speak in one single voice.”Footnote 43 Or, as Lorenzo Macagno puts it, “When Samora spoke, the Party/State did, too.”Footnote 44 Nor were watchwords and their expressions of ideas, beliefs, and ways of being limited to Machel or Frelimo leadership: others emulated the practice.Footnote 45 At a district-level meeting in the central province of Manica, convened over four days in September 1979, the organizer closed the final session with a recitation of ten watchwords and improvised on Machel, whose earlier counsel to be mindful of “infiltrators” became “Down with the infiltrators in the communal villages.”Footnote 46
Even before taking power, Frelimo grasped the significance of mastering the middle ground, the space in-between the leadership that authored a vision of the nation and the people targeted for its reception. During the yearlong transition (1974–75), when it was a government-in-waiting and its members were able to move openly within the country, but without the powers of state, Frelimo created the dynamizing groups (grupos dynamizadores, or GDs).Footnote 47 After independence, the GDs became ubiquitous in the middle ground: in workplaces, schools, neighborhoods, and communal villages.Footnote 48 Composed of a dozen or so people, the GDs existed in parallel to party cells as a highly local mechanism of education and outreach: “an arm with which the Party reaches and shapes the masses.”Footnote 49 Frelimo often conveyed its watchwords directly to the GDs and others in the middle ground, issuing them directives that included detailed instructions for their implementation.
In advance of Frelimo's third congress in 1977, the Department of Ideological Work published booklets on the theses developed for delegates’ discussion. Explaining each thesis, the booklets referred to a full range of resources for study: specific titles in the Watchwords series and citations to recent articles published in Tempo, together with page number references, quotations, and exegesis.Footnote 50 On the second thesis — ”Class struggle: Motor of history” — the author explained the idea of the peasantry as a distinct class, referring to a Central Committee resolution on communal villages (published in a stand-alone collection and in Tempo the previous year) and guiding readers to specific passages on “The experience of the liberated zones” and “The current situation in the countryside.”Footnote 51 Far more than an introduction to Marxism, the approach drew a clear line from the anticolonial war of the past — for which the “liberated zones” (areas Frelimo controlled during its war with the Portuguese military) were foundational — to the continual struggle of the present. To explain the worker-peasant alliance — celebrated in the full, front-page headline of Notícias da Beira (Beira News) — and in particular the “historic role of the working class as the leader of the alliance,” it recommended a speech Machel had delivered a few months earlier to workers gathered in Maputo, also published in Tempo.Footnote 52 A similar endeavor, aimed at a wider readership, appeared in the daily newspaper published in the country's second city, Beira: a double-page spread, setting out the forty watchwords prepared for the congress (for example, “Long live the communal villages, basis of rural development!” and “Down with imperialism!”), with commentary on each.Footnote 53 For Frelimo's fourth congress, held five years later, the Department of Information and Propaganda produced a list of 191 watchwords, instructing members to encourage their use and spread via radio, the press, newsletters, “down to posters and signs made with local resources.”Footnote 54 Aiming for broader reach, in the months leading up to the congress, the national daily paper published a series of comic strips on the eight theses developed for it, offering still another formula for expression.Footnote 55
Attention to how people used watchwords in the middle ground brings what Borges Coelho has called Frelimo's “navigation chart” — the self-narration used to legitimize its dominance — into higher resolution. He explains Frelimo's will to dominate meaning-making via what he calls the “Liberation Script,” an apparatus that legitimizes and renders unquestionable Frelimo's authority.Footnote 56 He refers to how people spoke of orders going “down to the locality,” though his essay's sweeping conceptual quality neither traces that path nor examines the points of contact.Footnote 57 I follow the path and consider the place of contact in the communal villages Frelimo created, examining district- and village-level documentation on the guidance given to cadres for mobilization at work and in their communities. Dinerman and Sergio Chichava read similar sources to understand villagers’ rejection of Frelimo's policies; my reading focuses on just what it was that villagers rejected — which was not the bold-faced headline in Notícias, “Down with superstition,” but rather attempts to attach meaning to those policies via village-level initiatives to unmake the world they knew.Footnote 58 Such attempts are most evident in commonplace encounters, as cadres gathered with “the People” in meetings held in far-distant districts, offering the watchwords they imagined would usher them into the nation, exhorting them to live in a desired future rather than an inherited present.
