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*''Les mégalithes, monuments funéraires ou sanctuaires d'initiation?'', by Babacar Sedikh Diouf, Age d'or du Sénégal. Pages 53-64. (article)<ref name="WorldCat"/>
*''Les mégalithes, monuments funéraires ou sanctuaires d'initiation?'', by Babacar Sedikh Diouf, Age d'or du Sénégal. Pages 53-64. (article)<ref name="WorldCat"/>
*''La présence sérère dans les fondements historiques et culturels de la nation, by Babacar Sédikh Diouf<ref>Diouf, Babacar Sédikh, ''La présence sérère dans les fondements historiques et culturels de la nation'', [in] ''Les Convergences Culturelles au sein de la Nation Sénégalaise'', ed. Moustapha Tambadou (Dakar: Ministère de la Culture du Sénégal, 1996), p. 72–81;</ref><ref>« Merging ethnic histories in Senegal: whose moral community? », in Derek Peterson & Giacomo Macola (dir.), Recasting the Past: History Writing and Political Work in Modern Africa, Athens, [[Ohio University Press]] (2009), (213-232.), p. 17 (PDF) [in] [[Academia.edu]] [https://www.academia.edu/2507191/_Merging_ethnic_histories_in_Senegal_whose_moral_community_in_Derek_Peterson_and_Giacomo_Macola_dir._Recasting_the_Past_History_Writing_and_Political_Work_in_Modern_Africa_Athens_Ohio_University_Press_2009_213-232] (retrieved February, 8 2020)</ref>
*''La présence sérère dans les fondements historiques et culturels de la nation, by Babacar Sédikh Diouf<ref>Diouf, Babacar Sédikh, ''La présence sérère dans les fondements historiques et culturels de la nation'', [in] ''Les Convergences Culturelles au sein de la Nation Sénégalaise'', ed. Moustapha Tambadou (Dakar: Ministère de la Culture du Sénégal, 1996), p. 72–81;</ref><ref>« Merging ethnic histories in Senegal: whose moral community? », in Derek Peterson & Giacomo Macola (dir.), Recasting the Past: History Writing and Political Work in Modern Africa, Athens, [[Ohio University Press]] (2009), (213-232.), p. 17 (PDF) [in] [[Academia.edu]] [https://www.academia.edu/2507191/_Merging_ethnic_histories_in_Senegal_whose_moral_community_in_Derek_Peterson_and_Giacomo_Macola_dir._Recasting_the_Past_History_Writing_and_Political_Work_in_Modern_Africa_Athens_Ohio_University_Press_2009_213-232] (retrieved February, 8 2020)</ref>
*''L'imaginaire sérère dans l'œuvre de Léopold Sédar Senghor' by Babacar Sédikh Diouf. (1998) [in] "Le colloque senghorien ", pp. 241-245<ref>N'Diaye-Correard, Geneviève, ''Les mots du patrimoine: le Sénégal'' (cont. Moussa Daff, Equipe du projet IFA.), Archives contemporaines (2006), p. 589, {{ISBN|9782914610339}}, [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=_kB1YjS8_ooC&pg=PA589#v=onepage&q&f=false] (retrieved February, 8 2020)</ref>


==Pan Africanism==
==Pan Africanism==

Revision as of 07:16, 10 February 2020

Babacar Sedikh Diouf or Babacar Sédikh Diouf (Serer: Babakar Sidiix Juuf,[1] b. 1928[2][3]) is a Senegalese historian, author, researcher, campaigner against "Wolofization", a Pan-Africanist, and former teacher. He has written extensively about the history and culture of Senegal, Africa, and that of the Serer ethnic group to which he belong.[2][3][4][5] He usually writes by the pen name Babacar Sedikh Diouf.

