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and the only woman within the party leadership. She also served as secretary-general of the
Commission Sociale des Femmes upon its establishment in 1962. She was essential in the drafting and enacting of the Marriage and Guardianship Code, which granted new rights to Malian women. In the 1960s,
185:. She was also appointed to the committee charged with drafting the constitution of the Sudanese Republic (an early name for Mali). She became the first woman in the Francophone West African Countries to be elected as a National Legislative Assembly in her country.
173:. Kéita and Diawara divorced in 1949 under pressure from Diawara's mother, when it became clear that Kéita could not have children. She was punished for her anti-colonial activism by being assigned to more and more remote locations, including Gao in 1950 and
181:, the party winning three parliamentary seats. As the RDA gained power, she rose through its ranks. In September 1958, she was elected to the RDA's executive body, the Bureau Politique National. In 1959, she was elected to Parliament, representing
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146:, a boarding school primarily for mixed-race girls to which a few Africans were allowed to enroll. Three years later, she completed her studies at the École de Médecine de Dakar and became a
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recounted her life up to the 1950s. When conditions improved in Mali and deteriorated in the Congo, they moved to Bamako in 1979, where she died the following year.
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however, she was pushed out of power in the increasingly radicalised RDA by a longtime rival, Mariam Keïta, the senior wife of the first
President of Mali,
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In 1923, her father sent Aoua to the first girls' school in Bamako, over the opposition of her mother. In 1928, she graduated from Bamako's
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In 1935, she married a doctor, Daouda
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in the mid-1950s. In 1951, she renounced her French citizenship and campaigned for the RDA in the
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Mali gained its independence in 1960. That year, she was the only woman elected to the new
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Preview of the article "Aoua Kéita and the
Nascent Women's Movement in the French Soudan"
204:, she left the country. In the 1970s, she and her second husband, Djimé Diallo, lived in
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and was a member of the colonial hygiene service. Her mother, Miriam
Coulibaly, was from
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In 1966, she gave up her midwife duties. When Modibo Keïta was overthrown in a 1968
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231:(An African Woman. The Autobiography of Aoua Kéita told in her own words). Paris:
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115:) was a Malian independence activist, politician and writer.
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Femme d’Afrique. La vie d’Aoua Kéita racontée par elle-même
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Femme d’Afrique. La vie d’Aoua Kéita racontée par elle-même
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Sudanese Union – African
Democratic Rally politicians
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She received numerous awards and honours from Mali.
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Historical
Dictionary of Women in Sub-Saharan Africa
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380:. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 145–146.
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212:. She published her autobiography in 1975;
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414:"Aoua Kéita in Women in African History"
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123:She was born in Bamako in what was then
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127:. Her father, Karamogo Kéita, was from
327:"Women in African History: Aoua Keita"
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356:University of Western Australia
288:Dictionary of African Biography
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291:. OUP USA. pp. 322–324.
86:midwife, writer, politician
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450:Malian non-fiction writers
352:"Africa and Women Authors"
279:Akyeampong, Emmanuel Kwaku
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445:Malian women activists
408:African Studies Review
111:– 7 May 1980, Bamako,
475:Women autobiographers
283:Henry Louis Gates Jr.
210:Republic of the Congo
179:1951 French election
165:, a future two-term
465:People from Bamako
233:Présence Africaine
163:Alpha Oumar Konaré
144:foyer des métisses
416:on www.UNESCO.org
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195:Modibo Keïta
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125:French Sudan
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109:French Sudan
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68:(1980-05-07)
57:French Sudan
50:12 July 1912
435:1980 deaths
430:1912 births
206:Brazzaville
202:coup d'état
137:Ivory Coast
133:World War I
424:Categories
304:19 October
247:References
101:Aoua Kéita
83:Occupation
66:7 May 1980
46:1912-07-12
41:Aoua Kéita
20:Aoua Kéita
119:Biography
285:(2012).
91:Language
183:Sikasso
148:midwife
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331:UNESCO
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129:Guinea
105:Bamako
94:French
73:Bamako
53:Bamako
171:Kayes
169:, at
382:ISBN
306:2016
293:ISBN
237:ISBN
175:Nara
113:Mali
77:Mali
63:Died
38:Born
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152:Gao
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