Virgínia Moura
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Virgínia Moura (1915-1998) was a Portuguese anti-government activist and feminist, opposed to the authoritarian regime known as the '' Estado Novo''. As a member of the Communist Party, she was arrested on 16 occasions for her activities. She was the second Portuguese woman to qualify as a civil engineer.


Early life

Virgínia de Faria Moura was born on 19 July 1915 in São Martinho do Conde, in the
Guimarães Guimarães () is a city and municipality located in northern Portugal, in the district of Braga. Its historic town centre has been listed as a UNESCWorld Heritage Sitesince 2001, in recognition for being an "exceptionally well-preserved and a ...
municipality, in the
Braga district The district of Braga ( pt, Distrito de Braga ) is a district in the northwest of Portugal. The district capital is the city of Braga, and it is bordered by the district of Viana do Castelo in the north, Vila Real in the east, Spain ( Galicia) ...
of Portugal. Her mother, a primary school teacher, was unmarried. At this time in conservative Portugal there was a considerable stigma attached to unmarried mothers. Moura indicated that she was aware of this from an early age, as her extended family cut off contact with her mother. Schoolmates were forbidden to invite her to their homes and even at university she felt marginalised. She indicated that this stigma was a factor in the development of her revolutionary approach. Nevertheless, her mother was accepted by enough people in the community that she could earn a living teaching children during the day and their parents at night, in a part of Portugal where adult illiteracy was high. Moura attended secondary school in Póvoa de Varzim. At the age of 15 she took part in a student strike to protest against the murder of a young student, allegedly committed by the police. Three years later she joined the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) and worked with the Socorro Vermelho (Red Assistance), an organization devoted to supporting political prisoners in Portugal and Spain. At this time she met the then architecture student António Lobão Vital, who would be her companion for 42 years until his death. In 1935, Vital was arrested for finding jobs for two Spanish refugees and was stopped from finishing his studies. Later, he did manage to graduate as an architect. Moura graduated from the Faculty of Engineering of the University of Porto in 1948 becoming only the second Portuguese woman to qualify as a civil engineer ( Maria Amélia Chaves was the first in 1937). However, she could not obtain a job in the Civil Service, since she was already on police records as an opponent of the ''Estado Novo''. Private engineering projects that she carried out were signed by others. She also studied Mathematics and Humanities, at the University of Coimbra and University of Porto, and in a private capacity carried out some teaching.


