Ndouna Dépénaud
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Dieudonné Pascal Ndouna Okogo, known as Ndouna Dépénaud, was a Gabonese writer, poet, playwright, educator, and diplomat, born on July 7, 1937, in
Akiéni Akiéni is a small town in Lekoni-Lekori Department in Haut-Ogooue in north-eastern Gabon. It lies along the road to Leconi and is set in a valley on the northern side of the Baniaka River The Baniaka River is a river of Gabon Gabon ( ; ...
, Haut-Ogooué province in the southeast of the country, and assassinated on July 19, 1977, in Libreville.


Biography


Death

Ndouna Dépénaud was assassinated on July 19, 1977, near his home in the Akébé neighborhood in Libreville. According to
Pierre Péan Pierre Péan (; 5 March 1938 – 25 July 2019) was a French investigative journalist and author of many books concerned with political scandals. Books, investigations and controversies In 1983 Pierre Péan was the first to break the story of the ...
, Ndouna Dépénaud had reportedly married Josephine Kama Dabany, also known as Patience Dabany, in a customary union, who later became the wife of
Omar Bongo Omar Bongo Ondimba (born Albert-Bernard Bongo; 30 December 1935 – 8 June 2009) was a Gabonese politician who was the second president of Gabon from 1967 until Death and state funeral of Omar Bongo, his death in 2009. A member of the Gabonese De ...
, President of Gabon. For the French journalist, the death of the Gabonese poet was linked to this past relationship with Omar Bongo's wife. Although the assassination of Ndouna Dépénaud remains unresolved, he is said to have been "cold-bloodedly murdered" by three members of the presidential guard. Placide Ondo also mentioned rumors of a crime of passion involving Ndouna Dépénaud and Josephine Kama. ''
Jeune Afrique ''Jeune Afrique'' (English: ''Young Africa'') is a French-language pan-African weekly news magazine, founded in 1960 in Tunis and subsequently published in Paris by Jeune Afrique Media Group. It is the most widely read pan-African magazine. It o ...
'' magazine indicates that Ndouna Dépénaud was an opponent of Omar Bongo's regime.


Works

Ndouna Dépénaud published two collections of poetry: * ''Passages. Poetic Essays'', Libreville, National Pedagogical Institute, 1969. * ''Rêves à l'aube'' (Dreams at Dawn), Libreville, National Pedagogical Institute, 1975. He also published a four-act play, ''La Plaie'' (The Wound). Ndouna Dépénaud expressed his love for writing and especially for poetry in these words: "I cannot say how or why I came to poetry. An essentially literary education, a particular taste for the marvelous, and a very sensitive nature must have led me to poetry... Why poetry? Simply because I have a fundamentally Negro soul, and poetry is the literary form that suits the expression of the Negro soul, imbued with sensitivity". In his anthology of Gabonese poets, Eric Joël Bekale notes that Ndouna Dépénaud was "the best-known Gabonese writer of the seventies". Ndouna Dépénaud's work is well-represented in anthologies of Gabonese literature. Literary critic Fortunat Obiang notes that "Ndouna Dépénaud favors themes that sufficiently indicate that his writing is on the margins of the lyrical protest inherent in Negritude".


References


Bibliography

* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Depenaud, Ndouna 1937 births 1977 deaths People from Haut-Ogooué Province Assassinated diplomats Gabonese writers 20th-century dramatists and playwrights Gabonese poets Gabonese diplomats Ambassadors of Gabon to Equatorial Guinea