Academia

Diouf, who is a retired teacher was appointed President of the Association of Retired Teachers of Senegal (French: l'association des instituteurs à la retraite).[6][7] As of 1980, he was the Director of the Thiers School (l'école Thiers).[8] He has been a long-standing member of the National Union of Languages.[7]

Diouf sometimes write by the pen name Babacar Sedikh Diouf. Many of his works are unpublished but cited by African, Caribbean and Western scholars who've interacted with him over the years. Some of these include gender politics writers Louise Langevin, Fatou Kiné Camara and Jeremy I. Levitt;[9][10][11] historians Mamadou Diouf, Abdoulaye Keita of IFANUCAD, Cyr Descamps and Iba Der Thiam;[12][13][8] and anthropologist Henry Gravrand.[14]

Diouf usually writes in French but has also written in Serer. An eighty page short biography of the of 19th century Serer King of SineMaad a Sinig Kumba Ndoffene Famak Joof, titled: O maad a sinig : Kumba Ndoofeen fa Maak JUUF (Buka-Cilaas), 1853-1871, PAPF (1987) was written in Serer.[15]

Senegambian stone circles

Diouf was one of the first (if not the first) to explain the Serer religious significance of the Senegambian stone circles.[16][8] His work published on July, 7 1980 on the Senegalese newspaper Le Soleil became headline news and was picked up by the prehistorian and archaeologist Professor Cyr Descamps and his colleague Professor Iba Der Thiam.[16][8] Professor Descamps was one the archaelogisgts who excavated the monuments back in the 1970s. On July, 28 1980, Professor Descamps issued a response to Diouf—thanking him for explaining the significance of the Senegambian megaliths which until then were unknown or undocumented. Some of that included the arrangement of the stones and their religious symbolism based on Serer numerlogy. In his joint paper with Iba Der Thiam – titled: La préhistoire au Sénégal: recueil de documents, published in 1982, Descamps and Thiam republished Diouf's work and reiterated their thanks to him for his work two years earlier.[8]

The Guelowar Dynasty in Seereer kingdoms

The mainstream view has been that, the Guelowar Maternal Dynasty (whom some writers such as Martin A. Klein, Donald R. Wright and Emmett Jefferson Murphy wrongly labelled[17] as Mandinka or Malinke[18][19][20]) conquered the Serer people and subjugated them.[18][19] After years of researching and documenting the oral traditionas of the Serer and that of Kaabu, Diouf was one of the first historian and author to posit that the Guelowars of Sine and Saloum (the two Serer kingdoms) did not conquer and subjugate the Serer people but were granted asylum by the Serer Council of Great Lamans, who then went on marry into the Serer noble patriclans.[21][22] The Guelowars who were relatives and offshot of the powerful Ñaanco (or Nyancho) Maternal Dynasty of Kaabu, underwent a dynastic war or struggle against their powerful Ñaanco relatives.[23] The Senegalese historian Alioune Sarr, in his acclaimed paper Histoire du Sine-Saloum (1986-87) supports that view and placed that dynastic war around 1335.[23] Sarr's Histoire du Sine-Saloum is one of the leading work on the history of Sine-Saloum and is generally regarded as the prevailing view especially in regards to the date of reign of the Kings of Sine and Saloum.

Diouf went on to posit that:

Maysa Waly [the first Guelowar to reign in Serer country] was first appointed legal adviser to the Council of the Great Lamans after his famous judgment. Gradually, he strengthened his power and authority and ended up being recognized as king.[21][23]

Maysa Wali's direct descendants did not reign in any of the Serer kingdoms. Serer noble men from the ancient lamanic class married Gulowar women, and the offsprings of these marriages reigned as kings. These children saw themselves as Serer and assimilated into Serer culture and all ties with Kaabu were severed. The Serer—Guelowar alliance was an alliance based on marriage, not conquest.[21][23] With the exception of the Serer being a conquered group—which has been the mainstream view, Emmett Jefferson Murphy's earlier work History of African Civilization (1972) reached a somewhat similar conclusion as regards to the Serer—Guelowar (or "Malinke" as he put it) marriage alliance. He writes:

The Serer people had earlier settled on the plains of the highland of Futa Toro in modern Senegal. They lived side by side with the Tukulor and were ruled by them until the eleventh century. At that time, perhaps because of growing Islamic influence among the Tukulor, the Serer—who refused to accept Islam–migrated to an area between the Sine and Saloum rivers in what is now southeastern Senegal. The Serer conquered the Mande-speaking tribes then inhabiting the Sine-Salum and settled the area. Within a century, however, powerful Malinke invaders also moved into the Sine-Salum, settling among the Serer as a ruling class. This caste, called the tiedo,[24] subdivided into the "guelowar," or the nobles eligible for the kingship (only Malinke or the descendants of Malinke-Serer marriages were included); [...][20]

