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Boganda and was
The assembly in CAR was led by Barthélemy Boganda, a Catholic priest who also was known for his forthright statements in the French Assembly on the need for African emancipation.
As a cousin of the CAR President David Dacko and nephew of Dacko's predecessor Barthélémy Boganda, Bokassa was given the task of creating the new country's military.
This song, which has been the anthem since 1960, was written by Barthélémy Boganda ( words ), the first President of the Central African Republic, and Herbert Pepper, who also composed the melody for the Senegalese national anthem.
Dacko was named principal of Kouanga College in 1955 and became a supporter of independence leader Barthélémy Boganda, who was from the same Ngbaka ethnic group as Dacko.
When the first Council of Government of Ubangi-Shari was established that same year, Boganda named Dacko Minister of Agriculture, Livestock, Water and Forests, in which position he served from May 14, 1957 until August 23, 1958.
While the country was still a French colony, Goumba was Vice-President of the Government Council from May 1957 to July 1958, President of the Government Council from July 1958 to December 1958, and was briefly Prime Minister in an acting capacity in April 1959, following the death of Barthélemy Boganda in a plane crash.
It was designed by Barthélemy Boganda, the first president of the autonomous territory of Oubangui-Chari, who believed that " France and Africa must march together.
Barthélemy Boganda ( 4 April 1910 – 29 March 1959 ) was the leading nationalist politician of what is now the Central African Republic.
Boganda was born into a family of subsistence farmers, and was adopted and educated by Roman Catholic Church missionaries.
During World War II, Boganda served in a number of missions and after was persuaded by the Bishop of Bangui to enter politics.
Boganda was born to a family of subsistence farmers in Bobangui, a large M ' Baka village in the Lobaye basin located at the edge of the equatorial forest some southwest of Bangui.
During his early years, Boganda was adopted by Catholic missionaries.
After World War II, Boganda was urged by the Bishop of Bangui, Mgr Grandin, to complement his humanitarian and social works through political action.
The movement was more popular among villagers than among évolué townsmen, whom Boganda considered servile and to whom he applied the derogatory term " Mboundjou-Voko " (" Black-Whites ").
He received Boganda, by then head of the Grand Council of French Equatorial Africa and pushing for independence, in Paris in July 1958 and was in turn received at Brazzaville in August.
They were married on 13 June 1950, for which Boganda was expelled from the priesthood and cut off from the Catholic hierarchy's support.
On 29 March 1951, Boganda was sentenced to two months in prison following his arrest on 10 January for " endangering the peace " after intervening in a local market dispute ( the " Bokanga incident " in Lobaye ).
Boganda hesitated to appear in a village that was not one of his strongholds, but did so anyway and declared before the rioters that justice would be the same for blacks and whites.

Boganda and independence
In 1958, after the French Fourth Republic began to consider granting independence to most of its African colonies, Boganda met with Prime Minister Charles de Gaulle to discuss terms for the independence of Oubangui-Chari.
He played a crucial role at the beginning of internal autonomy ( 1956 – 1958 ), although the relatively conservative Boganda remained sympathetic to French interests and still did not advocate immediate independence.
With the numerous declarations of independence being made in much of Francophone Africa, Boganda advised that an independent Oubangui-Chari would face major economic problems from the onset.

Boganda and when
During 1959, Dacko succeeded Boganda as the main leader of the country when Boganda died in a plane crash.
* March 29 – Barthélemy Boganda, the prime minister of the Central African Republic autonomous territory ( the future Central African Republic ) dies when his plane explodes in mid-air over Boukpoyanga, killing all on board.
Thus, after 1 December 1958, when Boganda declared the establishment of the Central African Republic as an autonomous member of the French Community, the name was applied only to the former Oubangui-Chari.

Boganda and French
The French constitutional referendum of September 1958 dissolved the AEF, and on 1 December of the same year the Assembly declared the birth of the autonomous Central African Republic with Boganda as head of government.
On many occasions, General Charles de Gaulle expressed his sympathy for Oubangui-Chari, which had supported de Gaulle's Free French Forces as early as August 1940, and refused to support the violent intrigues of the RPF against Boganda and his men.
For Boganda, the 1956 election, in which he took 89 % of the vote against another Oubanguian, was an uncontested speaker's platform with which the colonial administration had come to terms ; the French had realised that opposing him would be dangerous and sought to accommodate him.
On 31 March 1957, MESAN won all seats in the Territorial Assembly election ; on 18 June, Boganda was elected president of the Grand Council of French Equatorial Africa ( a forum he used to broadcast his views on African unity ) and in May was appointed vice-president of the Oubangui-Chari Government Council ( the French governor was still its president ).
A pragmatist, Boganda spoke before the local assembly on 30 December 1957 in praise of the new Comité de Salut Economique, which envisioned joint administration of the economy between French colonials and MESAN territorial councilors ( he called it " the union of capital and Oubanguian labour "), but lack of French investment and opposition by Oubanguians soon led him to turn away from the idea.
On 8 December, the CAR's first government came into being with Boganda as prime minister ; a French governor remained in the country but was now called high commissioner.