“The nation in the village”
Taking possession of the state in 1975, Frelimo left the rural areas that had long been the locus of its power and relocated to cities and towns. The shift distanced it from Mozambique's overwhelmingly agrarian, rural population. Maputo, the capital, was about as far south as one could travel from the northern strongholds that had sustained Frelimo during the war with the Portuguese and yet still be in Mozambique. Any government — especially one so attached to the idea that its time waging a rural insurgency had been an important source of revolutionary wisdom — as ambitious as Frelimo's would have been concerned with how to reach the countryside. One of its most expansive endeavors in the first years was to resettle the rural population into communal villages, a plan that at once served socialist traditions of collective production, extended state capacity into areas where it was largely absent, and connected Frelimo to the rural spaces it saw as central to its ontology.Footnote 59
Launched in 1976, the creation of communal villages shared something in common with other ventures, such as ujamaa in Tanzania, above all its boldness and top-down planning. Frelimo's effort is most distinctive as a mirror held up to its politics, more so than as a strategy for rural development.Footnote 60 The communal villages were “the spinal column” for Frelimo's plans to transform the country, a “political instrument” that would make “it possible for us to exercise successfully hard-won power.”Footnote 61 That watchword, offered by Machel to Frelimo's Central Committee in 1976 (and included in a national assembly resolution in 1977), still echoed three years later, as an official in the central province of Manica evoked Machel (the “maximal leader of the Mozambican Revolution”), speaking of the communal villages as the “spinal column” of the entire country.Footnote 62 In Frelimo's understanding of the state and the nation, each part was indissoluble from every other, or in Machel's phrasing, “The Nation is not the sum of the provinces, nor are these fractions of the Nation…. The Nation is in the Communal Village and in the capital of the country, it is Nation in the Communal Village, in the district, in the capital.”Footnote 63 In this imagining, the most-distant village held the same valence as Maputo.
Frelimo created communal villages on a mass scale: within three years, over a million people, nearly fifteen percent of the rural population, had moved into more than a thousand villages.Footnote 64 As central as resettlement and collectivized production were, the effort went beyond moving people into “well-organized villages” and introducing different methods of collective cultivation.Footnote 65 The drive also targeted people's “ways of being,” above all as markers of their position in Frelimo's nation. Toward that end, the officials and cadres who oversaw the formation and organization of communal villages targeted beliefs and practices seen as inconsistent with Frelimo's style of imagining the nation. Throughout the endeavor, Frelimo used its watchwords to reposition the future in the present. For those tasked with doing so, especially middle-ground actors such as the GDs, this meant “sowing the seeds of a future that did not exist” — no small matter.Footnote 66
Much of what we know about the communal villages in Mozambique centers on how the endeavor fell short of its aims, at least as motors for agricultural output, or how people rejected Frelimo's ham- or heavy-handed actions to overcome their reluctance to resettle and reorganize their household production along collectivized lines.Footnote 67 Indeed, some argue that Renamo drew support in direct measure from people's rejection of Frelimo's plans.Footnote 68 During the war for independence, Frelimo had urged people to accept the possibility of death in pursuing the future Frelimo sought to bring (Independence or Death!). With Frelimo in power, as Chichava writes, people inverted that formulation: when faced with the watchword, “Long live the communal villages, base of rural development!”, some declared a readiness to die rather than settle in communal villages.Footnote 69 It is difficult to separate, at least from 1982 (when the war intensified and spread in scope) onward, social or political dynamics in rural Mozambique from the war, because it was precisely in villages all over the country where the leading edge of Frelimo's imagination gave way to the bleeding edge of Mozambique's descent into war. Chichava, Christian Geffray, and Dinerman have each explored the connection between the communal villages and the war, yet we know far less about the communal village experience outside the war as such.Footnote 70
