As Asian and African countries made the transition to independence after the Second World War, the development of education and the training of their elites were widely recognized as indispensable preconditions for building prosperous nation-states. The specific link between education and development was steadily reinforced after the Second World War as various actors invested their hopes and interests in the achievement of these twin goals. The expansion of education was an integral part of the colonial development programmes implemented by the European empires after 1945.Footnote 1 The United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) considered its educational activity to be a contribution to both peace and development. Economists argued that investment in human capital promised higher returns than investment in fixed capital.Footnote 2 At the 1961 Addis Ababa Conference of African States on the Development of Education in Africa, delegates stressed the centrality of education to ‘economic and social development’, committed themselves to its expansion, and appealed to foreign donors.Footnote 3 The United States, the Soviet Union, and other actors subscribed to these views and provided substantial amounts of aid. ‘In a sense, this period was the culmination of the Enlightenment promise for progress through education’, Immanuel Wallerstein later recalled, adding that, ‘In itself, this was a wonderful thing.’Footnote 4
These shared views notwithstanding, the Cold War cast a shadow over education policies. Responding to the resounding success of Cuba’s 1961 literacy campaign, which had been hailed for simultaneously raising the political consciousness of peasant masses, Western officials in UNESCO and the World Bank advocated the relevance of ‘functional literacy’ and ‘occupational education’ to agricultural or industrial development purposes.Footnote 5 Educational planning became another highly politicized issue. The Soviets maintained that efficient educational planning should be part of comprehensive economic planning and provide for raising the overall educational and cultural level of workers. Responding to the sweeping Soviet approach, Americans promoted the idea that the ‘right number’ and kind of high-level workforce and skilled workers should be trained to produce useful goods and services with respect to each ‘society’s cultural identity’.Footnote 6
No other issue, however, was as politicized and as urgent for Third World countries as the training of students, who were expected to replace colonial administrators, teachers, or expatriate engineers. Seeing students as the new elites that would shape their countries’ future, both East and West offered thousands of scholarships and made their training a priority. By the turn of the 1950s, international higher education epitomized the oft-cited ‘battle for hearts and minds’. It was in this context that in February 1960, during a visit to Indonesia, the secretary general of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU), Nikita Khrushchev, announced the foundation of the Peoples’ Friendship University in Moscow, especially for students from Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Addressing 3,000 students at Jogjakarta University, Khrushchev affirmed that the Soviet government ‘wished to help the [developing] countries to train their national workforce, engineers, agronomists, doctors, teachers, economists’ and at the same time give a chance to ‘many talented young people coming from poor families’, who otherwise were ‘deprived of the possibility of realizing their wish to study in the Soviet Union’.Footnote 7 Candidates were soon invited to apply for the 600 places, and they did so in their thousands.Footnote 8
This article revisits the history of the Peoples’ Friendship University (Universitet Druzhby Narodov, henceforth ‘UDN’), which constituted the single most important venture in international higher education during the Cold War. Rechristened ‘Patrice Lumumba’ in February 1961, after the assassinated Congolese leader, the school was also conceived as a powerful symbol of Moscow’s solidarity with the Third World. UDN students who contributed to the school’s publications expressed their gratitude to the USSR, as did many graduates, who still today revere their alma mater.Footnote 9 Recent accounts by past professors celebrate the university’s unique history and major accomplishments.Footnote 10
On the opposite side, as soon as UDN opened its doors, it became the target of sharp reactions. The Togolese Michel Ayih, one of the first Africans to study in the USSR, who later ‘defected’ to West Germany, wrote that UDN had been created to isolate and indoctrinate African and Asian students.Footnote 11 Encouraged by anti-communist activists in the West, other former students followed suit. The Liberian William Appleton even called the university a ‘student trap’.Footnote 12 In Moscow, such attacks provoked embarrassment. In London, however, as early as November 1962, an official at the Foreign Office could not help but rejoice in Soviet troubles, concluding in his confidential report: ‘The establishment of a kind of African ghetto in the form of the Lumumba University has clearly been an error.’Footnote 13
In subsequent years Lumumba University continued to be depicted as a centre of Marxist–Leninist indoctrination, or as a breeding ground for revolutionaries and terrorists. Revelations that Rohana Wijeweera, the leader of the Popular Liberation Front who, in 1971, led a revolution in Sri Lanka, and Ilich Ramírez Sanchez, the Venezuelan terrorist known as Carlos the Jackal, had sat at Lumumba’s desks did not serve the school’s reputation well.Footnote 14 In the 1980s, following the shock of the Iranian Revolution, the CIA compared UDN to Qom, the religious school where radical clerics were educated.Footnote 15 Post-Cold War representations reproduced these images. The school appears in documentary films that relate the life of Carlos, and is recalled by the Chilean novelist Luis Sepúlveda, himself a former student in the USSR, as a destination for Latin American communists, although it was considered inferior to the prestigious Moscow State University.Footnote 16
Contrary to these accounts, this article delves into UDN-Patrice Lumumba documents to retrace the university’s history until the demise of the Soviet empire (1989–91), when ‘Patrice Lumumba’ disappeared as well, and ‘UDN’ was rechristened ‘RUDN’, the Russian Peoples’ Friendship University. It does not provide a comprehensive history of the school and its students, but focuses on a number of central questions: what was the rationale behind its creation and how did its specificities compare to other Soviet schools frequented by Third World students? Who were the students who attended it, and how did the university function as an institution? The article also examines international reactions and argues that, partly in response, UDN underwent major improvements, but at the same time departed from its initial Third World concept. For all its accomplishments as a school, as a cultural policy venture UDN failed to convince ‘developing’ countries that a special institution was necessary for their nationals.Footnote 17
From a longue durée perspective, Lumumba University is a tiny chapter in the history of the ‘global exchanges’ that Ludovic Tournès and Giles Scott-Smith have analysed so extensively.Footnote 18 In the conjunction of decolonization and the global Cold War, however, following the paradigm set by Odd Arne Westad, UDN’s history acquires significant dimensions: it becomes part of global Cold War history because it deepened Moscow’s engagement with the non-European areas of the world, and constituted Soviet socialism’s most ambitious attempt to ‘go global’ through higher education.Footnote 19 Nonetheless, UDN was not alone in pursuing such objectives: most Eastern and Western Third World education policies operated more or less within the paradigm set by Westad until the logic of commercialization prevailed.
