Biography
Marème Diarra
Who Was Marème Diarra?
Marème Diarra was a Bambara woman from Segou, Mali. At age 20 she was deported to Mauritania for disagreeing with the enslavement of war captives. She eventually fled Mauritania to prevent her daughter, Rokhaya, and two sons, Bilal and Ahmad, from being enslaved. They walked over 200 kilometers (124 miles) to French colonial Senegal, where slavery had been legally abolished. Diarra and her children settled in Diel Mbam outside of the colonial capital of Saint-Louis. Diel Mbam was a haven for newcomers from Saint-Louis and was home to other escapees of Mali’s Bambara community.
Diarra knew that enslaved people who set foot in colonial Senegal became free, as the settlements in the French colonies had abolished slavery. However, the rights of these newcomers remained restricted. Marème Diarra rejected the presence of French colonists who came to Diel Mbam to trade and recruit for the colonial army.
Remembering Marème Diarra
Marème Diarra’s great-grandson Mamadou Ba recounted Diarra’s story and shared memories of his great-grandmother as part of the Unfinished Conversations series. Unfinished Conversations is an oral history and public engagement initiative connected to the In Slavery’s Wake exhibition. The exhibition team filmed interviews in northern Senegal, learning about Marème Diarra and other historical figures.
Excavating Marème Diarra’s Home
The location of Marème Diarra’s home was identified during Unfinished Conversations interviews. Several artifacts were recovered at the excavation site, including fragments of an axe that may have been used by Diarra and her husband in their work as charcoal makers. The buttons recovered point to military service, as many of the Tirailleurs Sénégalais—Senegalese riflemen in the French colonial army—were recruited among newcomers like those in Diarra’s community.
That's Marème Ndiaye, who represents for us a figure of defiance who doesn't accept in any way to be dominated despite her generosity.
Mamadou Ba, Marème Diarra’s great-grandson, 2022