Maria Eugénia Varela Gomes

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Born
Maria Eugénia de Bilnstein Sequeira

(1925-12-18)18 December 1925
Died27 November 2016(2016-11-27) (aged 90)
Lisbon
OccupationSocial worker
KnownforOpposition to authoritarian Estado Novo Government; Political prisoner
Maria Eugénia Varela Gomes
Born
Maria Eugénia de Bilnstein Sequeira

(1925-12-18)18 December 1925
Died27 November 2016(2016-11-27) (aged 90)
Lisbon
OccupationSocial worker
Known forOpposition to authoritarian Estado Novo Government; Political prisoner

Maria Eugénia Varela Gomes (1925-2016) was a campaigner against the authoritarian Estado Novo government in Portugal in the 20th century. She was twice held in prison. Her work with the poor and to assist political prisoners led to her becoming known as “mother courage”.

She was born as Maria Eugénia de Bilnstein Sequeira in Évora, Portugal on 18 December 1925. Her father and grandfather were soldiers, her grandfather being a General. She had six brothers. When she was four, the family moved to Cascais, living in the house that subsequently became the Cascais Municipal Library. After completing school, she enrolled in a technical college in 1940 but only stayed there for six months. In 1942 she entered Portugal's Social Services Institute and received lessons from Father Abel Varzim [pt] who contributed significantly to the development of her political ideas. He had started out as a supporter of the dictatorship and was elected to the National Assembly, but later became increasingly uncomfortable due to his commitment to combating poverty. She took his side, unsuccessfully, when the Portuguese dictator, António de Oliveira Salazar wanted to remove him from his position in the institute.[1] Her initial work experience as a social worker included a posting at a cork factory in Seixal and in the Bairro da Boavista, a newly constructed area of Lisbon populated mainly by the very poor.[2]

Maria Varela Gomes married Captain (later Colonel) João Varela Gomes  [pt] in 1951 and they had four children, two girls and two boys. He was also very active in the opposition to the dictatorship. In 1956 she was appointed as Head of Social Services at Santa Maria hospital in Lisbon, now the city's largest hospital, but was forced to leave after two years because of her political stance against the Estado Novo. She campaigned actively for the candidature of Humberto Delgado in the 1958 Presidential elections. In March 1959 she was involved with the failed coup, known as the Revolta da Sé, which was frustrated by the Portuguese secret police, the PIDE. She was investigated but not arrested[1] and subsequently closely monitored the trial and imprisonment of some of those involved.[2]

Arrest

On New Year's Eve 1961 about 20 soldiers and civilians stormed the army barracks at Beja in an attack supported by Humberto Delgado. The attack was repelled and Delgado went into exile. Among the attackers injured was Varela Gomes’ husband.[3] A few days later she was arrested by the PIDE, not knowing at the time whether her husband was alive, and held in prison in isolation until the middle of April 1962. For some of the time she was subjected to sleep deprivation as a form of torture. Interviewed later in her life she stated that she managed to stick to her determination to deny knowledge of the planned assault in Beja while at the same time indicating her full support for the overthrow of the Estado Novo. She repeated over and over again, “I did not participate in either the preparation or the assault on the Beja Barracks, but I am heart and soul with my husband and his companions”.[4] For most of her imprisonment she was held in Caxias prison, together with many well-known members of the Portuguese communist party. However, she never, herself, joined any political party. She was released from prison in 1964 after eighteen months but, following a trial in 1964, her husband was sentenced to six years. After being released she joined the Patriotic Front for National Liberation, working with the future President of Portugal Jorge Sampaio.[1][2]

Later activities

Angola and Mozambique

References

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