Nevertheless, unlike the majority of the largely established education policies and forms of international education, UDN was an exceptional venture. It stands, therefore, alongside the few unconventional initiatives, ideologically inspired institutions, and methods that showcased socialist modernity, provided solutions to urgent problems, constituted flagships of internationalist solidarity, and spearheaded the socialist world’s cultural struggle for the Third World. They included not only the successful Cuban literacy campaign and the authoritative Soviet educational planning, but also institutions such as the workers’ faculties that circulated from the USSR and East Germany to Vietnam and Mozambique;Footnote 20 the boarding schools for Third World students on the Cuban Isla de la Juventud;Footnote 21 and the vocational School of Friendship in Stassfurt, East Germany, which trained 900 Mozambicans.Footnote 22 This article views UDN in this light, and seeks to understand its development beyond proclamations and contrasting accounts. The other Eastern bloc venture in higher education especially for Third World students was the University of the 17th of November, which was founded in Prague in 1961 in emulation of UDN. However, the Czechoslovaks closed the school in 1974 after disappointing results from a cost–benefit analysis, and as they reconsidered their Third World policy.Footnote 23
In other words, not all ventures developed as expected: among other reasons, because Third World countries were active agents of international education and extremely concerned with the training of students. While Soviet officials were quick to realize this, two French socialist scholars, who had earlier entertained the idea of creating a kind of a ‘French Lumumba University’, had been confronted with strong African reactions. It is worth focusing for a while on this illuminating confrontation that took place during the Conference of Dakar–Abidjan on the eve of decolonization, only two months before Khrushchev’s announcement in Jogjakarta.
A French international university for the underdeveloped countries
The conference on the ‘Scientific and Technical Research and the Economic and Social Development of African Countries’ held in Dakar and Abidjan from 14 to 21 December 1959 was a major event. So too was the address by the French President, Charles de Gaulle, to the Federal Assembly of Dakar, on the eve of the conference, when he accepted that the Mali Federation – the ephemeral union between Senegal and Mali – could acquire ‘international sovereignty’. This was the death knell of the old empire.Footnote 24
Under those circumstances, the Vice-President of the Mali Federation, Mamadou Dia, addressed 200 conference participants at the newly founded Dakar University with a short speech entitled ‘The mystique of development’, and urged them to find the answers to the aspirations of African countries.Footnote 25 Education was a burning issue. ‘The essential problem with regard to the future’, Félix Houphouët-Boigny, Prime Minister of Ivory Coast, stressed, ‘is first and foremost the development of education.’Footnote 26 During a heated debate, in a session chaired by the prominent Senegalese-French lawmaker Gabriel d’Arboussier, the director of the Paris Institute for the Study of Economic and Social Development, Henri Laugier, and the economist Georges Fischer put forward a radical agenda. Traditional French education was ‘harmful’ for Africa, they argued. Instead, Africa needed ‘centres for accelerated training’ and ‘the introduction of shock pedagogies’. Invoking the Soviet Union’s peculiar method for increasing productivity, they concluded that the goal would be to reach a higher, ‘“Stakhanovite” pace of [educational] activity’.Footnote 27
Elaborated at a rapid and truly Stakhanovite pace, these ideas were made public in early March 1960 in the opening article of the first issue of the journal Tiers-Monde, under the title ‘For an international university at the service of underdeveloped countries’.Footnote 28 Fischer and Laugier maintained that Africa needed its own ‘intellectual, scientific and technical experts, able to assume responsibility for their countries’ destinies as quickly as possible’. Convinced that their university was the right solution, they were nonetheless confronted with the reactions of African elites. ‘Most of them’, Laugier and Fischer noted regretfully and with considerable disappointment, ‘reject with more or less indignation, and always firmly, every special training institution, which may be suited to their situation; all such kind of training is dismissed as low-quality education, tailor-made training, and is considered as an intolerable reminiscence of the old relations between colonizers and colonized.’Footnote 29
Africans, as d’Arboussier also confirmed, ‘blasted away’ at all special education institutions.Footnote 30 French personalities and proponents of the established system objected as well, and the idea of an international university for underdeveloped countries was abandoned. It appears from the final footnote of their text that Laugier and Fischer, at least, found consolation in UDN, where their agenda of modernization through suitable education appeared to be vindicated.
Lumumba University: premises, aims, and policies
Against the background of decolonization and the emergence of the Third World, the foundation of UDN was predicated on a number of optimistic assumptions. Seeing the ‘awakening of the East’ as the fulfilment of Lenin’s predictions, the Soviet leadership considered that a Soviet–Third World alliance was imminent. Fostering political and economic ties with non-communist countries, which in most cases advocated anti-imperialism or socialism, was intended to encircle the capitalist world and accelerate the march of communism towards victory. A further assumption was that the USSR, with its experience in ‘modernizing’ the backward Tsarist empire, could serve as a model and transfer its knowledge to less developed countries. The latter, it was further assumed, would acknowledge Moscow’s authority and respond to solidarity with gratitude.
On the basis of these assumptions, the CPSU embarked on a new Third World cultural policy, in which UDN constituted the flagship. On the symbolic level, by naming UDN after the nationalist leader Patrice Lumumba, Moscow trumpeted the message that it was embracing anti-imperialist struggles led by non-communist actors. Similar political symbolism had been central in the short-lived University of the Toilers of China (1925–30), created by the Communist International in Moscow and named after the Chinese ‘bourgeois nationalist’ leader Sun Yat-Sen. At that time Sun Yat-Sen University, which primarily admitted members of the nationalist Guomindang Party, had represented an attempt to materialize the tactical alliance between Chinese nationalists and communists.Footnote 31 However, Lumumba University sharply differed from Sun Yat-Sen and from the Communist University of the Toilers of the East (1921–37), which were both political schools for cadres and revolutionaries, in that it was an academic institution. As such it had the primary mission to train physicians, engineers, economists, and administrators, who, as Houphouët-Boigny argued in Abidjan, would ‘ensure management in all state mechanisms’.Footnote 32
UDN was not exactly ground-breaking in the provision of Soviet educational aid to, nor cooperation with, the South. Between 1956 and 1960, nearly 1,800 Third World students, not necessarily communists, had already been enrolled in Soviet universities. A few, such as the Indonesians, came with scholarships provided by their government. Iraqis and Egyptians were sponsored jointly by their home government and the Soviet government. Others were fully sponsored by the USSR, but selected by the sender country or UNESCO. The last group, and the ones most likely to be radicals, were those sponsored by Soviet social and theoretically non-state organizations. Unlike regular Soviet schools, however, UDN was unique thanks to a number of characteristics, which accounted for its symbolic, educational, and political raison d’être.
To begin with, it was a university especially created for students from the Third World. Students from the so-called ‘First World’, other than a handful of Japanese communists, or from the socialist countries (the ‘Second World’), other than Soviets, were not eligible. In1960/61 the school boasted 59 Soviets alongside 538 foreigners, approximately 10%. This proportion grew to 16.7% in 1964/65 and 23.9% in 1969/70.Footnote 33 Second, unlike other Soviet schools, UDN did not admit students sponsored by the sender countries. Full-funding of all students, including medical care, housing, allowances for warm clothes and holidays, and a round-trip ticket were available until 1989. Along with the ratio of four students per faculty member throughout the 1960s, these expenses made the UDN a costly undertaking. In 1965, its annual cost reached 9,052,190 roubles, of which 43% covered the students’ needs.Footnote 34 From 1960 to 1990, without including the construction and equipment of the new campus, where UDN moved in the mid 1970s, the cost of training foreign students amounted to 250 billion roubles.Footnote 35
A further particularity was that, although the curricula were subject to the supervision of the Ministry of Higher and Specialized Secondary Education (henceforth Minvuz), UDN was formally administered by a council, which included four social organizations and its founding members: the Soviet Afro-Asian Solidarity Committee, the Union of Soviet Societies for Friendship and Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries, the All-Union Central Council of Trade Unions, and the Committee of Youth Organizations. In this way it could appear to act without the knowledge of the Soviet government, yet in reality serve its objective to reach out to communists or sympathizers, who otherwise would never have been allowed to study in the USSR. Thus, even though UDN was admitting and paying the scholarships of students selected by foreign governments, it was mostly a school for members of communist and anti-imperialist organizations.
