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Antoine-Roger Bolamba was born on 27 July, 1913 in Boma, Belgian Congo, is a politician. Discover Antoine-Roger Bolamba's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 89 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 89 years old
Zodiac Sign Leo
Born 27 July, 1913
Birthday 27 July
Birthplace Boma, Belgian Congo
Date of death 9 July 2002 (aged 88) - Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Died Place Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo
Nationality Republic of the Congo

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 27 July. He is a member of famous politician with the age 89 years old group.

Antoine-Roger Bolamba Height, Weight & Measurements

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Dating & Relationship status

He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.

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Antoine-Roger Bolamba Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Antoine-Roger Bolamba worth at the age of 89 years old? Antoine-Roger Bolamba’s income source is mostly from being a successful politician. He is from Republic of the Congo. We have estimated Antoine-Roger Bolamba's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
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Source of Income politician

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Timeline

2019

According to Congolese literary critic Kadima Nzuji Mukala, Bolamba was one of the "most important and representative" French-language writers in Belgian Africa. However, he posited that, aside from his contributions to journalism, he was "not a very prolific writer". Nzuji Mukala dismissed Premiers Essais as a "clumsy imitation" of French poetry of the 19th century. Other commentators criticised the collection as being a mimicry of the writings of European poets such as Paul Verlaine and Maurice Maeterlinck.

2002

Antoine-Roger Bolamba changed his name to Bolamba Lokolé J'ongungu in 1972 in accordance with President Mobutu Sese Seko's policy of Authenticité. He died on 9 July 2002 at the Ngaliema Clinic in Kinshasa. On 3 August 2013 Minister of Youth, Sports, Culture and Arts Banza Mukalay hosted a day of tribute in Kinshasa to recognise Bolamba's contributions to Congolese culture.

1963

Bolamba was appointed by Prime Minister Lumumba to serve as Secretary of State for Information and Cultural Affairs in his government of the newly independent Republic of the Congo. The government was officially invested by Parliament on 24 June. In August he was put in charge of directing the newly-created Agence Congolaise de Presse. He made numerous anti-Belgian broadcasts over Radio Léopoldville during his tenure. On 5 September President Joseph Kasa-Vubu dismissed Bolamba, Lumumba, and several other members of the government. Under Prime Minister Cyrille Adoula he returned to government work, serving as chef de cabinet in the Ministry of the Post Office and Telecommunications. In November 1962 he was made Director of Presidential Affairs at the Office of the Prime Minister. From 14 April 1963 until 9 July 1964 he served as Minister of Information and Tourism. In February 1966 Bolamba was appointed Head of the Press Office of the Presidency. In May 1969 he was made Head of the Administrative Service of the Presidency. Ten years later he became the director of national press of and adviser to the office of the President-Founder of the Mouvement Populaire de la Révolution.

1959

In 1959 La Voix du Congolais ceased publication. Bolamba, a self-described liberal, grew increasingly involved in politics and founded the Parti de l'Indépendance et de la Liberté. In early 1960 Patrice Lumumba convinced him to join his own party, the Mouvement National Congolais. Though he failed to secure a parliamentary seat in the 1960 elections, he was appointed Secretary of State for Information and Cultural Affairs in the Congo's first independent government. After independence his rhetoric turned sharply against Belgium, and he denounced the country in numerous radio broadcasts. He also began to employ more violent imagery in his writing. In September, President Joseph Kasa-Vubu dismissed him from his post. Under Cyrille Adoula's premiership, Bolamba returned to government work, holding advisory and staffing responsibilities until his appointment as Minister of Information and Tourism in April 1963. He led the ministry until July 1964. He thereafter held press and administrative responsibilities for the office of the presidency, while his output of literature decreased. In 1979 he was given a press position at the state party, the Mouvement Populaire de la Révolution. He died in 2002.

In 1959 Bolamba was appointed Director-General of Service in the Commissariat of Information. That year he attempted to transform the ASSANEF into a political organisation without success. In July he founded the Parti de l'Indépendance et de la Liberté, later becoming its vice president in December. During the municipal elections that month he secured a seat on the Council of the Kalamu commune of Léopoldville on a Balikolo list. He participated in the Belgo-Congolese Round Table Conference in January–February 1960 in Brussels that resulted in Belgium granting the Congo independence. From April through May 1960 he toured West Germany at the invitation of the German government. Patrice Lumumba convinced him to join his nationalist party, Mouvement National Congolais-Lumumba (MNC-L). Bolamba later explained that he did this because Lumumba supported national unity, though he still identified himself primarily as a liberal. In the general elections he unsuccessfully ran for a seat in the Chamber of Deputies on a MNC-L list in an Équateur constituency. Following independence in June 1960 his beliefs turned sharply against Belgium.

1956

In April 1954 Bolamba undertook a cultural mission to Senegal under the sponsorship of the Alliance Française. While there he met Léon Damas, a French poet whose poetry volume, Pigments, he held in high regard. Two years later Bolamba published another poetry collection, Esanzo: Chants pour mon pays (Esanzo: Songs for my Country). Prefaced by Léopold Sédar Senghor, it articulated Bolamba's identity as both Mongo and Congolese. Though all of the poems were written in French, some were set adjacent to Mongo translations. Most of the motifs were inspired by tropical imagery. He attended the Congress of Black Writers and Artists in Paris from 19 until 22 September 1956. La Voix du Congolais ceased publication in December 1959 and he ended his work as an editor. Following Congolese independence in 1960, his imagery became increasingly intense and violent and he expressed it in a stream of consciousness mode. In 1968 he became vice-president of the Committee of Friends of Congolese Art. After the end of the decade he wrote little. In the 1980s he served as a councilor of the Union of Zairean Writers and was a member of the Academia Brasileira de Letras. Though by then he had entirely retired from writing, he was still the Congolese writer most famous abroad.

