Concealing Authority: Diola priests and other leaders in the French search for a suitable chefferie in colonial Senegal

This article aims to explain the complexity of the relationship between Diola (or Joola) chiefs and the French colonial administration. After presenting the general Diola context, the author focalizes in Diola-Esulaalu and Diola-Huluf populations, both south of the Casamance River. In this area, the...

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Main Author: Robert M. Baum
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Universitário de Lisboa 2009-06-01
Series:Cadernos de Estudos Africanos
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cea/181
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author Robert M. Baum
author_facet Robert M. Baum
author_sort Robert M. Baum
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description This article aims to explain the complexity of the relationship between Diola (or Joola) chiefs and the French colonial administration. After presenting the general Diola context, the author focalizes in Diola-Esulaalu and Diola-Huluf populations, both south of the Casamance River. In this area, the traditional authorities were the leaders of the anticolonial resistance. For this reason, French officials turned to early Diola converts to Christianity to try to control the population. According both to oral information and to colonial archives, the French administration never controlled the leaders of Diola traditional religion (awaseena) or, consequently, the Diola population.
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spelling doaj.art-505ef55300e54b2d89dc93cc3057d0b52024-02-13T15:51:33ZengInstituto Universitário de LisboaCadernos de Estudos Africanos1645-37942182-74002009-06-0116355110.4000/cea.181Concealing Authority: Diola priests and other leaders in the French search for a suitable chefferie in colonial SenegalRobert M. BaumThis article aims to explain the complexity of the relationship between Diola (or Joola) chiefs and the French colonial administration. After presenting the general Diola context, the author focalizes in Diola-Esulaalu and Diola-Huluf populations, both south of the Casamance River. In this area, the traditional authorities were the leaders of the anticolonial resistance. For this reason, French officials turned to early Diola converts to Christianity to try to control the population. According both to oral information and to colonial archives, the French administration never controlled the leaders of Diola traditional religion (awaseena) or, consequently, the Diola population.https://journals.openedition.org/cea/181
spellingShingle Robert M. Baum
Concealing Authority: Diola priests and other leaders in the French search for a suitable chefferie in colonial Senegal
Cadernos de Estudos Africanos
title Concealing Authority: Diola priests and other leaders in the French search for a suitable chefferie in colonial Senegal
title_full Concealing Authority: Diola priests and other leaders in the French search for a suitable chefferie in colonial Senegal
title_fullStr Concealing Authority: Diola priests and other leaders in the French search for a suitable chefferie in colonial Senegal
title_full_unstemmed Concealing Authority: Diola priests and other leaders in the French search for a suitable chefferie in colonial Senegal
title_short Concealing Authority: Diola priests and other leaders in the French search for a suitable chefferie in colonial Senegal
title_sort concealing authority diola priests and other leaders in the french search for a suitable chefferie in colonial senegal
url https://journals.openedition.org/cea/181
work_keys_str_mv AT robertmbaum concealingauthoritydiolapriestsandotherleadersinthefrenchsearchforasuitablechefferieincolonialsenegal