As regards the first group, during the 1960s, students came either from non-aligned Asian countries, especially India, Indonesia, Laos, and Sri Lanka, or from countries allied to Moscow, such as Cuba or Mali, whose governments in both cases were very eager to train students at UDN. Students in the second group were generally members of Latin American, Asian, and Middle Eastern communist parties; of African nationalist and left-leaning movements, such as the Union des Populations du Cameroun, the Partido Africano da Independência de Guiné e Cabo Verde, or the Algerian Front de Libération Nationale (FLN); of youth organizations and trade unions; or of pro-Soviet cultural societies; or were candidates recruited on the recommendation of the students’ unions of UDN.Footnote 36 Many of them travelled to the USSR with a passport issued by a neighbouring country that supported their cause. Some students were also admitted on the recommendation of Soviet embassies, cultural centres, or journalists working abroad.Footnote 37 In terms of regions, with the exception of Cubans in the 1960s, who otherwise were quickly promoted from the ‘Third’ to the ‘Second World’ and were no longer eligible for acceptance to UDN, and of Nicaraguans, who in the 1980s were also selected by the Sandinista government, almost all Latin Americans were recruited on the recommendation of parties and organizations. The same was true of students from Arab countries, with the exception of those from South Yemen, the only country whose rulers espoused Marxism–Leninism and seized the opportunity to train the national elites at UDN.
These political criteria should ideally have corresponded to the social ones that Khrushchev had stressed in Jogjakarta, namely, to recruit youths ‘from poor families’. Being himself a former worker of peasant origin and promoted into the elites under Stalin’s affirmative action, Khrushchev was personally invested in the ‘re-proletarianization’ of universities, which informed his controversial 1958 educational reform.Footnote 38 Both the social organizations and the UDN rector, Sergei Rumiantsev, were instructed by the CPSU to give priority to candidates with working or lower-class background, who were expected to be grateful and reliable comrades.
Objectively, however, this task was complicated because of the lack of a working class in non-industrialized countries, and of the small pool of qualified candidates coming from poor families. ‘Youths from poor families do not have the possibility to receive the necessary education to qualify for university studies’, the Indian ambassador in Moscow once said in reaction to these requirements.Footnote 39 Nevertheless, based on statements of the enrolees, UDN professors N. Egorov and N. Sofinskii calculated that, from 1960 to 1968, 54.6% of students had been of either working-class or peasant background, a proportion that reached 57.8% in 1971/72.Footnote 40 Yet in the same academic year, among 3,039 Third World students studying all over Soviet Ukraine, this percentage was much lower, reaching only 34.9%.Footnote 41 However, by the end of the 1970s, students with working-class or peasant background made up approximately 67% at UDN and 46.2% in Ukraine.Footnote 42
Such figures allowed UDN to claim that it had fulfilled its mission to practise both nation-based and class-based affirmative action at the international level. For all the bias of Soviet sociological surveys and claims, it was nonetheless true that UDN welcomed Iraqi and Syrian communists persecuted by the ruling Baath parties, members of minorities such as Kurds or Lebanese Druze, Palestinian and Tutsi refugees, Latin Americans with working-class backgrounds, and Nigérien petit peuple.Footnote 43 It was more difficult to recruit female students, whose proportion in 1969/70 reached 15.4%, against 11.3% throughout the USSR, and 18.2% worldwide in 1968.Footnote 44 This 15.4% was predominantly made up of Latin Americans (23.4%) and Greek Cypriots (37.9%), rather than groups from Asian (13.6%), Sub-Saharan African (10%), and Arab countries (6.3%).Footnote 45 Unlike mainstream schools, which boasted large numbers of Soviet female students, UDN was an overwhelmingly male university, something that the male students found frustrating.
Recruiting the majority of students primarily according to political and social criteria presented challenges. One such challenge was to teach the heterogeneous student body of the first cohort, since 26% of enrolees had not completed secondary education.Footnote 46 For these enrolees, the solution was the preparatory faculty, an institution inspired by the workers’ faculties (rabochie fakul’tety) that the Bolsheviks had set up in 1918 to prepare students with working-class or peasant background for higher education.Footnote 47 Following the mass arrival of Third World students in the late 1950s, several universities created one-year preparatory faculties, whose principal mission was to teach Russian to foreign students. The preparatory faculty of UDN, however, could last up to three years and provided all the basic secondary-level courses to allow ill-prepared students to receive a certificate, giving them access to higher education on successful completion of their exams. In 1963/64, however, 835 of the 2,089 UDN students (40%) were still studying at the preparatory faculty. In 1969/70 this percentage had fallen to 25.8.Footnote 48
The six regular faculties were, in order of students enrolled, engineering (29%), medicine (20.3%), economics and law (17.1%), agriculture (12.1%), history and philology (12%), and natural sciences and mathematics (9.5%).Footnote 49 Graduates were awarded a diploma, which the Minvuz recognized as a Master’s degree. This diploma gave access to a PhD (aspirantura) programme, as did diplomas awarded by all Soviet universities. But studies at UDN were one year shorter than at other universities, lasting five years at the Faculty of Medicine and four at the rest. To compensate for the shortened programmes, there were thirty-six hours of classes per week (the average Soviet school had thirty hours). Thus, even though until October 1968 Third World students at UDN and all over the USSR were exempted from the courses on Marxism–Leninism, studies at UDN were particularly exhausting.
The relevance of the courses to the students was a thorny issue. In a few cases relevance did shape content. Lecturers in engineering, for instance, placed emphasis on the geological features of the Southern hemisphere and the construction of materials used in this region. Courses on tropical medicine or the economics of ‘developing’ countries were also taught, even though most lecturers had never been to Third World countries. Otherwise, during the 1960s, both the specializations and the curricula were identical to those of ordinary Soviet faculties, which trained a narrowly specialized workforce for the diversified Soviet economy.Footnote 50 In terms of specializations and courses, therefore, UDN could hardly justify the Third World recruitment.