As common in the Senegambia region and in many African cultures, when a woman from another tribe marries a man from a different tribe, both she and her children takes on the tribe of the father. Throughout the six hundred years of Guelowar dynastic rule, none of the reigning kings of Sine or Saloum bore Mandinka surnames, but Serer surnames with the few exceptions of the Mbooj or Mboge patrilineage, who patrilineally trace descent to Mbarick Bo or Mbarik Bo (or Mbanyik Bo), originally from Waalo, whose surname Bo is "Wolofized" to Mbooj. According to Serer oral tradition, he was the step father of Ndiadiane Ndiaye (founder of the Jolof Empire) and a Bambara prince from the Massassi dynasty of Kaarta; and according to Wolof oral tradition, he was a step father of Ndiadiane Ndiaye but a non-Muslim and a slave of the Almoravid Arab Abu Bakr ibn Umar (also referred to as Abdu Darday). Sources do not agree with the Wolof account of him being a slave of Abu Bakr or that Abu Bakr was the father of Ndiadiane Ndiaye as per Wolof oral tradition, as Abu Bakr preceeded Ndiadiane Ndiaye by at least three hundred years. Ndiadian reigned in Jolof around 1360. Abu Bakr was killed in 1087 possibly by the Serer bowman Amar Godomat.[25][21][23][22][26]

Selection of works

The following are a sample of Diouf's works:

  • O maad a sinig : Kumba Ndoofeen fa Maak JUUF (Buka-Cilaas), 1853-1871 by Babacar Sedikh Diouf, PAPF (1987)[3]
  • L'esprit de l'ecole nouvelle by Babacar Sedikh Diouf, (1988)[3]
  • Gradation modification effects on engineering performance of reclaimed asphalt pavement for use as roadway base by Babacar Sedikh Diouf, M.S. Florida Institute of Technology (2011) - (thesis)[3]
  • Les mégalithes, monuments funéraires ou sanctuaires d'initiation?, by Babacar Sedikh Diouf, Age d'or du Sénégal. Pages 53-64. (article)[3]
  • La présence sérère dans les fondements historiques et culturels de la nation, by Babacar Sédikh Diouf[27][28]
  • L'imaginaire sérère dans l'œuvre de Léopold Sédar Senghor' by Babacar Sédikh Diouf. (1998) [in] "Le colloque senghorien ", pp. 241-245[29]

Pan Africanism

In 2004, Diouf was invited by the Institut Fondamental d'Afrique Noire to give a speech at the cultural and scientific institute's conference—held at the University of Mutants in Gorée. In that conference, Diouf spoke out against globalization, and called for a Pan-African approach and the need to increase solidarity among African countries.[4]

Views on Wolofization

Diouf is a fervent opponent of linguistic "Wolofization" which is prevalent throughout Senegal and almost engulfing the entire Senegambia region.Cite error: The opening <ref> tag is malformed or has a bad name (see the help page).[6][7][30][31][32] He views Wolofization as destructive to the languages and cultures of other Senegambian ethnic groups such as Serer, Jola, Mandinka, Fula, etc.[33][7][6] Diouf calls for a "controlled osmosis" (French: "osmose contrôlée") between Wolof and other ethnicities, and regard Wolofization as a form of “uncontrolled” homogenization of the nation by the Wolof. That is, the Wolof language used as a tool to control other ethnic groups—which could possibly lead to the death or extinction of other ethnic languages and their cultures.[6][7] Serer intellectuals like Marcel Mahawa Diouf, Mandinaka intellectuals like Doudou Kamara, and Haalpulaar intellectuals like Yoro Doro Diallo and Cheikh Hamidou Kane share Diouf's view on Wolofization.[6] The historian and author Marcel Mahawa Diouf offers a drastic solution the "Wolofization problem". Since the Wolof language itself is the original language of the Lebou people, and not the Wolof; and the Wolof people are a mixture of the other Senegambian ethnic group—and became a distinct ethnic group only few centuries ago, Marcel Mahawa Diouf proposes an alliance between all non-Wolofs who have had historic alliances such as Serers, Toucouleurs, Sarakolés, Sossés, Jola, Lebou, etc. The purpose of this is to disconnect the Wolof, and in effect, disinherit them from the Senegambia region and its history.[6] In the oral tradition of the Wolof, they claim descent from Ndiadiane Ndiaye-founder of the Jolof Empire.[34][6] However, Ndiadian had a Haalpulaar mother and a Serer father, and his name came from the Serer language.[6][35][36] In essence, Marcel's proposal for dealing with Wolofization is to relegate the Wolof to non-existent and irrelevnt group.[6]

