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Aïssatou Cissé

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Senegalese writer
Aïssatou Cissé
Aïssatou Cissé at AWID 2016Aïssatou Cissé at AWID 2016
Born1970/1
Dakar
OccupationFeminist writer and adviser
NationalitySenegalese

Aïssatou Cissé or Aissatou Cisse (born 1970/1) is a Senegal feminist writer with disabilities who became an advisor to the President of Senegal.

Life

Cissé was born in Niayes Thioker in Dakar in about 1971. Her mother had rheumatism and during the birth Cissé's hands and feet were dislocated by the people assisting the birth. This left Cissé with permanent disabilities. She was able to achieve a lot with the support of her parents. She notes that her education was shaped by the colonialists who occupied her country and religion. The received education in Senegal was made by foreign people who did not allow their women to have equal rights. Cissé is happy to be called a feminist and she uses her writing to oppose Female genital mutilation, polygamy, early and forced marriage.

Cissé became a successful writer. She wrote her debut novel Zeina in 2002 and Linguère Fatim two years later. She won an award in Libya.

She cites the Ashanti Queen Pokou and Queen Djeumbeutt Mbodj as her role models. She wrote about the injustice of a Senegalese girl who was sent to jail for having an illegal abortion. This was despite the mitigation of the pregnancy having resulted from her being raped at the age of thirteen.

Cissé was appointed a special advisor to Senegal's president, Macky Sall. She has worked with the Minister of Health and Social Action to improve the country's sports facilities for people with disabilities. She assists with a Senegalese organisation called ASEDEME. ASEDEME is a self-help group started in 1989 to assist 50 children with learning difficulties to have an education.

References

  1. ^ Portrait Aissatou Cisse, January 2014, Xibar.net, Retrieved 3 April 2016
  2. ^ "Aïssatou Cisse » African Feminist Forum". African Feminist Forum. 2016-03-24. Retrieved 2024-12-14.
  3. Aissatou Cisse, Handicapped writer, 2011, Leral.net, in French, Retrieved 2 April 2016
  4. ASEDEME, Retrieved 3 April 2016
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