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Franz fanon. imapact
Franz fanon. imapact












As a Martinican medical student specializing in clinical psychiatry in France in the 1950s, he treated impoverished Algerians as he himself both experienced and diagnosed colonial racism. In retrospect, Fanon's destiny appears to have been tied to Algeria from the beginning.

franz fanon. imapact

He would often finish treating an Algerian, and then move on to a French police officer or official suffering from nervous exhaustion or trauma, a direct result of the demands of enforcing an oppressive colonial order. Unable to keep up the delicate balancing act, Fanon submitted his letter of resignation to the Resident Minister, Governor General of Algeria. There he put his life at risk by treating FLN fedayin who had been tortured by the French. The FLN was at the forefront of Algeria's grueling battle against French colonialism, and Fanon had earned the respect of the FLN during his tenure as chef de médecin at the Blida-Joinville Hospital in Algeria in the mid-1950s. At the time, he was actively engaged in the Algerian liberation struggle, serving as the Front de libération nationale's (FLN) ambassador to Ghana. It was only some years later that I discovered the scope of the Fanon's influence, not only on anti-colonial movements, but also the New Left, Quebec nationalists and North American Indigenous activists. From left to right: Ahmed Ben Bella, Mohamed Khider, Crown Prince of Morocco Moulay Hassan II, Hocine Aït Ahmed, Mohamed Boudiaf and Mostefa Lacheraf.

franz fanon. imapact

The five leaders of the FLN (National Liberation Front) at Rabat airport before boarding a plane bound for Tunis, Oct.














Franz fanon. imapact