• hopilavayi: an erotic dictionary

memories of my ghost sista

~ the dead are never satisfied

memories of my ghost sista

Tag Archives: The Azna

sarraouna: the witch-queen of the azna

11 Monday Feb 2013

Posted by babylon crashing in Illustration and art, sonnet

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Battle of Lougou, colonial era, Dogoua, female geneal, French, Nkomo Woman, The Azna, West Africa, witch-queen

Sarraouna

Smashed the villages. Knocked their walls to bits.
Broke the kilns and meeting houses. Sometimes

you make me wonder. You, who now commits
“crime de guerre,” wouldn’t dream of such crimes
near your beloved Paris. If I’m devout
and dire it is only in proportion
to the horrors your soldiers carried out
during your Voulet-Chanoine mission.

You called me witch-queen. No, I’m a mother

who took up arms against the men who raped
her last daughter, then sold her last sister
to the pimps of France. There are monster-shaped
men who’ll fear the witch-queen of the Azna.

I will teach you my name: Sarraouna.

* * *

What is known about Sarraouna is that she was a queen of the Azna people, who ruled in a region of West Africa during the late 19th century. Like many controversies surrounding European colonialism there appears two conflicting versions of Sarraouna. In one she is a champion of her people, standing up against an invading army that used large-scale rape and massacres as a means of subduing an indigenous population. In the other she is a “witch-queen” who stirred up anti-French sentiment during a time when France was attempting to conquer Chad and unify all French territories in West Africa.

The Azna occupied the Dallol Mawri, a broad valley in the Hausa country of the present-day Dogondoutchi district of Niger in northwest Africa. Like so many heroes of history, myths have grown about Sarraouna’s childhood. She had a Spartan upbringing with adoptive parents. At the age of eighteen she already knew how to lead men into battle, and as a tribal sorceress, she held her warriors and her enemies alike in thrall. When the Fulani of Sokoto attempted to convert her and her people to Islam, she and her warriors fought bravely to drive them back …

In January 1899, French troops — primarily [African] mercenaries — commanded by captains Voulet and Chanoine left Segou in Mali, crossed the territories of the Zarma and of the Gourma, and entered the dense vegetation of the Dallol Mawri. On April 17, 1899, they laid siege with cannon fire to the village of Lugu, which Queen Sarraouna and her fierce warriors defended valiantly, determined not to allow the invaders drive her out: “We won’t move a single inch from here … even if we must die to the last person!” But the superior French arms proved too powerful … forced to retreat … she continued to harass her enemies, so intimidating the mercenaries that many of them abandoned the French. While the French captains, watching her rituals from afar, at first dismissed them as “drunkenness” and “incoherent ramblings of a superstitious woman,” the mercenaries came to believe her to be the Nkomo Woman, the femme fetale, the Dogoua, or demon-woman. (Jackson-Laufer, 354)

Work Cited

Jackson-Laufer, Guida. Women Rulers Throughout the Ages: An Illustrated Guide (Santa Barbara, ABC-CLIO: 1999)

from the 1986 by Med Hondo, "Sarraouna"

from the 1986 by Med Hondo, “Sarraouna”

age difference anal sex Armenia Armenian Genocide Armenian translation ars poetica art artist unknown blow job Chinese translation conversations with imaginary sisters cum cunnilingus drama erotic erotica erotic poem erotic poetry Federico Garcia Lorca fellatio finger fucking free verse ghost ghost girl ghost lover gif Gyumri haiku homoerotic homoerotica Humor i'm spilling more thank ink y'all incest Lilith Lord Byron Love shall make us a threesome masturbation more than just spilled ink more than spilled ink mythology ocean mythology Onna bugeisha orgasm Peace Corps photo poem Poetry Portuguese Portuguese translation prose quote unquote reblog retelling Rumi Sappho sea folklore Shakespeare sheismadeinpoland sonnet sorrow Spanish Spanish translation spilled ink story Taoist Pirate rituals Tarot Tarot of Syssk thank you threesome Titus Andronicus translation video Walt Whitman woman warrior xenomorph

electric mayhem [links]