According to Étienne Smith:

"The alternative national narrative with which so-called peripheral homespun historians are striving to replace the Wolof-centered narrative postulates a coalition of small ethnic groups, interconnected by joking pacts. The Wolof appear nowhere in the ethnogenesis of the Senegalese nation they propose, except as the final product of the mixing of the “scraps” of these groups. In the eyes of the promoters of joking pacts, that is, the Senegalese nation is Wolof only from a linguistic point of view, the Wolof language itself being nothing more than the result of the amalgamation of all of the country’s languages and the Wolof identity being the possible outcome of the merging of such groups. But insofar as honor, prestige, cultural richness, or historical depth is concerned, the peripheral histories of the Serer, Haalpulaar, Joola, or Mandinka occupy center stage. For their promoters, that is what all these singular patriae have in common."[7]

Diouf does not dislike the Wolof people or the Wolof language, but takes issue with the concept of Wolofization which is prevalent in Senegal and encroaching on Gambian soil.[6][31][32] For many years, Diouf have advocated for brotherhood and cousinage among all Senegambian peoples.[37][6] He argues that, "national unity existed long before the name, without fratricidal wars and unnecessary heartbreaks, around a central nucleus whose virtues can still be used."[6]

Stuff

  • "Babacar Sédikh Diouf, Serer elder, president of the Union of Retired Teachers, and long-standing member of the National Union of Languages, is a staunch critic of Wolofization and calls for a “controlled osmosis” between Wolof and other ethnicities.48 When the past is described by patriotic historians as a paradise of interconnected but different, autonomous, equal, and selfrespecting patriae, a statement is obviously made about the present, viewed as the “uncontrolled” homogenization of the nation by the Wolof. An alternative past is sought with a view to proposing an alternative present." (Source : « Merging ethnic histories in Senegal: whose moral community? », in Derek Peterson & Giacomo Macola (dir.), Recasting the Past: History Writing and Political Work in Modern Africa, Athens, Ohio University Press, 2009, (213-232.), p. 12 (PDF) [in] Academia.edu [17] (retrieved February, 8 2020).
  • "Former teacher Babacar Sédikh Diouf recalls that he first met Senghor in 1951, in a Casamance village. Senghor, then a member of Parliament (MP), was visiting the locality as a surprise and had slept overnight in a simple hut. Diouf argues that after that day, he became a supporter of Senghor because his visit had proved his humility and interest in teaching. From then on, Diouf started to read Senghor. Later on, Senghor awarded him a grant to study Serer history “along Cheikh Anta Diop’s hypotheses.” See Babacar Sédikh Diouf, “L’imaginaire sérère dans l’oeuvre de Léopold Sédar Senghor,” in Senghor: Colloque de Dakar (Dakar: PUD, 1998), 241–46." (Source : « Merging ethnic histories in Senegal: whose moral community? », in Derek Peterson & Giacomo Macola (dir.), Recasting the Past: History Writing and Political Work in Modern Africa, Athens, Ohio University Press, 2009, (213-232.), p. 16 (PDF)) [in] Academia.edu [18] (retrieved February, 8 2020)