When people arrived at the locations chosen for communal villages, they found the very places themselves named anew to reflect the style of Frelimo's imagination. Many village names drew on foundational elements of Frelimo's independence narrative: “Julius Nyerere,” Frelimo's host and patron during the war with the Portuguese, whose steadfast support was inseparable from the movement's success; “September 25th,” the day in 1964 on which Frelimo celebrated its first armed attack on the Portuguese colonial state; “February 3rd,” when Eduardo Mondlane, known as Frelimo's martyred founding president, was killed by parcel bomb in Dar-es-Salaam in 1969; “Josina Machel,” Machel's first wife, a celebrated leader of Frelimo's Women's Brigade; “Lusaka Accords,” the 1974 agreement with the Portuguese that ended the war and paved the way for Frelimo's assumption of sovereignty; “Vigilance,” which called to mind a watchword (Unity, Work, Vigilance) Machel offered in his 1974 speech marking the transitional government's assumption of power. Others had origins outside Mozambique's road to independence — “May 1st” or “Marien N'Gouabi,” the Congolese soldier who established a Marxist-Leninist state in 1968 — yet whose meaning in Mozambique reflected Frelimo's self-narration of its path to power.Footnote 71 These new names were at times layered over others, some rooted in long-standing linguistic geographies that located people within networks of affect or authority.Footnote 72 In renaming these places, Frelimo sought to remake the ways in which people saw themselves in relation to the world that surrounded them.
The discussion here focuses mostly on the center and north-central provinces, parts of the country that cleave toward a mean, at least in how people received the communal village project. This distinguishes them from the enthusiastic embrace of Cabo Delgado in the north and Gaza in the south and from the vigorous opposition it saw in the Zambezi-valley province of Zambezia.Footnote 73 The provinces of Manica and Nampula offer a midline context — suggesting neither the program's embrace or its rejection, though even these province-level generalizations cover significant variation.Footnote 74 Moreover, north-central Nampula's Muslim communities and west-central Manica's Christian adherents present illustrative instances of how middle-ground actors enacted Frelimo's watchwords in the spiritual realm.
In examining how people used watchwords in the communal villages, I locate their origins within Frelimo's senior ranks and consider the resonance they then held when used in district- and village-level gatherings. This view is vital to understand how most Mozambicans encountered watchwords, because when people rejected Frelimo's ideas, it was less in reaction to one of Machel's speeches, an article in Tempo, or a publication by the Department of Information and Propaganda, if only because those sources were removed from everyday life, above all in rural areas, where these forms of communication were less common and people were less likely to be readers. Bold-face phrases in the newspaper were where the topline message appeared, the vehicle local party members used to deliver watchwords to GDs and others.Footnote 75 When local officials, other cadres, and GD members transformed watchwords into practices of governing that would touch people's “way of being,” they did not do so merely by declaring “Long live the collective organization of the people!” or “Down with polygamy.”Footnote 76 To be sure, they often opened and closed their encounters with these declamatory recitations — but in between they worked through just the sort of “creative applications” that Frelimo urged.Footnote 77 And when certain “malcontents,” as local officials called them, aimed to “demobilize” villagers and even destroyed new homes being built for the communal villages, they did so not in reaction to ideas in one of Machel's speeches or an article in the daily paper, but on seeing the people who lived alongside them taking actions — such as surveying land for communal village allotments — that touched qualities of ordinary life.Footnote 78
