Maria Belo
Maria Belo is a Portuguese psychoanalyst who can be considered a pioneer in the use of psychoanalysis in Portugal. She was a Member of the European Parliament in its second and third terms, between 1988 and 1994, and was active in efforts to decriminalize abortion in Portugal in the 1980s.
Early life
Maria Belo was born on 27 April 1938 in Lisbon, capital of Portugal. One of nine children, she came from a conservative Catholic family that supported the prevailing Estado Novo dictatorship under the leadership of António de Oliveira Salazar. In adolescence she considered becoming a nun. After completing high school in Lisbon, she trained to be a kindergarten teacher and taught for a year. Then, in 1959, Belo obtained a scholarship to study psychology in Belgium at the Catholic University of Leuven,. At the end of her third year, she had to decide on a thesis topic and chose to do research in Angola, at that time a Portuguese colony. Her plan was to take six months to research children in Angolan tribes but she ended up staying a year, doing teaching in order to fund herself.Having completed her degree she concluded that she was not yet ready to return to Portugal to be a psychologist and stayed at the university in Leuven as an assistant in psychology. At this time, she gradually moved away from social relations with the Belgian students and became more friendly with those with left-wing politics from Latin countries, such as Spain, Italy and South American countries. She is quoted as saying that her first boyfriend was a Spanish communist, while the second was a Maoist guerrilla. At this stage, she also lost her religious faith. In 1968, she went to Paris to study psychoanalysis, where she stayed until 1974, when she returned to Portugal. Among those that she worked with in Paris was Jacques Lacan.
In Portugal, Belo did a PhD at the Faculty of Social and Human Sciences of the NOVA University Lisbon, presenting a thesis on "Portuguese Culture and Psychoanalysis", advancing the concept of the "absent father" syndrome. Soon after, she became a Freemason, as part of the Women's Grand Lodge Of France. She went on to be the founder of the first women's lodge of Portugal in 1996 and was elected Grand Master of the Women's Grand Lodge of Portugal in 2004.