Bolamba became the first African to be appointed assistant private secretary to Belgium's Minister of the Colonies, holding the post from September 1956 until October 1957. He encouraged évolués to join civic associations and served as president of the Association des Anciens Elèves des Frères des Ecoles Chrétiennes (ASSANEF), vice-president of the Mouvement Cultural Belgo-Congolais, member of the consultative committee for Émissions africaines de Radio Congo Belge, member of the regional committee of the Office des Cités Africaines, and member of the consultative committee for the Fonds du Roi.

1950

In the 1950s, Bolamba strongly advocated for evolution of the Belgian Congo colony into a Belgo-Congolese community. In 1952, while in Senegal, he joined Liberal International. The following year he traveled to Belgium where he was received by members of the Liberal Party. The trip was limited and largely managed by the government. Bolamba subsequently criticised Belgian travel restrictions for the Congolese, writing, "Nothing should prevent Blacks to work in Belgium, if they wish to...Black parents should have the freedom to let their children be educated in Belgian universities of their choice."

1947

In 1947 Bolamba published Premiers Essais (First Attempts), a collection of poems he had previously printed in La Voix du Congolais. They were influenced by the French Parnassianism that he had read in school. The following year Bolamba released a 176-page paper about African women's issues, entitled Les problemes de l'evolution de la femme noire (The Problems of the Evolution of the Black Woman), which offered a description of an ideal modern black woman and included advice pertaining to social and domestic behavior. In 1949 and 1950 he made submissions to the creative writing contest of the Conference on African Studies at the International Fair in Ghent, though he did not win any awards. In August 1952 he attended the World Assembly of Youth in Dakar, Senegal, as part of the Congolese delegation.

Bolamba frequently advocated for public discussion of the issues of colonisation in the Congo in his editorials for La Voix du Congolais. In 1947, he encouraged the administration to introduce a "special card" for évolués that would distinguish them from the rest of the Congolese population and grant them some privileges. The colonial administration introduced a carte du mérite civique (civic merit card) the following year, which could be granted to any Congolese who had no criminal record, did not practice polygamy, abandoned traditional religion, and had some degree of education. Cardholders were given an improved legal status and were exempt from certain restrictions on travel into European districts. Bolamba praised the decision and was himself awarded a carte. The Belgian government regarded him as "friendly" towards its administration.

1939

Bolamba performed well as a student, taking keen interest in literature. Despite the low accessibility of books in the Congo during his youth, he managed to read many French classics. He soon thereafter began writing. His first work, L'Echelle de l'Araignee (The Spider's Ladder), was inspired by legend from Congolese oral tradition. In 1939 he won an award from the International African Institute for his writing. He also won the first prize in a contest organised by the Association des Amis de l'Art Indigéne for his work Les Adventures de Ngoy, le héros légendaire des Bangala (The Adventures of Ngoy, the Legendary Bangala Hero). His success brought him a considerable amount of public attention. He also contributed articles to several Congolese periodicals, including Band, Brousse, and Nsango ya bisu, the official journal of the Force Publique. In October 1944 Bolamba was hired by the Services d'Information du Gouvernement Général to serve as president of its press section.

1913

Antoine-Roger Bolamba, later Bolamba Lokolé J'ongungu (27 July 1913 – 9 July 2002), was a Congolese journalist, writer, and politician. He edited the monthly journal La Voix du Congolais from 1945 until 1959. He also served as Secretary of State for Information and Cultural Affairs of the Republic of the Congo (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) in 1960 and then as Minister of Information and Tourism from 1963 until 1964.

Bolamba was born to a Mongo family in 1913 in the Belgian Congo. During his education he took interest in French literature and soon thereafter began to write, publishing various works and contributing to Congolese periodicals. He gained public attention in 1939 after winning awards for his writing. In 1944 he was hired by the colonial government to manage its press division, and the following year he was made editor-in-chief of a new publication, La Voix du Congolais. Bolamba held much influence in the city of Léopoldville and frequently discussed the social implications of colonialism. He also began writing poetry, and in 1956 he released a collection entitled Esanzo: Chants pour mon pays, which articulated his Mongo and Congolese identity.

Antoine-Roger Bolamba was born on 27 July 1913 in Boma, Belgian Congo to a Mongo family from Coquilhatville. His father was a career soldier in the Force Publique. He received six years of primary education from the Colonie Scolaire de Boma, a school managed by the Frères des Ecoles Chrétiennes, before going to the local school for assistant clerks for one year. He then attended the Ecole des Assistants Médicaux á Léopoldville-Kintambo for two years. Bolamba subsequently worked for 14 years as chief clerk and secretary to the medical director of the Fonds Reine Elisabeth pour l'Assistance Médicale aux Indigénes. He became a member of the évolué social class. Later, Bolamba married and fathered nine children.