What happened to watchwords in the hands of Gustavo Francisco, a thirty-three-year-old GD leader in the communal village September 25th (one of many so named to commemorate the first attack of Frelimo's armed struggle) in Nampula, northeast of the Zambezi valley?Footnote 79 A married father of two, Francisco had completed six years of formal schooling and was a trained literacy instructor. He tuned in to broadcasts of Radio Mozambique and held a subscription to Tempo. It was individuals such as Francisco whose access to print media and ownership of a radio allowed him to keep abreast of “the most important events in the life of the Nation,” briefing village residents on Frelimo directives.Footnote 80 The work he did meant that those without access to news sources — those not literate in Portuguese, or peasants who would never hear radio news broadcasts in the local language (rather than Portuguese), because they aired in mid-afternoon, while they were at work in their fields — would still know of Frelimo's plans and vision, at least in the terms Francisco used to convey them.Footnote 81 Reports or correspondence that emerged from the meetings he convened with others in the communal village — or from the uncountable others held in communal villages created throughout the country — make visible the connective thread that linked capital and communal village in the fabric of Frelimo's nation. This is the terrain on which some Mozambicans did the work of conveying watchwords to others, and where people made meaning, engaged in “political work,” and “hashed out” solutions to the challenge of living an unknowable future in the present.Footnote 82
“The village in the nation”
Taking their cues from Machel, who spoke of a “permanent battle of the New against the Old” in which there was no place for “old habits, old ideas, old ways of thinking,” officials, GD members, and others occupied with the communal villages targeted practices and beliefs seen as the wellspring of superstition and ignorance that imperiled the nation.Footnote 83 Those who held onto the “old ways” — not merely incompatible with the future Frelimo imagined but also associated with the colonial past on which Frelimo wanted all to turn their backs — were, at worst, potential agents of the neighboring white minority regimes and stalking horses for imperialism, but even otherwise harbored values incompatible with the continuing revolution, potential carriers of disintegrative influences. Middle-ground actors, bringing Frelimo's watchwords “down to the locality,” worked to steer the wayward back to Frelimo's line.Footnote 84
Two years into the effort, district officials gathered in September 1979 to discuss progress, together with communal village residents of Guro district, lying close by the border with what would become Zimbabwe in the coming year. In opening the meeting, they explained that to live in a communal village meant to “fulfill the watchword and in so doing, fight the vestiges inherited from the old society.”Footnote 85 To take up the watchwords was to line up with Frelimo, where there was no space for keepers of those “old ways,” including chiefs and other holders of “traditional authority,” such as healers and spirit mediums. When, in a neighboring district, a discussion focused on health promotion in communal villages, some mentioned spirit mediums known as macangueiros, practitioners of certain forms of traditional medicine. Calling them “liars and confusionists” who “keep the people in ignorance,” those leading the discussion concluded that they should be opposed and “their instruments put in museums, and those who are obstinate must be punished.”Footnote 86 Antagonism toward such respect or attachment to a world of ancestral spirits was not new; two years earlier, the regional daily newspaper had run one of the famous Xiconhoca cartoons targeting that attachment.Footnote 87 Xiconhoca — an oafish, caricatured enemy of the people who opposed all that stood in the path of his self-gratification — was depicted inciting fellow villagers not to relocate to a communal village (despite devastating floods), because to do so would be “to abandon the land of our ancestors.”Footnote 88 The cartoon format hardly softened the critique of those whose attachment for the “old ways” kept them from stepping toward Frelimo's future.
Frelimo's antipathy toward spiritual belief and practice did not end with ancestor veneration, which was often associated with chieftaincy and traditional healing; its opposition was ecumenical: Jewish, Christian, Islamic, and African-rooted belief and practice all came in for criticism.Footnote 89 As early as 1970, Machel had spoken of religion as a “false solidarity;” for Frelimo cadres, “the only religion was to serve the masses.”Footnote 90 But Mozambicans did not need to hear Machel speak — in person or broadcast on Radio Mozambique — or read Palavras de Ordém or the newspapers to get the message. Those responsible for communal villages conveyed the sentiment openly, using a variety of approaches to make the faithful feel unwelcome, if not to ban their practices outright: discouraging open expression of faith or observance of practice; attempting to prevent inculcation of faith among children; excluding religious institutions; and, finally, advocating for practices that would drive the faithful out of the communal villages themselves.
