Ngalandou Diouf (also Galandou Diouf; 14 September 1875 – 6 August 1941) was a French people and French Senegal politician who was a member of the French Chamber of Deputies representing the Four Communes from 1934 until his death in 1941. He was the last person to represent the Four Communes under the French Third Republic.
Early life
Diouf was born to the aristocratic
Diouf family. He was of
Wolof people and
Serer people background, and as a native of one of the
Four Communes of Senegal considered part of France, was granted the (nominally) full rights of French citizenship. He began his career as a schoolteacher and minor government clerk but became progressively involved in politics.
Political career
Diouf was elected in 1909 to represent the
Four Communes of
Rufisque at the advisory General Assembly (
Conseil Général) of Saint-Louis, then capital of colonial Senegal.
He was an editor of the influential
La Démocratie newspaper, and founding editor of "
Le Sénégal". As a journalist and political leader, he was the political godfather of
Blaise Diagne, whose fame and political success quickly supplanted Diouf's own. Diouf and Diagne finally broke in 1928 over Diouf's view that Diagne had conceded too much to French interests, and over Diouf's increasingly anti-communist and anti-socialist views.
After Diagne's death, Diouf was elected to his seat in the Chamber of Deputies, leading a coalition of the centre-left, small farmers, Senegalese veterans of the French military, and followers of the Tijaniyyah Sufi brotherhood which defeated the socialist and Mouride brotherhood coalition of Amadou Lamine-Guèye, an attorney who would later carry out much of Diagne's political program.[The Cambridge History of Africa
J. D. Fage, Roland Anthony Oliver. Cambridge University Press (1977) ]
In the Chamber of Deputies
In the Assembly, Diouf joined with the Independent Left, connected to the Radical-Socialist Party Camille Pelletan. Diouf fled France during the Battle of France and was not present to vote against the French Constitutional Law of 1940, which gave power to Philippe Pétain and
Vichy France. Diouf had opposed the armistice with the Germans, even drafting an appeal on 19 June 1940 with the Guadeloupean deputies
Gratien Candace and
Maurice Satineau to President Albert François Lebrun that called on the government to continue the war in the colonies.
[ Gratien Candace 1940 - Gaulliste au 19 juin 1940 / L’appel du 19 juin .]
Diouf was among the Massilia Deputies, a group of 27 deputies also including Édouard Daladier, Georges Mandel, Jean Zay, and Pierre Mendès-France. The group boarded the SS Massilia and fled to Casablanca in French Morocco, where they planned to set up a government-in-exile.
[http://francois.delboca.free.fr/fsparlem.html List of the 26 Deputies, 1 Senator, and other personalities who fled aboard the Massila. After disembarking at Port-Vendres, the group, including Diouf, were arrested by collaborationist officials, but Diouf was not deported to face trial with the leadership.
Later life
Ngalandou Diouf died in 1941. A large secondary school in
Dakar and major streets in both Dakar and Saint-Louis are named for him.
Notes
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Portions of this article were translated from the French language Wikipedia articles Ngalandou Diouf and Galandou Diouf.
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Lucie Gallistel Colvin. Historical Dictionary of Senegal. Scarecrow Press/ Metuchen. NJ - London (1981)