Boubacar Boris Diop’s Un tombeau pour Kinne Gaajo: The Value of Memory, Writing, and Translation, by Marame Gueye

Boubacar Boris Diop’s Un tombeau pour Kinne Gaajo: The Value of Memory, Writing, and Translation, by Marame Gueye Book Reviews [email protected] Mon, 08/05/2024 - 15:14 Photo of Diop by Gavyn Redd / Shevaun Williams PhotographyOn September 26, 2002, Le Joola, the passenger ship relaying Dakar to Ziguinchor in the south of Senegal, capsized on its way to Dakar. The official death toll is 1,863, with 64 survivors, but many estimate that the number of dead was higher because the ship, which was designed to carry only 536 people, had close to 2,000 passengers, yet ticket counts are only 1,034. Survivors recount hundreds of people sleeping on the upper deck, making the ship tilt. Reports cite many reasons for the shipwreck, including weather conditions, mechanical issues due to poor maintenance of the twelve-year-old vessel, and ship operators who failed to follow maritime protocols. Still, overcrowding remains the primary reason for the disaster. The heavy death toll is exacerbated by the delay in rescue missions and the lack of proper rescue equipment. Over twenty years later, the shipwreck remains the second most disastrous nonmilitary maritime accident in recent history. Yet it is not known to the rest of the world, and even in Senegal, victims and survivors alike did not get worthy commemoration and reparations, and accountability actions remain tepid, with few officials being dismissed. Most of the blame was put on the... Continue reading at 'World Literature Today'

[ World Literature Today | 2024-08-05 20:14:31 UTC ]

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