On top of that, optional seminars and conferences, political and cultural events, excursions, and holidays were meant to cultivate the students’ sympathy for the USSR and communism. Discipline was required, and during the first years passports were impounded to prevent students from travelling abroad, a measure that prompted Appleton to call UDN a ‘student trap’. Yet difficulties of adaptation and disillusionment with the political atmosphere, as well as living conditions, occasionally sparked unrest. When in December 1963 a Ghanaian student was found dead in Moscow under mysterious circumstances, nearly four hundred African students caught the supposedly impeccable Soviet surveillance system by surprise and marched on Red Square to denounce racism, dealing a blow to the USSR official image of racial tolerance. Many of them came from UDN, where unrest continued. Thirteen students finally left the USSR for West Germany.Footnote 51
Disillusionment and academic failure, the unforeseen consequences of recruiting students according to political criteria, constituted the major causes of student absences, withdrawal, or expulsion. Of approximately 4,800 students enrolled between September 1960 and May 1968, 226 dropped out of their own volition, 225 were expelled for ‘immoral behaviour, major violation of discipline, academic failure or non-attendance of classes’, 122 went on holidays abroad and never returned, 49 abandoned their studies citing family reasons, and, finally, 68 dropped out ‘because they could not afford the climate and fell sick’.Footnote 52 According to this data, the overall dropout rate reached 14.4%. In reality, it was much higher, because among the latest enrolees there were many students who had not yet dropped out (but would do so in the future), and also because numerous students who transferred to technical schools were not included.Footnote 53
Still, by Soviet standards the rate was high. Of 3,560 Third World students enrolled at preparatory faculties in Ukraine between 1975 and 1981, only 126 (3.5%) dropped out and left the USSR.Footnote 54 In mainstream faculties all over the USSR, the dropout rate was even lower, even in the 1960s, meaning that almost all Third World students enrolled graduated.Footnote 55 At UDN, however, the relatively high dropout rate added to the rate of students lagging at the preparatory faculty, and thus signified fewer graduates over time. Of nearly 4,200 students enrolled from 1960/61 to 1966/67, 2,808 (66.8%) graduated in the period 1965–71.Footnote 56 For a school that in 1962/63 hosted 29.9% and in 1969/70 25.5% of all Third World students in the USSR and constituted the biggest Soviet investment in training a friendly intelligentsia, the failure to produce graduates according to the plan was a matter of concern. It was not the only one, for adverse reaction was also increasing.
Reactions against Lumumba University
Reactions against Soviet practices of recruitment and indoctrination, and student denunciation of racial discrimination and criticism of their poor living conditions in the USSR, began before UDN had even opened its doors. In particular, accounts of disillusioned Africans, former students at Moscow State University (MGU), appeared in several languages and were used in Western propaganda to caution Africans that Moscow should not be regarded as their Mecca.Footnote 57 Against the background of anti-communism, the founding of UDN and its admission and training policies lent ever more credence to these accounts and increased international suspicion. The Cabinet Office of Prime Minister Harold Macmillan was doing its part by warning all members of British Commonwealth against Soviet intentions, and stressing that ‘the pro-Rector of the Lumumba Friendship University in Moscow’ was ‘a KGB general’.Footnote 58
In most of these Cold War battles, Africans were prominent. In June 1961, a Nigerian expelled from UDN published a fictional testimony in the British Sunday Telegraph alleging that the Soviets trained students in guerrilla tactics to help stage communist revolutions.Footnote 59 Published in West Germany in 1965, Friendship University Moscow: the student trap, by Appleton, was far more honest, but still written with the explicit purpose of confirming the UDN’s invidious intentions. Propaganda battles were also fought on African soil, as happened after the expulsion from the USSR of seven Somali students in April 1961. ‘The Westerners’, wrote the Soviet ambassador in Mogadishu, Georgi Fomin, on May 22, ‘continue to use the seven Somali students dismissed from MGU to spread anti-Soviet propaganda both inside the Republic of Somalia and abroad. In particular, a leaflet written in Italian language, entitled “The communists speak … Africans reply: ten truths about the Peoples’ Friendship University in Moscow” is widely distributed in Mogadishu.’Footnote 60
A vitriolic reaction against UDN came from the predominantly white and ideologically liberal National Union of South African Students (NUSAS), an organization that opposed apartheid and sought a multi-racial alliance. Drawing on various African accounts, the NUSAS president, John Shingler, addressed a letter to the president of the Soviet Friendship Association with the Peoples of Africa and well-known Africanist, Ivan Potekhin, in October 1960, denouncing the Soviet government and UDN:
So bad has the situation now become that the government of the USSR has felt it necessary to segregate the non-whites from the whites, placing them to a separate University institution altogether. To disguise this discriminatory practice the government has hypocritically indicated that the University has been created as a special gesture to the non-white peoples of the world and has gone so far as to call it ‘The University of Friendship of Peoples’. We want to know why it would be necessary to put students into separate institutions, thus depriving them of contact with the people of the country which they are visiting, where they are only to meet their own kind in order to further this so-called friendship. We believe that this University will serve only as an indoctrination center for the ideology which your government holds …Footnote 61
This letter reached Moscow through the Netherlands and prompted an angry reply by Potekhin in April 1961. After accusing Shingler of re-iterating ‘anti-Soviet propaganda’, he retorted that UDN had been created ‘not to segregate the students from the countries of Asia or Africa from the Soviet students, but because Moscow State University, in spite of the fact that more than 25 thousand students including Africans’ were studying there, was ‘too small for a great number of foreign students wishing to receive education in the USSR, the country of highly developed culture, science and technology’.Footnote 62 Notwithstanding Potekhin’s political rhetoric, by the end of 1961 there were 10,765 Asian, African, and Latin American students, 6,261 of whom came from socialist countries and the remaining 4,504 (41.8%) from Third World countries, studying not only at MGU or UDN but all over the USSR.Footnote 63 Shingler’s argument that UDN had been created to ‘segregate the non-whites from the whites’ was projecting the apartheid policies of South Africa onto the USSR.
