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After earning her diploma, making her one of the first
Congolese women to gain a university degree, she returned to Congo in September 1963 and began teaching at a high school in Pointe-Noire. However, having become a member of the
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After returning to Congo, she was elected to the municipal council of Pointe-Noire in 1992, becoming deputy mayor in 1995. In
January 1999 she was appointed Minister of Culture and the Arts, in charge of Tourism.
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in France. However, she was expelled and returned to Congo in 1952, completing her education at the
Savorgnan de Brazza school and becoming the first girl in
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After being rejected for a teaching post at a school in
Brazzaville in 1965, she moved to the United States to continue her education, completing courses at
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Crise des deux Congo: crise politique et militaire : usage politique de la terreur : femmes congolaises et politiques : guerre du Congo
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was appointed to replace her on 18 August 2002. She subsequently joined the Party pour l'Alternance
Democratique, becoming its secretary general.
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in 1971. She oversaw education projects in several
African countries, living in Paris until 1978 and then Dakar until 1991.
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to earn a baccalaureate. She returned to France and studied modern literature at the
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former politician. In 1963 she became one of the first group of women elected to the
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ethnic group, Gnali was born in
Brazzaville in October 1935. Her family moved to
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when her father was transferred to the city. After two years of schooling in
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Le regard de Mambou Aimée Gnali sur le livre de Martin Mbéri
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Members of the
National Assembly (Republic of the Congo)
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Women government ministers of the
Republic of the Congo
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21st-century
Republic of the Congo women politicians
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183:(MNR), she was a candidate for the party in the
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416:21st-century Republic of the Congo politicians
371:20th-century Republic of the Congo politicians
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254:John Frank Clark & Samuel Decalo (2012)
406:Republic of the Congo expatriates in France
173:Black African Students Federation in France
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294:List of governments of Congo since 1999
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284:La Semaine Africaine, 20 December 2011
185:December 1963 parliamentary elections
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181:National Movement of the Revolution
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391:20th-century women civil servants
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131:(born 18 October 1935) is a
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165:French Equatorial Africa
346:People from Brazzaville
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212:Jean-Claude Gakosso
200:Columbia University
192:Lawrence University
169:University of Paris
55:Jean-Claude Gakosso
299:2008-11-22 at the
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129:Mambou Aimée Gnali
23:Mambou Aimée Gnali
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305:(in French)
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117:Moyen-Congo
113:Brazzaville
330:Categories
303:, izf.net
242:Le Maitron
218:References
103:1935-10-18
143:Biography
133:Congolese
75:1963–1968
71:In office
44:1999–2002
40:In office
297:Archived
161:Orléans
204:UNESCO
153:Nkayi
259:p198
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97:Born
321:UWA
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