Boganda and Africa
* United States of Latin Africa, a political entity proposed by Barthélemy Boganda for Central Africa.

Boganda and France
Boganda decided to run for election to the National Assembly of France.

Boganda and under
Father Gabriel Herrau sent Boganda to the Catholic School of Betou and then to the school of the Saint Paul Mission at Bangui, where he completed his primary studies under Mgr Calloch, whom he would consider his spiritual father.

Boganda and Oubangui-Chari
He attended mission schools in Gabon, Cameroon, and Mbamu, where he met Barthélemy Boganda, the future nationalist leader of Oubangui-Chari and the first president of the Central African Republic.
However, such a federation proved unrealistic, foundering on the rocks of regional jealousy and personal ambition, and Boganda came to accept a constitution covering only Oubangui-Chari as the Central African Republic.

Boganda and .
Boganda ruled until his death in a plane crash on 29 March 1959.
* 1959 – Barthélemy Boganda, African politician, 1st President of the Central African Republic ( b. 1910 )
* March 29 – Barthélemy Boganda, first President of the Central African Republic ( b. 1910 )
Other attractions in Bangui include Boganda Museum and Bokassa Palace.
De Gaulle accepted Boganda's terms, and on 1 December, Boganda declared the establishment of the Central African Republic.

was and active
At Sounion there is a group of beautiful columns, the ruins of a temple to Poseidon, of particular interest at that time, as active reconstruction was in progress.
Greece was one of the highlights of our trip, but beginning in Greece and continuing around the world throughout Southeast Asia the treatment of animals was horrifying, ranging from callous indifference to active cruelty.
The Suez-Hungary crisis proves that this system was not invented by the new Administration, but only made more consistent and more active.
The first was a list of fourteen manufacturing companies located in the state of Washington which were personally known to the research team to be active in defense work.
Substance Z, an active urinary peptide, was purified by extraction in organic solvents and repeated column chromatography ; ;
He was also personally active in ward politics, and by 1924 O'Banion had acquired sufficient political might to be able to state: `` I always deliver my borough as per requirements ''.
the first use of the word `` rustler '' was as a synonym for `` hustler '', becomin' an established term for any person who was active, pushin', and bustlin' in any enterprise.
By the time Felix turned up it was early afternoon, which, one would think, would be late enough so that by then, except for small children and a few hardy souls who had not yet sobered up, it could have been expected that people would no longer be having any sort of active interest in the previous night's noisemakers and paper hats.
that she was active in the Woman's Club and he in Lions, Rotary, and Jaycee ; ;
Theodore Dwight Weld ( 1803-1895 ) was especially active.
Susan was an active character ; ;
But the process of refusing to think about it was an active reminder in itself and he couldn't rid himself of a consciousness of it throughout the day.
Attempts to accuse anthropologists of complicity with the CIA and government intelligence activities during the Vietnam War years have turned up surprisingly little ( although anthropologist Hugo Nutini was active in the stillborn Project Camelot ).
These terms have historically been applied to any astronomical object orbiting the Sun that did not show the disk of a planet and was not observed to have the characteristics of an active comet, but as small objects in the outer Solar System were discovered, their volatile-based surfaces were found to more closely resemble comets, and so were often distinguished from traditional asteroids.
While Poirot's actual death and funeral occurred in " Curtain ", years after his retirement from active investigation, it was not the first time Hastings attended the funeral of his best friend.
His father's civil service commission was still active, and during Turing's childhood years his parents travelled between Hastings in England and India, leaving their two sons to stay with a retired Army couple.
The Alan Parsons Project was an English progressive rock band, active between 1975 and 1990, consisting of singer Eric Woolfson and keyboardist Alan Parsons surrounded by a varying number of session musicians.
Bloch was shot by the Gestapo during the German occupation of France in World War II for his active membership of the French Resistance, and Febvre carried on the Annales approach in the 1940s and 1950s.
Jonas of Bobbio records that Columbanus was active in Bregenz, where he disrupted a beer sacrifice to Wodan.
In imperial politics Albert was fairly active.
Alessandro Algardi ( 31 July 1598 – 10 June 1654 ) was an Italian high-Baroque sculptor active almost exclusively in Rome, where for the latter decades of his life, he was the major rival of Gian Lorenzo Bernini.
Amos, an older contemporary of Hosea and Isaiah, was active c. 750 BC during the reign of Jeroboam II, making the Book of Amos the first biblical prophetic book written.

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