Total population | |
---|---|
162,604 (2011); 31,614 (2022) [1] | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Lisbon [2] | |
Languages | |
Portuguese |
Angolans in Portugal form the country's second-largest group of African migrants, after Cape Verdeans. [3] In 2006, official statistics showed 28,854 legal Angolan residents in Portugal. [1] However, this number is likely an underestimate of the true size of the community, as it does not count people of Angolan origin who hold Portuguese citizenship. [3] In 2022 INE counted 31,614 Angolans living in Portugal. [4]
Large-scale migratory flow from Angola to Portugal began in the 1970s, around the time of Angolan independence. [5] However, this early flow consisted largely of retornados, white Portuguese born in Angola. The bulk of mixed-race or black African migrants came later. [2] After the 2002 peace agreement which ended the Angolan Civil War, many Angolan migrants in Portugal returned to Angola. By 2003, statistics of the Angolan embassy in Portugal showed that between 8,000 and 10,000 had already returned, and that 400 people a week were flying from Portugal to the Angolan capital Luanda. [6] However, statistics of the Instituto Nacional de Estatística showed that the population of Angolan legal residents did not decrease from 2001 to 2003, but instead grew by 12.6% (from 22,751 to 25,616 people). [1]
The most intense period for migration was in the 1990s. Most Angolans who came to Portugal would come under a tourist visa and overstay, converting into residents and citizens. Others would seek asylum. A sizeable majority of those who did not migrate to Portugal instead migrated to South Africa. Of the migrants, many were either young adults or teenagers. 69.5% of Angolans who migrated to Portugal were male. 76.4% of migrants had some sort of occupation at the time of their asylum interviews. 68.8% of incoming migrants had completed a basic level of education. [7] Migrants typically came from middle to low-middle socioeconomic backgrounds. Emigration to Portugal from Angola was a result of war, economic instability, academic aspirations, and new opportunities. [8] Existing networks created linkages by which made immigration and transitioning to Portuguese-living easier. Linkages to the Angolan homeland remained strong despite physical detachment, these linkages are especially true when speaking in regards to economic obligations. [7]
In 1998, Law 244/98 in Lisbon was passed allowing for families to reconnect in Portugal. [9] The condition was that the individual that is already residing in Lisbon is supposed to have lived there for at least one year. The individual within Portugal can also petition for his or her family member that lives outside of Portugal. The process to residency for the petitioned family member begins with temporary living status, that can be renewed once it expires. After appealing for additional years, they may be authorized for residency, not depending on the status of the already resident individual who petitioned. This can all take place under the prerequisite that the migrant can provide for family if unemployed. In 2003, Portugal approved the European Council's demand for limitation of family to be nuclear. [10] In 2002, before the demand came into effect, family migration constituted 75% of national immigration. In 2009, 805 authorizations for residency were given to Angolan citizens for their family members. [10]
Many individuals invest in small businesses in various industries. Despite investment, not all succeed. This is a result of smaller than needed capital, lack of skill, or complications with the immigration system. There are many obstacles that stand in the way of the Angolan diaspora of Portugal to invest in their home country. [7]
A vast majority of Angolans do not currently invest into their country as a result of short interests and fear of government interventions. Political insinuations are placed on Angolans investing back into Angola by the government. [7]
However, these discouragements do not prevent investment from taking place. 83% of migrants send remittances to their networks in Angola, with a high concentration of the remittances being sent to Luanda. In turn, 90% of Angolans receive remittances from abroad. [7] The money quantity of remittances has been on the decline as a result of changing economic factors in Portugal. Most recipients are either parents, siblings, children, or spouses. Remittances from Portugal are sent via recorded services or hand delivery. The former is the most popular because it is reliable. Remittances are not popularly received through banks for less than 6% of the population has access to a bank account. This is changing as Angola expands its micro-financing industry. [11]
67% of remittances are used for basic necessities and utilities. They have also been used to advance educational opportunities for aspiring male academics. Remittances have had the biggest impact in providing food security. In conclusion, they are seen as an additional income to many households and are responsible for the well-being of many households despite economic hardships. [11]
The first Angolan Association was the Casa de Angola de Lisboa, founded in 1971. [12] Its main purpose was to supervise and control the activities of Angolans in Portugal. The association has consisted of Portuguese-Angolans, most of whom were there for military or civil service. The association had also consisted but to varying and typically smaller degrees, colonial-minded Angolans and members of the Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA). The strength of the Casa de Angola could be attributed to the need to lean on a government, which at the time was a dictatorship. Post-revolution in 1974, Angolan university students took over the association. The Casa de Angola following the revolution became a voice for the MPLA. Until 1986, it was the only recognized Angolan Association in Portugal.
