Deolinda Rodrigues Francisco de Almeida was born in
Catete, Angola, on 10 February 1939. Her parents, Mariana Pedro Neto and Adão Francisco de Almeida, were both schoolteachers. Her father was also a
Methodist minister. She had four siblings, including Angolan politician
Roberto Francisco de Almeida. In 1954, Rodrigues moved with her mother and siblings to the capital
Luanda and lived with her aunt Maria da Silva, in the same house as her son, the poet
Agostinho Neto, who went on to become the first
president of Angola. Rodrigues attended elementary school at the
Escola da Missão Evangélica ( 'Evangelical Mission School') and high school at the
Liceu Salvador Correia ( 'Salvador Correia High School'), where she studied
Germanic languages. In 1956, as a teenager, she began working as a translator and organizer for the MPLA, and by 1958, she had joined the United Methodist Youth, writing poetry for the Methodist periodical
O Estandarte ( 'The Banner'). During the late 1950s, however, she began to question the
paternal attitude of both the government and the church. Rodrigues's work with the MPLA led her into conflict with the Portuguese authorities, particularly the
Polícia Internacional e de Defesa do Estado (PIDE, 'International and State Defense Police'), and by 1959, PIDE had placed a warrant out for her arrest. Rodrigues fled to Brazil, where she began attending the Chácara Flora Methodist Institute in
São Paulo on scholarship, studying sociology and exchanging letters with American civil rights leader
Martin Luther King Jr. In 1960, fearing that her arrest warrant would lead to her deportation from Brazil following a proposed Brazilian-Portuguese extradition treaty, Rodrigues moved to the United States, this time studying at
Drew University. However, in 1962, she returned to Africa without finishing her studies to rejoin the MPLA. ==Work with the MPLA==