Arts & International Affairs: Volume 2, Issue 1 | Page 18

Figure 1. Portugal adjacente e ultramarine (mapa escolar) by João Maria Carlos Moreira da Silva (detail); photograph taken at the occasion of the exhibition RETORNAR: Traços de Memória, Galeria Av. da Índia, Lisbon, February �, ���� Based on this understanding, the ���� Bandung conference condemning “colonialism in all its manifestations” and the United Nations Declaration on the Granting of Independence to Colonial Countries and Peoples of December ��, ���� (resolution ����) were considered irrelevant for Portugal. With the revolution of April ��, ����, the wars were, from the official Portuguese perspective, lost. Mozambique, Angola, Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde and São Tomé e Príncipe were internationally recognized as independent states. Portugal established what Graham (����:��), before the current economic crisis and its political ramifications, calls a “noisy, messy, healthy democracy.” The memory of the overseas wars is institutionalized in Portugal across the country in various monuments featuring strikingly different approaches to design and architecture (see Figures � and �). These monuments are maintained by the Combatants League (Liga dos combatentes) which was established after the Great War as the Great War Combatants League to support the soldiers and their families. The name was changed into Combatants League on December ��, ���� so that the organization could extend its activities to include soldiers from what the League still refers to as Overseas Wars, despite the term’s profound delegitimation due to its association with the dictatorship. The purpose of these memorials is to honor the soldiers who died in the service of Portugal (Figure �), those who died while defending the overseas territories (Figure �), and those who died in the overseas campaigns (Figure �). 17