For all its bias, however, the letter echoed the views of Africans, who castigated the school for segregation. Such views were not uncommon. When the American political scientist Alvin Rubinstein visited the USSR in 1971, he found that African students studying at mainstream and more prestigious schools referred to Lumumba University as a ‘colonial establishment’.Footnote 64 African officials held similar views. In March 1969 the Soviet ambassador in Zambia, Sergei Slipshenko, visited the Ministry of Education to obtain the two lists of students to be sent to the USSR, the ones to study at regular schools and the others at UDN, but the second list was not ready. Although Zambians replied to his enquires that they had been busy, Slipshenko was under no illusions: ‘In Zambian circles’, he informed Moscow, ‘the opinion is widespread until today that UDN is an educational institution especially created for Africans and in which they are “segregated”.’Footnote 65
On a similar note, Arab governments questioned Moscow’s decision to create a university especially for Third World students. ‘The government of Morocco’, stated a diplomatic note addressed to the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs in October 1960, ‘does not intend to send students to the “Peoples’ Friendship” University’, adding that:
The interest in sending students to the USSR would be to allow them to connect with the Soviet cultural and student milieu, and not to get mixed with Afro-Asian or Latin American students, who make up the “Peoples’ Friendship” University, and whom they can meet in their own countries. Besides, the government of Morocco recognizes and accredits diplomas only of state and not of private or semi-governmental institutions.Footnote 66
Soviet diplomatic missions were, however, quick to realize that in some Arab countries the rejection of UDN was less due to the relative isolation of Arab students from the Soviet milieu, and more related to the very Third World ‘mixture’ of UDN’s student body, and sometimes to co-existence with students from Sub-Saharan Africa, for whom Patrice Lumumba University was perceived to be reserved. As an Iraqi UDN graduate complained to a Soviet diplomat, his degree was not recognized because the Ministry of Education of Iraq ‘considered Friendship University as a party school, in which only ill-educated Negros study’.Footnote 67 Similarly, a Tunisian diplomat informed the Soviet embassy that ‘the Tunisian Commission for the allocation of scholarships decided against the enrolment of Tunisian students at Lumumba University, considering that studies at this university constitute a form of discrimination against Tunisians, because young Tunisians have an education level comparable to that of European students, while the university is suited to African students whose level is lower’.Footnote 68
Racial and cultural hierarchies therefore lay behind some reactions, while the name ‘Patrice Lumumba’ reinforced the false impression that UDN was reserved for sub-Saharan Africans. Beyond these prejudices, however, the major reason of anxiety was UDN’s recruitment policy, which Western-oriented countries strongly opposed. Morocco affirmed that granting scholarships without the approval of Moroccan authorities was ‘unacceptable’.Footnote 69 The Nigerian government issued recurrent notes protesting against the recruitment of students through political channels. Enrolled through such channels, Biafran Nigerians at UDN created a separate union and militated for Biafra’s independence during the Nigerian Civil War (1966–70). Violent clashes erupted in UDN dormitories. As the Kremlin sided with the Nigerian Federal Government, the Soviet authorities put pressure on Biafran students to disavow separatism and reach a reconciliation with the Nigerian embassy. Meanwhile, in Lagos, the authorities stopped the departure of students other than holders of state scholarships.Footnote 70
At the same time, even socialist countries viewed UDN recruitment policies with suspicion. Kwame Nkrumah’s Ghana and Modibo Keita’s Mali, for instance, were eager to assist students from neighbouring countries, particularly members of opposition movements from Nigeria, Cameroun, Niger, or Senegal, to travel to the USSR. When it came to their own nationals, however, both governments issued diplomatic notes criticizing the Soviet recruitment policies and asking that UDN admit only students selected by their commissions.Footnote 71 Similarly, the Algerian FLN, which eagerly sent students to UDN when it was a national liberation movement, changed course after 1962, when it became the party ruling independent Algeria. In April 1963, President Ahmed Ben Bella asked the Soviets to close non-governmental channels for granting scholarships to Algerians to study at UDN.Footnote 72 ‘We are eager to train our specialists in the USSR only when cooperation is under government control’, an Algerian official informed the Soviet embassy in March 1964.Footnote 73 The standoff intensified after Ben Bella was ousted by Houari Boumedienne in June 1965. Algerian students at UDN denounced Boumedienne’s coup. In response, on 19 December 1965, the day that Boumedienne arrived on an official visit to the USSR, the Algerian embassy handed the Soviets a list with the names of four UDN students and requested their repatriation.Footnote 74 When the demand was not met, Algerian authorities did not hesitate to place UDN on their black list.
Reactions of foreign governments were not limited to verbal notes. Measures were taken to prevent students from departing to study at UDN and to punish those who circumvented state commissions. As early as 1961, Egyptian authorities prevented three holders of UDN scholarships from leaving the country.Footnote 75 Similarly, four holders of UDN scholarships from Benin experienced disillusionment when, according to the Soviet ambassador, ‘on August 21 [1966], just as they were ready to fly to Moscow to study at the Peoples’ Friendship University … five minutes before the take-off, a police officer ordered them to get out of the plane’.Footnote 76 Two years later, only four out of thirty-nine holders of UDN scholarships from Pakistan were allowed to travel to the USSR.
For returning students the consequences could be tougher. ‘Among all graduates of Soviet higher and technical education institutions, only those of Lumumba University are conscripted into the army’, noted the Soviet embassy in Jakarta two months after the socialist President Sukarno was toppled.Footnote 77 Singled out as a ‘Moscow spy’, a Camerounian female student was jailed, whereas many among her peers migrated to western European or neighbouring African countries.Footnote 78 Graduates were forced to migrate or opted to do so. In some cases, migration was a decision taken in view of the obstacles they faced to having their degree recognized.
The UDN degree
Unless there was a coup against a socialist regime, the group of graduates who had been selected by state commissions did not face difficulties in having their degree recognized. However, these conditions did not always apply to the group of students sent to the USSR by opposition parties. In particular, UDN graduates, who made up a sizeable part of this second group, could face even greater difficulties. In several contexts, therefore, UDN graduates constituted a sort of third group or ‘third-class’ graduates. The member of a communist party who had studied at Kiev or Leningrad State University was usually much more fortunate than a comrade who had attended Lumumba. Such hierarchies were even more clear-cut in Arab countries.