  • aimee mann
  • poesia erótica (português)
  • discos bizarros argentinos
  • armenian erotica and news
  • sandra bernhard
  • cyndi lauper
  • Poetic K [myspace]

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Blog Stats

  • 392,910 hits

Categories

ars poetica: the blogs a-b

  • black satin
  • Alcoholic Poet
  • kristy bowen
  • mary biddinger
  • alzheimer's poetry project
  • afterglow
  • the art blog
  • american witch
  • brilliant books
  • sandra beasley
  • margaret bashaar
  • aliki barnstone
  • armenian poetry project
  • megan burns
  • afghan women's writing project
  • clair becker
  • tiel aisha ansari
  • wendy babiak
  • cecilia ann
  • sommer browning
  • stacy blint
  • lynn behrendt
  • emma bolden
  • all things said and done

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 44 other subscribers

Archives

ars poetica: the blogs c-d

  • cheryl clark
  • natalia cecire
  • lyle daggett
  • julie carter
  • juliet cook
  • jackie clark
  • roberto cavallera
  • linda lee crosfield
  • flint area writers
  • maria damon
  • jennifer k. dick
  • cleveland poetics
  • abigail child
  • CRB
  • lorna dee cervantes
  • michelle detorie

ars poetica: the blogs e-h

  • bernardine evaristo
  • human writes
  • jane holland
  • maureen hurley
  • amanda hocking
  • Gabriela M.
  • liz henry
  • jeannine hall gailey
  • joy garnett
  • jessica goodfellow
  • sarah wetzel fishman
  • carol guess
  • pamela hart
  • elizabeth glixman
  • ghosts of zimbabwe
  • hayaxk (ՀԱՅԱՑՔ)
  • Free Minds Book Club
  • joy harjo
  • herstoria
  • julie r. enszer
  • elisa gabbert
  • maggie may ethridge
  • carrie etter

ars poetica: the blogs i-l

  • gene justice
  • las vegas poets organization
  • donna khun
  • laila lalami
  • a big jewish blog
  • emily lloyd
  • diane lockward
  • megan kaminski
  • dick jones
  • renee liang
  • sheryl luna
  • lesley jenike
  • joy leftow
  • lesbian poetry archieves
  • charmi keranen
  • miriam levine
  • maggie jochild
  • meg johnson
  • language hat
  • sandy longhorn
  • irene latham
  • kennifer kilgore-caradec
  • IEPI
  • Jaya Avendel
  • amy king
  • Kim Whysall-Hammond

ars poetica: the blogs m-o

  • marion mc cready
  • michelle mc grane
  • adrienne j. odasso
  • caryn mirriam-goldberg
  • motown writers
  • michigan writers resources
  • new issues poetry & prose
  • mlive: michigan poetry news
  • Nanny Charlotte
  • majena mafe
  • My Poetic Side
  • maud newton
  • iamnasra oman
  • january o'neil
  • heather o'neill
  • sophie mayer
  • the malaysian poetic chronicles
  • ottawa poetry newsletter
  • nzepc
  • sharanya manivannan
  • michigan writers network
  • wanda o'connor

ars poetica: the blogs p-r

  • rachel phillips
  • sophie robinson
  • joanna preston
  • susan rich
  • helen rickerby
  • kristin prevallet
  • nikki reimer
  • split this rock
  • Queen Majeeda
  • maria padhila
  • ariana reines
  • nicole peyrafitte

ars poetica: the blogs s-z

  • switchback books
  • scottish poetry library
  • tim yu
  • Stray Lower
  • sexy poets society
  • southern michigan poetry
  • Trista's Poetry
  • tuesday poems
  • vassilis zambaras
  • shin yu pai
  • womens quarterly conversation
  • ron silliman

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • memories of my ghost sista
    • Join 44 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • memories of my ghost sista
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...