PINHEIRO, D. M. R.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/8579207522703438; PINHEIRO, Daelem Maria Rodrigues.
Resumo:
This paper aims to understand the political action of women in the process of
independence of Angola, and the Methodist educational influence. Especially those
who were part of the anti-colonial resistance. The analysis has as main objective to
understand the Methodist Protestant missions in Angola and their performance in the
development of formal education for girls, especially analyzing the performance of
Deolinda Rodrigues during the period of anti-colonial struggles. The documentation
used for the research was the Diary of an Exile without Return. Luanda: Nzila, 2003
by Deolinda Rodrigues the Statement of the Reverend Malcolm MoVeigh of Stanhope,
New Jersey, missionary of the Methodist Church to Angola, Africa, 1558-1961 and
the book "Colonial Angola photographed by Methodist missionaries", published by
Paul. A. Blake. foundation Agostinho Neto, 2019. Access to the documents was made
possible thanks to the use, as research methodology, the digital collections, essentially
through the Tchiweka Association of Documentation (ATD); the Mario Soares
Foundation and Memories of Africa and the West. The research was developed
through the digital collections, according to Almeida (2011), the internet enables the
"reduction in space" and the expansion of the historian in the research. The applied
methodology is based on research on this theme. For this, we work with the following
bibliography, OYEWÚMÍ (2021) will be the basis for analyzing the gender issue
beyond the West, without homogenizing and understanding gender issues on the
African continent, as a colonial social construct. Paredes (2010), analyzing the
Methodist church and the MPLA movement through the writings of Deolinda
Rodrigues, which the author makes an analysis of Deolinda's education through the
church, her entry into the MPLA and the criticism reported by Deolinda Rodrigues in
her personal diary. Whose results, consisted in the perception of understanding that
formal education conducted by the Methodist missions was synonymous with greater
educational possibilities for many Angolans who were fighting against Portuguese
colonialism.