Dionísio Mendes de Sousa

Dionísio Mendes de Sousa[1] (born 9 October 1940) is a Portuguese politician, writer, educator, and former president of the Legislative Assembly of the Azores.

Dionísio Mendes de Sousa
7th President of the Legislative Assembly of the Azores
In office
1995–1996
Preceded byHumberto Melo
Succeeded byHumberto Melo
ConstituencyAzores
Personal details
Born
Dionísio Mendes de Sousa

9 October 1940
Vila de São Sebastião, Angra do Heroísmo, Azores, Portugal
CitizenshipPortuguese
NationalityPortuguese
Political partyPS

Biography

Sousa was born in Vila de São Sebastião, Angra do Heroísmo, on the Azorean island of Terceira. Following his primary education, Mendes studied at the Episcopal Seminary in Angra do Heroísmo from October 1952 to June 1964. In his course work he obtained high marks—around 16 out of a scale of 20—in more than half of his disciplines.

Academic career

Between 1965 and 1968 he was conscripted into mandatory military service and stationed at various military installations, including the main army barracks in Lisbon. During his military service he frequented classes at the Faculty of Letters at the University of Lisbon, obtaining a licentiate diploma in philosophy. By the 1969-70 term, he was teaching history at the secondary school Liceu Padre António Vieira and Portuguese at the Externato Séneca in Lisbon. In 1971 he took courses in pedagogical sciences at the University of Lisbon. Between 1971 and 1974 he participated in night classes as working student at the Instituto Superior de Economia (ISEF) while working as the personnel services director at Transul – Empresa de Transportes in the southern Tagus estuary.

During the 1976-1977 school year he taught psychology and philosophy at the Liceu de Almada secondary school, while during the 1977-1978 school term he was teaching intern at the Liceu Antero de Quental in Ponta Delgada. For the 1978-1979 school year he returned to Terceira, working at the Liceu de Angra do Heroísmo, becoming the president of the executive council there in the 1979-1980 school year.

Politician

Dionisio Sousa with the Assembly presidents of Madeira, Cape Verde, and the Canary Islands, during the Atlantic Parliament workshops in May 1998

During the regional elections of 5 October 1980[2] Sousa was elected to the regional Legislative Assembly of the Azores as an independent. In 1982 he became a member of the PS Azores.

Between 1980 and 2004, he served as a regional deputy during six legislatures. He was president of the PS parliamentary group between 1981 and 1992. In various legislatures he was the president of the Permanent Commission of the Regional Assembly on Social and Economic Affairs.[3] Between 1982 and 2004, he exercised various party positions within the PS at the local, regional, and national levels, including regional secretariat of the PS, member of the Regional and National Commissions of the PS, member of the municipal assembly of Angra do Heroísmo, president (for eight years) of the PS parliamentary group, candidate for the municipal council of Angra (1989), and President of the PS Azores.

From 1996 to 1998 he was elected President of the Regional Legislative Assembly of the Azores. On 3 September 2001, he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Order of Prince Henry by former President of the Republic Jorge Sampaio.[4]

From 2002 to 2004 he was president of the Rádio Clube de Angra (Radio Club of Angra) and, in 2004, obtained his pension for his work as secondary school professor. On 11 May 2006 during a meeting of the regional assembly, the assembly unanimously voted to award Dionísio Mendes with the Autonomic Insignia of Valor for his contributions to the Azores.[5]

Writer

Since 1980 Mendes has been involved in Azorean newspapers and other media, including A União, Diário Insular, Açores Expresso, Correio dos Açores, and the Projecto Autonómico de Aristides da Mota (31 March 1892)[6] In 2013, he provided the preface and edited the work Testamento Poético ("Poetic Testament") of Coelho de Sousa.[7]

On his own, Dionísio Mendes was responsible for Achegas sobre a Autonomia[8] and Livro de Bagatelas,[9] which were followed on 14 January 2014 by the trimestral publication Boa Nova, the first journal edited in Vila de São Sebastião.

Personal life

Dionísio married Maria Doralice Barcelos Falcão Sousa in 1974. The couple has two children: Ana Rita Falcão de Sousa Carapinha (married to Nuno Miguel Morais Carapinha), born 27 December 1979, and José Duarte Falcão de Sousa, born 3 September 1982.

Dioníso is the author of various blogs, including O Ventilhador[10] and Álamo Esguio.[11]

References

Notes
  1. GrãCruz (in Portuguese), retrieved 14 July 2014
  2. Resultados das eleições regionais de 1980 (in Portuguese), Comissão Nacional de eleições, archived from the original on 14 July 2014, retrieved 12 July 2014
  3. Presidente da Comissão Permanente de Economia (PDF) (in Portuguese), Diário da Assembleia Regional, retrieved 12 July 2014
  4. Atribuição da Grã-Cruz Infante D.Henrique (in Portuguese), Ordens Honoríficas Portuguesas, retrieved 12 July 2012
  5. Atribuição da insignia de Valor (PDF), Diário da Assembleia Regional dos Açores, retrieved 12 July 2014
  6. Sousa, Dionisio (27 May 2014), Projecto autonómico de Aristides da Mota 31 Março 1892 (in Portuguese), Correio dos Açores, archived from the original on 13 September 2014, retrieved 13 September 2014
  7. Sousa, Coelho (February 2014), Testamento poético
  8. Sousa, Dionisio (February 2014), Achegas sobre a Autonomia
  9. Sousa, Dionisio (May 2014), Livro de Bagatelas
  10. Sousa, Dionisio (February 2005). "O Ventilhador". Retrieved 12 July 2014.
  11. Sousa, Dionisio (May 2004). "Álamo Esguio". Retrieved 12 July 2014.
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