In Iraq, the pro-Soviet government of Kassem decided in December 1962, to ‘recognize the diplomas of all Soviet education institutions with the exception of the Peoples’ Friendship University Patrice Lumumba’.Footnote 79 Yet, when Kassem was ousted by the Baath Party in February, 1963, the majority of the 1,266 Iraqis studying in the USSR, who refused to pledge allegiance to Baath, were targeted by the regime. Students at UDN remained a target for longer. Even as Soviet–Iraqi relations improved, a professor from Baghdad University, who was dispatched to the USSR in July 1968 to inquire about the studies of Iraqis, concluded that, ‘in comparison with the other Soviet institutions of higher education, the academic level at UDN-Patrice Lumumba’ was ‘much lower’.Footnote 80 One year later, fourteen Iraqi graduates of UDN addressed a letter to the rector, Sergei Rumiantsev, urging him and the Soviet government to press the Iraqi side to recognize the UDN degree.Footnote 81
Syria, the biggest Third World exporter of students to the USSR after 1967, signed an agreement with Moscow in 1968, which provided for the recognition of Soviet degrees. However, this agreement did not apply to UDN. The reason, according to an official at the Syrian Ministry of Education, himself a graduate of MGU, was that UDN was recruiting students without the knowledge of the Syrian government.Footnote 82 UDN graduates faced stark consequences. ‘Our government does not recognize the degrees of the Peoples’ Friendship University even though this is an obligation according to the agreement signed between Syria and the USSR last year’, a group of graduates of the Faculty of Medicine wrote to Rumiantsev on 18 March 1969, adding: ‘Being in a very difficult situation … deprived of the possibility to work on our specializations, we ask you to raise the question of the recognition of the UDN degrees through the Soviet Ministry of Education to our government.’Footnote 83
While Morocco, Algeria, and Egypt ruled out recognition of the UDN degree, Lebanon in 1967 and Iraq in 1969 imposed terms. One of these stipulated that only graduates who had completed secondary school before attending university could have their degree recognized. Soviet officials complied with this regulation, perhaps with relief. When a delegation of the Lebanese Communist Party visited the Minvuz and requested a scholarship for a member who had not completed secondary education, a Soviet official showed them the Lebanese government’s note and asked them ‘to choose only candidates with the required educational level’.Footnote 84
As well as betraying political anxieties, these measures, which focused on the shortened programmes and on students without the required qualifications, reflected dismissive views about the quality of training. Such views were common in Tunisia, where the authorities ‘evoked the easier study programmes’ to justify the non-recognition of the UDN degree.Footnote 85 ‘My degree is not recognized and I am obliged to work as a trainee doctor’, a Tunisian graduate of the Faculty of Medicine wrote to Rumiantsev in November 1968, adding: ‘With the exception of those who attended UDN-Lumumba University, all Tunisian citizens who received education in the USSR work as established specialists, their diplomas have been accredited.’Footnote 86
UDN graduates faced obstacles in other countries too. In Sri Lanka, the right-leaning United National Party, which came to power in 1965, refused to recognize the degrees of UDN graduates, and the anti-communist Indonesian regime did the same after 1966.Footnote 87 That year, the ousting of President Nkrumah heralded troubles for the hundreds of returning Ghanaians. The ‘Russian doctors’, as Soviet-educated physicians were dismissively called, became the target of a public campaign. Published in the Legon Observer of the University of Ghana in October 1967, an article by a Ghanaian doctor lamented the low admission requirements and shortened study programmes, and, hinting at the UDN graduates, expressed ‘doubts that the Russians provided these students the same training they provide the Soviet students at their best universities’.Footnote 88 His doubts were not entirely unfounded. The 1968 report by Egorov and Sofinskii mentioned earlier confirmed the shortcomings in the training of physicians. The five-year study programme was insufficient, especially for students lacking fundamental knowledge. The report acknowledged that only 12% had pursued their one-year hospital training.Footnote 89 Whether intentionally or not, however, in the Ghanaian debate the line distinguishing UDN graduates from those of mainstream medical institutes, who had completed a regular programme, was blurred. The negative image of UDN therefore served to disparage Soviet-educated elites altogether. UDN played into the hands of Western-educated elites, who did not welcome the competition of their Eastern-educated compatriots for prestigious jobs and social capital.
In Latin America too, UDN graduates and especially physicians could face similar problems. Graduates from Mexico and Ecuador reported complications of an administrative nature and delays in accrediting their degrees. A Colombian graduate informed the UDN in September 1971 that her degree had been recognized as a Bachelor’s and not as a Master of Sciences. She had, however, secured employment at Magdalena University of Santa Marta.Footnote 90 Some students responded by simply leaving the Communist Party. In 1971, the secretary general of the Brazilian Communist Party, Luís Carlos Prestes, informed the newly appointed UDN rector, Vladimir Stanis, that ‘among the graduates there’ were ‘anti-communists’ and others who ‘after they returned from the Soviet Union abandoned the Party’, adding that ‘overall graduates of the Faculty of Engineering work very well’. However, Prestes also noted that ‘medical graduates’ access to work is more difficult because it was necessary to officially recognize and approve their degrees’.Footnote 91 The same year, according to the Bolivian doctor Héctor Aleman, a senior Communist Party member and alumnus of the Faculty of Medicine, the majority of Bolivian graduates had abandoned the party or converted to Maoism, but had managed to embark on good careers.
Overall, suspicion regarding Moscow’s aims and unfavourable comments about the academic level of UND courses were common. Several countries refused to accredit the UDN diploma or did so slowly, and after their commissions had dealt with each returnee separately. An official account of the history of UDN acknowledges the serious difficulties that graduates faced in their careers from the mid 1960s to the 1970s.Footnote 92 Evidence points to an ironic twist: instead of succeeding in its mission to promote socialist-minded elites through positive discrimination, UDN had created a group of disadvantaged specialists – its own graduates.
Reform, heyday, and demise of Lumumba University
Before the issue of degrees loomed large, such phenomena as indiscipline, long studies at the preparatory faculty, and the dropout rate had sparked concerns. As early as the 1960s measures were taken to raise standards and improve the university’s image abroad. On the domestic front, the increase in the ratio of Soviet to foreign students from 1 : 10 to almost 1 : 3.5 by the end of the sixties was meant to help the foreigners learn Russian, ease their integration, and raise the academic level. Another correcting measure consisted in drastically reducing the percentage of enrolees without complete secondary-level education from 26% at the beginning to 12.8% in 1962/63 and only 2% in 1966/67, which in turn allowed the length of studies at the preparatory faculty to be reduced from three to two years beginning in 1964. Nevertheless, even in 1966/67, although in possession of certificates of secondary-level education, every fourth new student was enrolled in the two-year preparatory programme.Footnote 93
But the biggest and most debated reform consisted of the drastic reduction of specializations from an initial thirty-two to thirteen within a decade. Implemented in two waves, in 1963/64 and 1970/71, this reform was meant to eliminate all specializations considered less relevant to Third World countries, and to concentrate on those that prepared ‘specialists of broader profile’. Despite strong reactions by biology professors, who advocated the relevance of their discipline as demonstrated by the exceptionally successful careers of their students, biology was eliminated, as were analytical chemistry, development of oil and gas wells, and industrial planning. At the Faculty of History and Philology, the reform swept away archaeology, ethnography, linguistics, and journalism, maintaining only history and Russian language and literature. Of course, fewer specializations did not necessarily mean the development of curricula that were different from those in mainstream faculties. As the elimination of biology suggests, the criterion for eliminating a specialization was not only its irrelevance. In essence, the reform constituted a pragmatic readjustment of the UDN ambitions in keeping with its resources and the nature of the student body, as well as an effort to forge its academic identity through what the university council believed were meaningful and feasible study programmes. These new programmes remained in force until 1990. The only notable exception was the re-introduction of journalism in 1980, in response to the quest of the Third World for a New International Information Order, which became the most popular specialization at the Faculty of History and Philology.Footnote 94
