Jump to content

Lina Magaia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by S.coscione (talk | contribs) at 01:43, 12 July 2011. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Lina Magaia (born 1945 - 2011) was a Mozambican was a writer, journalist and veteran of the war for the independence of Mozambique. It was a woman of many facets, which stood out during the life in areas such as writing, film, rural development, or even as a soldier of the liberation of the country from colonial rule. Lina Magaia died on June 27 of 2011 victim of cardiovascular disease.

Published works

  • Histórias trágicas do banditismo. 2 volumes. (1987–89)
  • Dumba nengue (1987) [Dumba nengue, run for your life: peasant tales of tragedy in Mozambique. Translated by Michael Wolfers; historical introduction by Allen Isaacman. (1988) ISBN 0865430748 (pbk.); ISBN 086543073X]
  • Duplo massacre en Moçambique (1989)
  • Doppio massacro : storie tragiche del banditismo in Mozambico (1990) ISBN 8826700931
  • Delehta: pulos na vida (1994)
  • Memories of Grandma Marta (2011)

The books "Dumba Nengue" (1987) and "Double Massacre in Mozambique" (1989) contain gruesome episodes illustrating the savage nature of the war and of the apartheid regime's surrogate force, the Renamo rebels. A third book "Delehta" (1994) set during the war, is part fiction, part documentary. Lina's final work was "Recordacoes da Vovo Marta" ("Memories of Grandma Marta"), published in 2011, and based on lengthy interviews with one of Mozambique's oldest women, 99 year old Marta Mbocota Guebuza, mother of the current Mozambican President, Armando Guebuza.

Source