See also

References

  1. ^ Diouf, Babacar Sedikh, O maad a sinig : Kumba Ndoofeen fa Maak JUUF (Buka-Cilaas), 1853-1871, PAPF (1987), pp. 3-4
  2. ^ a b Babacar Sedikh Diouf's body of works: Diouf, Babacar Sedikh, O maad a sinig : Kumba Ndoofeen fa Maak JUUF (Buka-Cilaas), 1853-1871 (PAPF, 1987) [in] Consortium of Academic and Research Libraries in Illinois (CARLI) [in] CARLI I-Share [1] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  3. ^ a b c d e f Overview of Babacar Sedikh Diouf's works [in] WorldCat [2](retrieved February, 8 2020)
  4. ^ a b Le Soleil (Senegal) [in] AllAfrica.com, Afrique: Babacar Sédikh Diouf, conférencier : « Face à une mondialisation, il faut renouveler l'idéal panafricain » (November 4, 2004) by Madeline Malhaire [3] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  5. ^ Cite error: The named reference ecole was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Smith, Étienne, La nation « par le côté » - "Le récit des cousinages au Sénégal", (pp. 907-965), 2006 [in] Cahiers d'Études africaine., Notes: 45, 81, 93; Texte intégral: 3, 54, 55, 71. [4] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  7. ^ a b c d e f Smith, Étienne, « Merging ethnic histories in Senegal: whose moral community? », in Derek Peterson & Giacomo Macola (dir.), Recasting the Past: History Writing and Political Work in Modern Africa, Athens, Ohio University Press, 2009, (213-232.), p. 12 (PDF) [in] Academia.edu [5] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  8. ^ a b c d e Descamps, Cyr; Thiam, Iba Der; La préhistoire au Sénégal: recueil de documents, Association sénégalaise des professeurs d'histoire-géographie (1982), pp. 79-80
  9. ^ Diouf, Babacar Sedikh « La dimension genre dans le vivre ensemble africain » [in] Langevin, Louise, Rapports sociaux de sexe-genre et droit: repenser le droit, Archives contemporaines (2008), p. 96, ISBN 9782914610797 [6] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  10. ^ Camara, F. (2015). African Women and the Gender Equality Regime in Africa: From Patriarchy to Parity. In J. Levitt (Ed.), Black Women and International Law: Deliberate Interactions, Movements and Actions (pp. 61-87). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [7] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  11. ^ Diouf, Babacar Sedikh, La dimension genre dans le 'vivre ensemble' africain [in] Levitt, Jeremy I., Black Women and International Law, Cambridge University Press (2015), p. 75, ISBN 9781107021303 [8] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  12. ^ Diouf, Mamadou, Tolerance, Democracy, and Sufis in Senegal, Columbia University Press (2013), p. 172 ISBN 9780231162630 [9] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  13. ^ Keita, Abdoulaye, Au carrefour des littératures Afrique-Europe, KARTHALA Editions (2013), p. 118, ISBN 9782811109875 [10] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  14. ^ Gravrand, Henry, La civilisation sereer: Pangool, Nouvelles Editions africaines du Sénégal (1990), p. 56, ISBN 9782723610551
  15. ^ Diouf, Babacar Sedikh, O maad a sinig : Kumba Ndoofeen fa Maak JUUF (Buka-Cilaas), 1853-1871, PAPF (1987) [in] WorldCat [11] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  16. ^ a b Le Soleil, July 7, 1980
  17. ^ Kaabu was ruled by the noble patriclans of "Sanneh" and "Manneh" (variations : "Sané" and "Mané" - both Bainuk and Jola surnames in origin, not Mandinka or Malinke), with the noble maternal clans of Ñaanco and Guelowar. However, almost all the kings of Kaabu came from the Ñaanco maternal clan. The Guelowars were extended maternal relatives of the Ñaanco and one of their greatest threat to the throne. See: Ngom, Biram: La question Gelwaar et l’histoire du Siin, Dakar, Université de Dakar, 1987
  18. ^ a b Klein, Martin A., Islam and Imperialism in Senegal: Sine-Saloum, 1847-1914. Edinburgh University Press (1968). pp. 7–8. ISBN 9780804706216
