Ndèye Coumba Mbengue Diakhaté | |
---|---|
Born | 9 December 1924 Rufisque |
Died | 25 September 2001 Dakar |
Nationality | Senegalese |
Genre | poet and educator |
Ndèye Coumba Mbengue Diakhaté (9 December 1924 – 25 September 2001) was a Senegalese educator and poet who was active in promoting the education of mothers and their children. Her poetry is published in Filles du soleil (Daughters of the Sun, 1980).[1][2]
Biography
Born in 1924[3] in Rufisque, Senegal, Mbengue Diakhaté was one of the first schoolteachers to graduate from the Rufisque Normal School. She was an active member of Rufisque's Association pour l'Action sociale des femmes (Women's Social Action Association).
Works
Her poetry conveys her views on how women are placed in society, for example, when a man tells his sister or mother "Jiguen rek nga!" (After all, you're just a woman). The conflict with the white population comes through in "Ils étaient Blancs, j'étais Noire..." (They were white, I was black).[4] She not only conveys her innermost thoughts through her poetry but reproduces the forms and rhythms of the Serer oral tradition in her French verses.[5]
Death and legacy
Ndèye Coumba Mbengue Diakhaté died on 25 September 2001 in Dakar.[1]
References
- 1 2 "Ndèye Coumba Mbengue Diakhaté". The University of Western Australia. 28 July 2004. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
- ↑ Mbengue Diakhaté, Ndèye Coumba (1980). Filles du soleil: poèmes. Nouvelles Editions africaines. ISBN 2 7236 0217 6.
- ↑ Les femmes-poètes africaines “griotent” de la Femme et de l’Enfant / African women poets sing, proclaim, and advise about Women and Children, 13 July 2013, Zócalo Poets. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
- ↑ "Auteur de "Filles du Soleil", la poétesse Ndèye Coumba Mbengue Diakhaté est décédée hier". Le Soleil (in French). 26 September 2001. Retrieved 30 January 2017.
- ↑ Larrier, Renée Brenda (2000). Francophone Women Writers of Africa and the Caribbean. University Press of Florida. pp. 8, 86. ISBN 978-0-8130-1742-6.
External links
- N'dèye Coumba Mbengué Diakhaté in D'Orphée à Prométhée: La poésie africaine au féminin by Angèle Bassolé Ouédraogo (in French)