For some committed to modernization, religious belief was dangerously close to superstition, with its elements of irrationality and backward ways of thinking. For those more committed to socialism, spiritual belief represented an unscientific mindset incompatible with historical materialism, and membership in a faith community a potential competition to class identity in general and the worker-peasant alliance in particular. Still, leadership and cadres alike were aware that religious belief — in Islam, Christianity, and ancestral spirits — persisted even within their ranks.Footnote 91 Within the milieu of the communal villages, such awareness was evident in the day-to-day, given the proximity in which people lived, but also simply because cadres, members of the dynamizing groups, and ordinary villagers were well-familiar with each other's “ways of being.” During periods when the faithful were fasting, officials in Nampula noted that amidst political meetings, when people paused for refreshment, “ten or fifteen people might not hesitate to leave the meeting as it was time for prayers, even when we are considering members of the Dynamizing Groups who are religious believers.”Footnote 92 Spiritual practice and observance endured in the face of Frelimo's open skepticism. Some lived contradiction in the quotidian, condemning Christianity in the morning and then leaving early from afternoon meetings to take their children to catechism classes.Footnote 93
Unlike some other lightning changes Frelimo introduced — such as the nationalization of housing stock in 1976 or the 1977 declaration that all students in the eighth year of formal schooling would end their studies and enter the workforce — the approach to religion was not so immediate or sweeping, reflecting perhaps internal ambivalence or realization that so rapid a change might not be feasible.Footnote 94 This was evident in the concluding remarks at a district-level seminar held in Guro (not far south of the Zambezi) in September 1979, where the discussion addressed how religious residents might be permitted to engage in their practices. Believers were to be included in the organization of village life, yet “when it is time for prayer, they must do so alone,” proposed an official, and should not proselytize — in the phrasing used, “make propaganda” toward — others in the village.Footnote 95 In a neighboring district, officials proposed similar restrictions. Believers, it was suggested, should pray only in the confines of their own houses, and should not join together with others in prayer. Still more, officials proposed action against “religious exchanges,” and that believers should be “prohibited from going from one district to another with the purpose of prayer.”Footnote 96 Aside from an inability, or unwillingness, to recognize the essentially social and collective element of many practices of prayer, the stance also revealed Frelimo's opposition to propagation of the faith. Although they did not say in so many words, the officials sought to constrain believers’ expressions of faith and to curtail any effect they could have on others, imagining the arrival of an unreligious future in the present.
For believers themselves, it would have been hard to see Frelimo's interest to control religious belief and practices as anything less than an effort at their outright elimination, for statements against proselytizing were not limited to the social sphere, but also the familial. At an August 1979 meeting in Angoche, a coastal district north of the Zambezi, officials gathered representatives from the communal villages in preparation for an upcoming national meeting. In discussing religion, they reached the conclusion that children “should not participate in religious groups.”Footnote 97 They did not elaborate on their reasons, but their counterparts in Guro justified the same restriction, expressing concern that children might arrive at school “wiped out” from having been up late at prayer.Footnote 98 They called on village authorities to oversee the children of believers “step by step.”Footnote 99 Some officials — starting with Machel himself — tied religion to other elements of the legacy of colonial capitalism, such as polygamy, the transfer of bridewealth, and what they called “premature marriage,” all of which they saw as leading young people astray.Footnote 100 Eliminating such practices was part of their effort to mobilize young people and elevate their “political level,” all to counter enemy action and influence.Footnote 101 Those who gathered at the district level expressed the ultimate goal, indirectly if not quite obliquely: that if they pursued such efforts successfully, religion “might remain something only for the elderly.”Footnote 102 The message sent was that religious belief could be only a millstone that would hold back the nation's youth, keeping them tethered to the past rather than anchored in the future.
