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Karfa Diallo | |
|---|---|
| Diallo in the George Floyd protests, 2020 | |
| Born | Karfa Sira Diallo 1971 (age 53–54) |
| Alma mater | Lycée Seydina-Limamou-Laye |
| Occupation(s) | Activist, writer |
| Years active | c. 2000—present |
Karfa Sira Diallo (born 1971) is a Franco-Senegalese activist and writer.
Diallo was born in Thiaroye, Senegal in 1971, the eldest of twenty-five children. His father was a rifleman in the Algerian War. He disliked his father as a child and opposed his conservatism. He received a law degree from the Lycée Seydina-Limamou-Laye in Pikine. [1] [2]
Since c. 2000, Diallo has worked as an activist to memorialise French slavery in the city of Bordeaux. He is the founder and director of Mémoires et Partages, an organization that has helped Bourdeaux recognize its history. [3] He also founded Mémoires & partages, an education organisation to help memorialise French slavery. [4] In 2019, after the unveiling of Woodly Caymitte's sculpture of Modeste Testas, Diallo criticised it, saying one who was freed cannot represent the struggles of slavery. [5]