At the international level, UDN sought to build its legitimacy by adhering to the International Association of Universities in May 1964, sending scholars to international conferences, and, beginning in 1969, hosting the annual UN-sponsored courses for upgrading the qualifications of engineers from ‘developing’ countries. Bilateral agreements were also signed when political conditions were suitable, as with Sudan in 1965, which became one of the first countries to recognize the UDN degree. The Sudanese dictator, Jaafar Nimeiri, went farther in March 1970, embracing UDN by sponsoring the annual Award of the Democratic Republic of Sudan for the best UDN student. The same year, seizing on the momentum of the Indo-Soviet partnership, Moscow obtained New Delhi’s recognition of the UDN degree.Footnote 95
Despite these developments, in most cases the issue of degrees remained unresolved. A UNESCO conference on the equivalence of diplomas held in Moscow in June 1968 brought about no solution. Then, in December 1968, Rumiantsev came up with his own proposal. In a report addressed to the Minister of Education, Vyacheslav Eliutin, he cited the letters of graduates who complained that their qualifications were recognized as a Bachelor’s degree but not as a Master’s, and identified this as the main problem. His solution combined formal changes and job training, while providing for the further shortening of studies. UDN faculties, he proposed, should first award a Bachelor’s degree after completion of the third year, or of the fourth in Medicine, and then the Master’s degree one year later. Students should be free to choose if they stopped at the Bachelor level or would go on to pursue graduate studies and gain a Master’s degree. In that case, the entire year of the Master’s should be devoted to practical training and the writing of a thesis.Footnote 96
Rumiantsev thus endorsed UDN’s ‘Stakhanovite’ concept and advocated its stricter implementation. Countries such as Ethiopia and Laos, impatient to reap the fruits of international aid, subscribed, though with reservations, to the idea of shortened study programmes. But, having weighed the academic arguments and international reactions, Eliutin did not. As a result, Rumiantsev’s plan was never implemented. In December 1970, he was replaced by Vladimir Stanis, Eliutin’s deputy at the Minvuz, who remained UDN’s rector until June 1993. Stanis took office together with instructions to deliver a new reform plan. On 17 July 1971, his plan was sent to Eliutin, with Stanis pushing for a number of major changes. ‘It is necessary’, he stressed, ‘to extend the duration of studies in all specializations from 6 to 10 months’, in order to ‘improve the ideological work and the quality of specialists who graduate.’ To raise the level, he argued that the ratio of Soviets to foreigners should reach 1 : 2, noting that this increase would in turn reduce the cost of studies per student. Minor changes in the faculty chairs were also proposed in line with the school’s policy to train ‘specialists of broader profile’. But the most important reform was the extension of study programmes.Footnote 97
With a decree issued on 31 December 1971, the Minvuz ratified Stanis’s plan. Beginning in 1972, graduates of the preparatory faculty went on to mainstream departments to study six years at the medical faculty, five years in engineering, natural sciences and mathematics, or in the Russian language and literature programme, and a maximum of four and a half years at the remainder.Footnote 98 This extension came with the reduction of class hours per week and the systematization of practical training for all students. Those studying at the Faculty of History and Philology often underwent training in museums. Mining engineers used the MGU bases in Crimea, and civil engineers worked at construction sites around Moscow, including at the UDN campus. Completed in the mid 1970s, the campus had a polyclinic for the training of medical students, a computer centre, numerous well-equipped laboratories, and many other facilities. As provided by the plan, between 1976 and 1987 the annual enrolment of Soviet students reached an average of 358, against 655 foreigners.Footnote 99 Carefully selected by the Komsomol, they were often PhD candidates who envisioned a career in the burgeoning field of Soviet–Third World relations. Being an international school, which provided linguistic training to its Soviet students, UDN was also the only university in which a Soviet jurist, mathematician, or engineer could defend his thesis in a foreign language.
Stanis took further steps to raise the academic level in line with his proclaimed ‘cult of knowledge’. While insisting on class-based affirmative action, he prioritized academic criteria and rejected demands to enrol members of communist parties who did not meet the requirements. ‘Unfortunately we cannot admit people without complete secondary-level education’, he replied to the request of Luís Carlos Prestes.Footnote 100 In 1972, all enrolees had completed secondary education. UDN graduates who had worked in their countries for at least two years and had remained loyal party members were encouraged to return for a PhD.
The standard political courses taught all over the USSR, such as Marxist–Leninist philosophy or scientific atheism, were also introduced by the end of the sixties. Optional ones included the ‘Introduction to the non-capitalist path of development’ and the ‘Critique of Zionism’ to woo Arab students and embassies. ‘Improving the ideological work’, along with raising the academic standards, had been an argument Stanis had advocated for the extension of study programmes. With regard to academic standards, in 1977 the external state commissions that examined the first cohorts of students who had studied through the new programmes assessed their knowledge positively. The Commission for Marxist–Leninist Philosophy, however, was the only one to stress that the level of ‘foreign students was much lower’ compared to that of their Soviet counterparts. The issue was passed to the Minvuz, which adopted a resolution criticizing the university and requiring improvements in ideological education.Footnote 101 The incident demonstrates that the school was not fundamentally obsessed with such education.
More important shortcomings persisted, however. Among 3,993 students enrolled from 1976 to 1981, only 2,913 (73%) graduated six years later, between 1982 and 1987.Footnote 102 On the other major front, even though the extension of study programmes had removed one obstacle, in many countries the recognition of the UDN degree remained a vexed question. Algeria, for example, the non-communist country pursuing the most extended educational cooperation with USSR, never accepted UDN scholarships and never recognized its degrees. By contrast, most Sub-Saharan African countries did, and Soviet allies such as Angola, Benin, Congo-Brazzaville, Mali, and Mozambique signed cooperation agreements with UDN.Footnote 103 By 1984, the USSR had signed forty-four bilateral agreements providing for the mutual recognition of degrees.Footnote 104 More foreign governments were now selecting their nationals who studied at UDN. By the end of the 1970s, Nigerian students had returned to UDN. It also became evident that students preferred UDN to mainstream universities in remote Soviet regions.
Economic factors and the international environment played a crucial role in these developments. In the shadow of the 1973 economic crisis, Great Britain introduced ‘full-cost’ tuition fees for international students coming from countries outside the European Economic Community.Footnote 105 In the US too, tuition fees doubled, whereas the number of scholarships for international students declined.Footnote 106 While one after another Third World countries plunged into recession, oil-producing nations like Nigeria benefited greatly and became major exporters of students to the West, despite the rising costs of education. But the collapse of oil prices in the late 1970s hit the oil-producing countries hard and this, in turn, brought about a decline in the number of their nationals studying in the US and Great Britain. Nigeria, in particular, defaulted on its payments to American universities and cancelled the scholarships paid to Nigerian students abroad.Footnote 107 In the meantime, from 1979 to 1989, the USSR doubled the number of scholarships for African and Arab countries, becoming a top donor of educational aid and a major host country after France and the United States.Footnote 108 Unlike the US, where in 1981/82 only 11.5% of international students were subsidized, the Soviet Union fully covered the expenses of almost all Third World students.Footnote 109 Against this background, UDN was indeed a showpiece of solidarity and a safe haven.
These developments, however, came late. As recruitment of Third World students all over the USSR gained pace, UDN was no longer their primary destination. Throughout the 1980s, the overwhelming majority studied in the many regular schools such as Kharkov and Kiev state universities, medical and technical institutes, which emerged as major centres for the training of Third World students. As the Togolese political scientist Fafali Koudawo observed – and Table 1 (which shows the evolution of enrolments) corroborates – against the broader picture of Soviet educational aid to the Third World, the much-discussed Lumumba University was ‘the tree hiding the forest’.Footnote 110
a Cyprus, Iran, Sudan, and Turkey are included, Israel and Mauritania are not.
b Japan is not included; South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia are included only in 1961 and 1971, Afghanistan until 1988.
c Without Cuba.
