Ana Benavente
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Ana Benavente | |
|---|---|
| Member of the Assembly of the Republic | |
| In office 1995–2005 | |
| Parliamentary group | Socialist Party (PS) |
| Constituency | 1995–1999, Santarém; 1999–2005, Viseu |
| Secretary of State for Education | |
| In office 1995–2001 | |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 11 August 1945 Cartaxo, Portugal |
| Alma mater | University of Geneva |
| Occupation | Educationist |
Ana Benavente (born 11 August 1945) is a Portuguese activist, educationist, university professor and politician who has served as secretary of state for education and member of the Assembly of the Republic.
Benavente was born on 11 August 1945, the daughter of primary school teachers. Having lived the early years of her life in Cartaxo, a rural area to the northeast of Lisbon, she arrived in the Portuguese capital in 1960/61 to complete her high school studies at the Maria Amália Vaz de Carvalho High School, living as a boarder. A good student, she was admitted in 1962/63 to the Faculty of Arts of the University of Lisbon without needing to take an entrance exam.[1]
In her first days of college, she joined a student organization led by José Medeiros Ferreira, who would later be expelled from the university by the authoritarian Estado Novo government for leading protests. Around this time, she also met Odete Santos, a law student who, like her and Ferreira, would go on to become members of the Assembly of the Republic after the Estado Novo had been overthrown.[1]
Exile
In 1964, she married a law student as a way of achieving some autonomy by escaping from government or convent-run hostels that young women were supposed to live in while at university. In these hostels the students' mail was opened and read and the windows of their rooms had padlocks. Going to Mass was mandatory. Her husband did not want to be drafted to go to one of Portugal's colonies and so the two of them left to go to Geneva in Switzerland. There, she took odd jobs in factories, offices, etc. to pay for her studies. In her third year in Switzerland, she received a small grant given to refugees, which met her costs during term time. Benavente studied at the Jean-Jacques Rousseau Institute, directed by Jean Piaget and was later employed there during the period when it became the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences of the University of Geneva. Piaget had founded the International Bureau of Education (BIE), the first international organization in the field of education. Benavente went on to become an educationist and vice-chair of BIE between 2001 and 2006.[1]
While in exile she joined the Portuguese Communist Party but resigned in 1968 as a result of the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia. She named her eldest daughter "Rosa", after the revolutionary socialist, Rosa Luxemburg. Benavente has noted that after the stifling atmosphere of Portuguese academia, the freedom of debate at university in Geneva was a refreshing change. She read Piaget, Bärbel Inhelder, Émile Durkheim, Karl Marx, Pierre Bourdieu, Herbert Marcuse, and many others. She worked with Swiss groups who supported independence movements in Portuguese colonies and welcomed Portuguese deserters. In the early 1970s she moved into a commune, members of which helped her raise her daughter.[1] Later she would try, without success, to establish a commune in Portugal.[2]
In 1999, 25 years after the Carnation Revolution, former Portuguese emigrées in Geneva, including Benavente, paid tribute to the city, thanking it for the exile it granted them. They left a plaque (made of Portuguese marble) on the wall of a famous and now-defunct university café.[1]