  19. ^ a b Wright, Donald R., Oral Traditions from the Gambia: Mandinka griots, Ohio University Center for International Studies, Africa Program (1979), p. 21, ISBN 9780896800830
  20. ^ a b Murphy, E. Jefferson, History of African Civilization, Crowell (1972), p. 106, ISBN 9780690381948
  21. ^ a b c d (Babacar Sédikh Diouf) [in] Ngom, Biram La question Gelwaar et l’histoire du Siin, Dakar, Université de Dakar, 1987, p 69
  22. ^ a b Éthiopiques, Issues 55-56, Fondation Léopold Sédar Senghor (1991), p. 32
  23. ^ a b c d e Sarr, Alioune, Histoire du Sine-Saloum, (Sénégal), Introduction, bibliographie et notes par Charles Becker. Version légèrement remaniée par rapport à celle qui est parue en 1986-87. p 19
  24. ^ A tiedo or ceddo is a Senegambian term to describe any of the Senegambian people who do not believe in any of the Abrahamic religions but adhere to the tenets of Traditional African religions such as the Serer religion. It is a Fula term in origin. Senegalese filmmaker Ousmane Sembène made a film about the Ceddo class in his 1977 film Ceddo.
  25. ^ The Mbooj family trace their decent to Mbarick Bo ((also spelled Mbarik Bo) - Wolofized to Mbooj or Mboge. He was Bambara prince from the Massassi dynasty of Kaarta. The surname Bo was Wolofized to Mbooj/Mboge, just like the Haalpulaar surname Bah or was Wolofized to Mbacke as in Amadou Bamba Mbacke
  26. ^ Fage, John D.; Oliver, Roland; The Cambridge history of Africa: From c. 1600 to c. 1790, p. 486. ISBN 0521209811
  27. ^ Diouf, Babacar Sédikh, La présence sérère dans les fondements historiques et culturels de la nation, [in] Les Convergences Culturelles au sein de la Nation Sénégalaise, ed. Moustapha Tambadou (Dakar: Ministère de la Culture du Sénégal, 1996), p. 72–81;
  28. ^ « Merging ethnic histories in Senegal: whose moral community? », in Derek Peterson & Giacomo Macola (dir.), Recasting the Past: History Writing and Political Work in Modern Africa, Athens, Ohio University Press (2009), (213-232.), p. 17 (PDF) [in] Academia.edu [12] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  29. ^ N'Diaye-Correard, Geneviève, Les mots du patrimoine: le Sénégal (cont. Moussa Daff, Equipe du projet IFA.), Archives contemporaines (2006), p. 589, ISBN 9782914610339, [13] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  30. ^ Ngom, Pierre; Gaye, Aliou; and Sarr, Ibrahima; Ethnic Diversity and Assimilation in Senegal: Evidence from the 1988 Census, February 2000 [in] the African Census Analysis Project (ACAP), pp. 3, 27, [14] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  31. ^ a b Wolf, Hans-Georg , English in Cameroon, Walter de Gruyter (2013), p. 36, ISBN 9783110849059 [15]
  32. ^ a b Mwakikagile, Godfrey, Ethnic Diversity and Integration in The Gambia: The Land, the People and the Culture, Continental Press (2010), p. 84, ISBN 9789987932221 [[16] (retrieved February, 8 2020)
  33. ^ École pratique des hautes études (France). Section des sciences économiques et sociales, École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Cahiers d'études africaines, vol. 46, issue 4; vol. 46, issue 184, Mouton (2006), pp. 933, 938
  34. ^ (en) Anyidoho, Kofi. Cross rhythms, Volume 1, Occasional papers in African folklore, p. 118. Trickster Press (1983)
  35. ^ Diop, Cheikh Anta; and Modum, Egbuna P. Towards the African renaissance: essays in African culture & development, 1946-1960, Karnak House (1996), p. 28, ISBN 0907015859
  36. ^ Research in African Literatures, Volume 37. University of Texas at Austin. African and Afro-American Studies and Research Center, University of Texas at Austin, African and Afro-American Studies and Research Center, University of Texas (at Austin) (2006), p. 8
  37. ^ Le Soleil (Senegal), « devoir de confraternité » entre cousins à plaisanterie , Maim 17 1996, p. 6).