The second association started in 1991 under the name União de Estudantes Angolanos em Portugal (AEAP). This association was founded to serve the interests of students pursuing university educations in Portugal. [13]
In the 1980s, Angolan Associations had elitist implications. This would also include ties to the MPLA and also the Portuguese Communist Party. In the 1990s, this changed as a result of an influx of poor Angolan refugees and immigrants. The socioeconomic condition of this demographic lived in shanty-towns and squatted where it was prohibited. The increased number of Angolans living in Portugal made way for more political associations to form in order to lobby for an immigration policy that benefits the Angolan community at large. [14]
The rapid growth of the Angolan economy and the demise of the Portuguese economy in the 2008 financial recession created a phenomenon of Portuguese migration to Angola. Of those migrating to Angola is Portuguese-Angolans. This phenomenon has brought back the history and memory of the Portuguese colonization of Angola. Most migrate as a result of unemployment and the ability to secure a job with stable incomes. [15] The financial security that may result in living in Angola could maintain a family in Portugal. With employment in Angola, there is the opportunity for social ascension in contrast with the possibilities of social degradation that may occur in Portugal. The overall well-being of Portuguese-Angolans after securing stable incomes could for them to send remittances back to their family in Portugal. Success in Angola as a Portuguese-Angolan (White-Angolan) is not guaranteed. When there is instability, that individual may be at the whims of the Angolan Party-State. The immigrant, now in an inferior position, may be the recipient of reverse treatment because of the historical legacy of the Portuguese to native-Angolans. The white Portuguese born in Angola is no longer seen as Angolan at this point. [15]
Angolan migrants in Portugal do not have a particularly homogeneous culture. However, two important elements of their self-described common identity are calor humano (human warmth) and convivência (living together), part of "African hospitality" and "African solidarity" which they feel is an important difference between Angolan and Portuguese social relations.
Angolan migrants in Portugal have had a significant influence on the popularisation of the kuduro musical style. Cinematic portrayals include Leonel Vieira's 1998 blockbuster Zona J.
As a whole, contemporary art was becoming much more of a force on the African continent. Angolans in Portugal have for their cultural dichotomy, like many others in the diaspora, have become recognized for their global and postmodern image. [16] Artists like Francisco Vidal display their work in this fashion. Vidal was born in 1978 in Lisbon and lives and works in Luanda. [17]
Angola, officially the Republic of Angola, is a country on the west-central coast of Southern Africa. It is the second-largest Lusophone (Portuguese-speaking) country in both total area and population and is the seventh-largest country in Africa. It is bordered by Namibia to the south, the Democratic Republic of the Congo to the north, Zambia to the east, and the Atlantic Ocean to the west. Angola has an exclave province, the province of Cabinda, that borders the Republic of the Congo and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The capital and most populous city is Luanda.
Human migration is the movement of people from one place to another, with intentions of settling, permanently or temporarily, at a new location. The movement often occurs over long distances and from one country to another, but internal migration is the dominant form of human migration globally.
"Angola Avante" is the national anthem of Angola. Ruy Mingas composed the music, while the lyrics were authored by Manuel Rui. It was adopted as the national anthem in November 1975, when the country gained its independence from Portugal. The lyrics make reference to several key events of the People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), which has been in power since independence and was the only party in Angola until 1992.
Hermenegildo de Brito Capelo (1841–1917) was a Portuguese officer in the Portuguese Navy and an explorer, who helped to chart territory between Angola and Mozambique that was unknown to Europeans in the 1870s and 1880s. Alongside Roberto Ivens, he is famous for being the first European to cross Central Africa from coast to coast between Angola and Mozambique.
The Portuguese Colonial War, also known in Portugal as the Overseas War or in the former colonies as the War of Liberation, and also known as the Angolan, Guinea-Bissau and Mozambican War of Independence, was a 13-year-long conflict fought between Portugal's military and the emerging nationalist movements in Portugal's African colonies between 1961 and 1974. The Portuguese regime at the time, the Estado Novo, was overthrown by a military coup in 1974, and the change in government brought the conflict to an end. The war was a decisive ideological struggle in Lusophone Africa, surrounding nations, and mainland Portugal.
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Afro-Portuguese(Afro portugueses or Lusoafricanos), African-Portuguese(Portugueses com ascendência africana), or Black Portuguese are Portuguese people with total or partial ancestry from any of the Sub-Saharan ethnic groups of Africa.
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There were estimated to be 25,000 Cape Verdeans in Senegal as of 1995.
As of December 2022, Portugal had 1,733,067 inhabitants that were born in a foreign country, out of 10,516,621 inhabitants, accounting for 16.48% of its total population. This figure also includes all Portuguese nationals born outside of Portugal. This applies whether they are children of Portuguese citizens living abroad at the time of their birth or foreign-born individuals who have acquired Portuguese citizenship through naturalization. Dealing with foreign nationals, in 2023 around 1,044,606 foreign citizens lived in Portugal, accounting for 9.82% of Portugal's population. Among foreign nationals, about 35.3% were from Brazil.
Portuguese Australians refers to Australians of Portuguese descent or Portuguese-born people living in Australia.
In southwestern Africa, Portuguese Angola was a historical colony of the Portuguese Empire (1575–1951), the overseas province Portuguese West Africa of Estado Novo Portugal (1951–1972), and the State of Angola of the Portuguese Empire (1972–1975). It became the independent People's Republic of Angola in 1975.
Fractionism, also called Nito's group or nitism, and self-called MPLA Action Committee — FAPLA-People Unit, was an Angolan political movement with an orthodox communist nature, led by Nito Alves, former leader of the People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA).
Manuel Rui Alves Monteiro is an Angolan writer of poetry, novels, theater plays, and short stories. He has been described as "the chronicler par excellence of postindependence Angola" through fiction that offers "subtle, complex, pointed, and oftentimes humorous portrayals of Angola since the early years of the MPLA euphoria, in which he played a political role."
Manuel Domingos Vicente is an Angolan politician who served as the second vice president of Angola between September 2012 and September 2017. He was chief executive officer of Sonangol, Angola's state oil company, from 1999 to 2012, and he briefly served in the government as the minister of State for Economic Coordination in 2012.
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Deolinda Rodrigues Francisco de Almeida was an Angolan revolutionary, writer, and poet. She was a member of the Movimento Popular de Libertação de Angola and, in addition to seeing combat, worked for the organisation as a translator, educator, and radio host.
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