Operating in the middle ground, cadres came up with strategies that fulfilled the exhortation to develop creative applications of the watchwords.Footnote 103 In bringing Frelimo's ideas down to the locality, they gave living color to the simple declaration “Down with superstition.”Footnote 104 At an October 1979 meeting, the leadership in the central province of Manica gathered at a secondary school (named after Joaquím Mara, a celebrated hero who had died in the war with the Portuguese) with local agricultural staff, village authorities, and communal villagers themselves to discuss progress made over the previous two years and difficulties still to be overcome. In considering the nature of the communal village itself, those gathered agreed that it was “where the people, organized, consolidate national unity.”Footnote 105 More concretely, they addressed how to counter religious activity: the communal village was a “liberated zone” and as such, no “physical structure of religion could exist in it.” The reference to the liberated zone, considered a fundamental source Frelimo's revolutionary wisdom, was a rhetorical move that worked to put the idea beyond debate.Footnote 106 Organized religious activity was unacceptable, though “spontaneous practices” could be tolerated. They also debated specific strategies to counter religious practices. One participant brought up how, in a province north of the Zambezi, where Muslims made up a significant proportion of the population, staff had introduced rabbit and swine husbandry in the communal villages “as a way of fighting religious activity.”Footnote 107 Aware of Islam's dietary prohibitions and beliefs on pork as a contaminating element to be avoided, seminar participants in Manica suggested the approach “could be adapted in our province to fight religious actions that still persist.” Manica had only a small Muslim population, but it was home to adherents of a number of apostolic Christian sects — Johane Marangue, Johane Massoe, and the Zion Christian Church — for whom pork and rabbit were prohibited.Footnote 108 Encouraging communal villagers to raise pigs and rabbits may have been principally appealing as a food production strategy, but their discussion focused on the additional beneficial effect of repelling followers of the three sects, since their adepts “cannot even approach a corral” holding these animals.Footnote 109 If successful, the outcome would have been no unintended consequence or product of ignorance. It was a proposal to render the communal villages profane, a contaminated, unwelcoming space from which believers should flee.
Unlike the efforts that Benedito Machava and Eric Morier-Genoud have examined in other settings, the strategy pursued in the communal villages was less to purge faith from people's minds, than to discourage its expression and transmission, first, and second, to encourage the deeply devout to leave.Footnote 110 Considered alongside the reeducation camps, the tactics were comparatively mild, even if they were evidence of no less fierce an intolerance of religious faith. Lacking the violence of the camps, or an equivalent coercive displacement (many of those in the camps had been seized in distant urban street sweeps), the approach in the communal villages was no less visceral an attack on spiritual belief nor less clear a desire to remove the religious from the nation.Footnote 111
As ill-disposed as some Mozambicans were to leave behind such beliefs, the leap Frelimo expected them to make was just as stark in material life. The residents of the communal village May 1st (this one somewhat south of the Zambezi and not far from the Zimbabwean border) got a good sense of this at a meeting in September 1979, when a cadre explained how villagers should adopt new methods for processing the foodstuffs they produced. In particular, he advised, they should cease spreading pounded grain to dry on the lengths of cloth known as capulanas (typically used as a body wrapper, and often as well to secure an infant or small child to one's back), since they were also used for bathing and were thus “dirty.”Footnote 112 Instead, he suggested they should use manufactured cooking implements, without appearing to grasp that such items were rarely available and, when they were, beyond the very modest means of most. His advice, offered to villagers so poorly served by commercial networks that they often lacked clothing for daily use, made sense only in a world that did not yet exist.Footnote 113 For some within Frelimo's inner circle, such thinking reflected a conviction that the future was as real as the present, while for many Mozambicans, this way of thinking was not merely unimaginable, but a cruel indifference to material reality.Footnote 114 The future, whatever potential it held, could not displace people's attachment to, or need to confront the struggles of, the present.
Conclusion
Frelimo's nationalism was unable to evoke a community for many Mozambicans. It is hard to know, probably unknowable, how much the war that wrecked the country from 1977 onward was responsible.Footnote 115 A war that destructive dooms almost any project. Yet even absent the war — or the loss of Machel in 1986, when his plane flew into a mountain in then-Swaziland — the style in which Frelimo imagined the nation could never have caught on with many Mozambicans. Frelimo insisted that people imagine themselves in a community that did not yet exist, one that could exist only in the world Frelimo aimed to summon into being. Frelimo's nationalism required Mozambicans to live in the future tense: the message — from Machel, the maximal leader, down to neighborhood- or village-level cadres — directed them to a future unhitched from past and present. Whether such a future was within reach, or was one toward which they wanted to turn, seemed at times to be an unconsidered question. Frelimo's style of imagining the national community heralded ways of thinking about relationships between self and other, about authority, about “ways of being,” at times not even reminiscent of those their parents or previous generations had known. Save for its own history, or that of Portugal's colonial crimes, Frelimo was unerringly forward-looking. After all, “Independence or death,” one of Frelimo's earliest watchwords, discounts the present, with its concrete risks, in favor of the future, with its unsecured rewards.