Source: GARF, fond 9606, op. 1, d. 869, 4754, 9121; and fond 9661, op. 1, d. 335.
Lumumba University did not reap the fruits of normalization for long. Under the weight of economic collapse, the Soviet Union fell apart (1989–91), the Soviet–Third World alliance was relegated to the dustbin of history, and Lumumba University no longer had any reason to exist. Fees were introduced and self-financed students were admitted in 1989. In August 1991, Lumumba University signed an agreement with the Commission for the Social and Economic Development of Autonomous Republics and Regions and of Small National Groups of the Russian Federation providing for the training of students, who would navigate the emerging market economy.Footnote 111 In a sense, the new mission confirmed the university’s role in providing the ‘right kind’ of education for the development of less developed countries through affirmative action. Students from Kalmykia and Ingushetia replaced the subsidized Third World students of the Soviet era; market economics replaced Marxism–Leninism; and racism against people from the Global and post-Soviet South was widespread. On 4 February 1992, Stanis signed a decree allowing foreigners to pay the fees in equipment instead of hard currency.Footnote 112 This was his last decree as rector of Patrice Lumumba University. On 5 February, the university was rechristened the Russian Peoples’ Friendship University (RUDN).
Through the painful years of adjustment, by the end of the 2000s, RUDN had capitalized on its infrastructure, experience, and depoliticization, and on the reassertion of Russian power, emerging as the leader in the training of foreign students and a top earner of foreign currency among Russian universities.Footnote 113 By far the most tragic page in its history was written in November 2003, when a fire broke out in a dormitory, taking the lives of forty-two African and Asian students.Footnote 114
Conclusion
Lumumba was probably the only academic institution targeted by so many diplomatic notes, castigated for its Third World concept, denounced as a school for spies by opponents, or hailed as a symbol of solidarity by proponents.Footnote 115 A common confusion has been to portray it as a successor of the schools of the Communist International which trained cadres and revolutionaries. Confronting these stereotypes, this article has sought to situate UDN in the intellectual and political context at the confluence of decolonization and Cold War. Long-term geopolitical objectives did lie behind its creation, as they lay behind the university for underdeveloped countries which Laugier and Fischer envisioned, and behind the educational aid offered by the US and other countries. The international education policies devised by both capitalist and socialist countries in response to the emergence of the Third World were meant to best serve these objectives. To the benefit of Third World countries, education stood at a strategic intersection of the Cold War battlefield between cultural and development policies. Against this background, educational internationalism was the norm. All Soviet educational education programmes reflected these trends and the importance that Moscow assigned to education for building a Soviet–Third World alliance. Lumumba University was meant to display to the world the superiority of the leading socialist country and to propel friends of the USSR into the elites. It was expected to pay dividends both as an educational institution and as a cultural policy venture.
A sui generis academic institution functioning on ideological premises, Lumumba University had a difficult educational mission. As a consequence, throughout the 1960s, its academic standards were lower compared to mainstream Soviet schools. Even then, however, the efforts of students and professors bore fruit. A 1968 CIA memorandum noted that ‘Several graduates of Patrice Lumumba University have been awarded advanced degrees in the United States and Western businessmen who have worked with African graduates of Soviet schools have commented favourably on their performance.’Footnote 116 By a twist of fate, which actually confirms that the training reached high standards, UDN-trained engineers worked in the oil-rich Gulf States and benefited the region’s economies. Although the history of returning students remains to be written, notable examples of ministers and heads of state suggest that UDN graduates did become incorporated into the political elites.Footnote 117 In Moscow, among its numerous faculty members, UDN boasted respected professors of geology, biochemistry, and other disciplines, whose textbooks the Minvuz recommended for all students in the USSR, Soviets and foreigners alike. Its new campus and facilities were excellent both by socialist and by international standards. Unlike the curriculum in most Western institutions, the systematic practical training was a major advantage of the Soviet programmes. The reassertion of academic criteria and the extension of study programmes signified that by the 1970s the gap with the mainstream schools had disappeared, and through the development of higher standards UDN had become an almost ordinary Soviet school.
Ironically, this normalization, or retreat from the initial concept, left the university with even fewer educational arguments, if any, to account for its Third World identity. As the admission and education policies changed, questions as to why a Nigerian or Indian student should study mathematics or engineering at UDN and not elsewhere in the USSR could hardly be answered. In medical studies, the emphasis that UDN placed on tropical medicine and diseases was now common at the medical institutes of Kharkov or Crimea, the latter claiming to provide students from the southern hemisphere with the most relevant training.Footnote 118 At the UDN Faculty of History and Philology, students who chose Russian language had few peers who were native speakers. Those who opted for history could attend lectures given by Soviet area specialists, members of the Moscow-based Institutes of Latin America, Africa, and Orientalism. Yet, as the well-known example of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas illustrates, scholarship could easily fall victim to politics.Footnote 119 Overall, beyond educational improvements, convincing arguments for the continuing existence of a Third World university were notably absent.
As a cultural undertaking, therefore, UDN was compromised by its very concept. Third World students and officials were grateful for the scholarships, but never subscribed to the idea of a special university. The Soviets fell into the trap which the French had avoided, thanks to the reactions that Laugier and Fischer encountered in Dakar, Abidjan, and Paris. Regardless of where they were located, special education institutions reminded Africans of the École William Ponty of colonial Senegal. Smaller schools in ‘neutral’ havens, like the Geneva Centre for the Training of African Experts, founded in 1961 with a grant by the Ford Foundation as a response to UDN, courted African elites more discretely.Footnote 120 But the UDN could not.
As a consequence, to paraphrase William Appleton, Lumumba University became not a ‘student trap’ but a ‘Soviet trap’, an expensive liability in Moscow’s cultural policy. To make matters worse, the issues linked to the UDN had long-lasting implications. Casting a shadow over the entire Soviet educational assistance to the Third World, its image informed false perceptions about education all over the USSR, and gave the rivals of Soviet-educated elites ammunition by which they could disparage both the Soviet schools and their graduates. As late as 1989, the journal Jeune Afrique could publish misleading articles entitled ‘USSR: fast-track training’.Footnote 121 Two years later a Portuguese-educated Guinean claimed that the ‘red rag of Patrice Lumumba University’ could not compare with his own diploma, and a Togolese scholar could confirm that similar opinions were widespread.Footnote 122 Such views have persisted despite the undeniable educational work carried out by UDN and financed by the Soviet taxpayer.
Constantin Katsakioris is a research fellow at the Bayreuth Academy of Advanced African Studies. He received his PhD from the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales in Paris in 2015 and is currently completing his first monograph, Leçons soviétiques: la formation des étudiants d’Afrique et du Moyen Orient en URSS pendant la guerre froide.