Opposition to the Estado Novo

From 1944 Moura was an active participant in the struggle against the '' Estado Novo''. She was a member of the
Movement of National Antifascist Unity The Movement of National Antifascist Unity ( pt, Movimento de Unidade Nacional Antifascista or MUNAF) was a political platform of democratic organizations which fought against the Portuguese authoritarian regime ( led by António de Oliveira Salazar ...
(MUNAF), which was a political platform of groups opposed to the government that was strongly influenced by the Communist party; the Movement of Democratic Unity (MUD), which played a similar role; and the National Democratic Movement (MND), which supported opposition candidates for the National Assembly. She was also active with the National Council of Portuguese Women and the
Associação Feminina Portuguesa para a Paz The ''Associação Feminina Portuguesa para a Paz'' (Portuguese Women's Association for Peace - AFPP) was a female pacifist association created in 1935 and dissolved by the Esdado Novo dictatorship in 1952. It had active groups in Lisbon, Coimb ...
(Portuguese Women's Peace Association). The latter was dissolved by the ''Estado Novo'' in 1952. In an environment where women were subordinated to their husbands and in some cases still could not vote, and in a country which had the highest child mortality in Europe, women and their status in Portugal was a common theme of Moura's work. Her "Letter to a Modern Woman" (''Carta a Uma Mulher Moderna'') was a call to women to participate actively in political life. First arrested on 17 December 1949, Moura was tried for "treason to the Motherland" in 1951, for having signed a declaration that demanded that President Salazar negotiate with the Indian government regarding the Portuguese colonies of Goa, Daman and Diu. In total, she was arrested sixteen times by the PIDE, the Portuguese secret police, prosecuted nine times, convicted three times and also repeatedly assaulted by the police. The last arrest was in 1962. She became well-respected in Porto to the point that in 1950 women in Bolhão Market went on strike to demand her release from prison. At a trial in 1952 messages of support from Eugénie Cotton, a French scientist and President of the Women's International Democratic Federation, and Irène Joliot-Curie, daughter of
Pierre Pierre is a masculine given name. It is a French form of the name Peter. Pierre originally meant "rock" or "stone" in French (derived from the Greek word πέτρος (''petros'') meaning "stone, rock", via Latin "petra"). It is a translation ...
and Marie Curie and President of the World Peace Council, were read out in court. She, herself, was held in prison in Porto, in PIDE offices, and in Lisbon's Caxias Prison. Senior male Communist party members were also held in the
Peniche Fortress The Peniche Fortress is located in the municipality of Peniche in Leiria District, Portugal. Built on the site of the former Castle of Atouguia da Baleia, of which only a few vestiges remain, initial construction took place in 1557 and 1558 but t ...
, and Moura organised a protest by wives of political prisoners against the harsh conditions in which they were kept. Moura supported the Presidential campaigns of Norton de Matos in 1949, of
Ruy Luís Gomes Ruy Luís Gomes (5 December 1905 – 27 October 1984) was a Portuguese mathematician who made significant contributions to the development of mathematical physics and the state of academia in Portugal during the twentieth century. He was part of ...
in 1951, and of Humberto Delgado in 1958 and was a charismatic speaker at public meetings. She became a member of the Central Committee of the PCP and remained in hiding, but also found time to write newspaper and magazine articles under the pseudonym of "Maria Selma". She was a founder of a magazine called ''O Sol Nascente'' (The Rising Sun). As an editor she was fined for having edited a book, ''Palavras necessárias'' (Necessary words), by the communist,
Bento António Gonçalves : ''For the city named Bento Gonçalves in Brazil, see Bento Gonçalves, Rio Grande do Sul'' Bento António Gonçalves, GOL (2 March 1902 – 11 September 1942) was the second General Secretary of the Portuguese Communist Party. He was born in Mo ...
.


After the Carnation Revolution

The
Carnation Revolution The Carnation Revolution ( pt, Revolução dos Cravos), also known as the 25 April ( pt, 25 de Abril, links=no), was a military coup by left-leaning military officers that overthrew the authoritarian Estado Novo regime on 25 April 1974 in Lisbo ...
took place on 25 April 1974, resulting in the overthrow of the ''Estado Novo''. On April 26, she was invited by the Armed Forces Movement (MFA), which had instituted the peaceful Revolution, to accompany them in the release of political prisoners at the PIDE headquarters, in Porto. Inside, "some terrified agents burned all the papers they could". After April 25 she continued her political activity as a member of the PCP and stood for election on several occasions, being elected to the councils of both Porto and Gondomar. In 1985 she was made a Grand Officer of the Order of Liberty ( pt, Ordem da Liberdade). This was followed by the receipt of the Medal of Honor from Porto City Council in 1988. Virgínia Moura died on 19 April 1998, in Porto. The funeral of the lady known as the "Passionate Portuguese" was attended by thousands. In 1999, a bust of Virgínia Moura, by the sculptor Manuel Dias, was inaugurated. The sculpture was placed in front of the building where the political police were based when she was arrested for the first time and was unveiled 50 years after that first arrest. In Guimarães a group of schools bears her name and a street has been named after her, as have roads in several other locations throughout Portugal.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Moura, Virginia 1915 births 1998 deaths Portuguese anti-fascists Portuguese prisoners and detainees Prisoners and detainees of Portugal Portuguese communists Portuguese women activists Portuguese women's rights activists Portuguese feminists