For Frelimo and others fighting colonialism, that watchword, with its wartime origins, evoked a choice only in rhetorical terms: to fight for independence or die in the effort. Who would not fight for freedom? Two decades later, as many of the dreams of independence were coming undone, for those who had yet to join Frelimo's nation, the exhortation became an ultimatum.Footnote 116 In earlier stages of styling the nation, Frelimo often aimed to win over the wavering through suasion, or in its terms, “moral combat” and “ideological struggle.”Footnote 117 Yet as the war with Renamo spread, its homegrown quality imperiling Frelimo's sovereignty, Machel spoke in more martial terms. In a December 1984 speech, he deplored the ravages of the war. He referred to those fighting the government as armed bandits, supported by South Africa's white supremacist government, but also as “our children,” underscoring their origin from within.Footnote 118 Those fighting Frelimo had become a mortal threat, Machel explained, even as their actions also helped Mozambicans to understand that “our child… can also be our enemy.” In a quick lexical shift, he cast them out not only of the nation, but of humanity, evoking the language of contagion and parasites, calling them “lice in the blanket.” Directly addressing his audience, he asked what was to be done and received the response, “Kill them!” Not yet satisfied, he asked again, “what do you want?”, receiving the reply, “We want to kill them, as they also kill us! We want weapons so we can kill them!”Footnote 119
The open incitement to violence, while perhaps shocking, also reflects the singular ferocity with which civil wars are fought.Footnote 120 Many fled the spreading intensity of fighting, generating enormous numbers of refugees and internally displaced. Yet this was simply the evolution of a dynamic already underway: some Mozambicans had withdrawn a decade earlier or more, at least in political terms, withholding their participation in Frelimo's endeavors.Footnote 121 Others did so literally, abandoning or refusing to move to the communal villages, distancing themselves from Frelimo's indivisible “Nation in the Communal Village.”Footnote 122 Shortly after independence ceremonies in 1975, Machel had condemned those who left the new nation, suggesting they lacked conviction in the country's future and “had no pátria.”Footnote 123 Lacking a homeland, they also had no access to the identity and rights associated with membership in a nation, which itself is as rooted in time as it is in place.Footnote 124 Frelimo's nation, situated in the future tense, was inaccessible to those unable or unwilling to imagine it.
In the years after Machel's death, Frelimo abandoned its nationalism, exchanging the vision of national community born exclusively in revolution and shorn of familiar “ways of being” for one open to any citizen in the national territory, even their enemies.Footnote 125 This vision, more accessible, had its own orientation toward the future, but it was one with fewer barriers to imagination, allowing people to look forward from the present. Neatly framed for the 1994 national elections — the first open contest the country ever had — Frelimo offered a message that could elicit a popular nationalist sentiment, taking the present as point of departure. So, too, after years of war that wrecked the country, many were glad to excise that recent past from memory.Footnote 126 No longer telling people how to join the nation, Frelimo presented them a choice to make it their own: “the future is in your hands.”Footnote 127
Acknowledgements
Great thanks go to the journal's editors for their careful guidance and to the anonymous readers, whose suggestions helped me to improve this piece in important ways. I am also appreciative of comments on earlier iterations of the ideas from Anne Pitcher, Heidi Gengenbach, Zack Kagan-Guthrie, and Betty Banks; and from the Car Collective at the University of Ottawa. As has long been the case, friends and colleagues in Mozambique, especially in Maputo and Manica, have contributed powerfully to my understanding of their country's history. I am grateful for their interest and input.
Competing interests
The author declares none.