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Diop received the Grand prix de la République du Sénégal pour les Lettres for his second novel, ´Les tambours de la mémoire´, published in 1990. On the initiative of journalists Nocky Djedanoum and Maimouna Coulibaly, Diop went to Kigali for two months in 1998 to take part in the ´Rwanda: écrire par devoir de mémoire´ project along with other artists.
Diop’s most recent novel, ´Murambi, le livre des ossements´, is based on accounts by survivors of the Tutsi genocide in 1994, when almosthalf a million people were killed. The author lives in Dakar and has been writing for ´Neue Zürcher Zeitung´ for several years.
Diop presents a genuine link between European and African narrative traditions based on ´authentic´ African legends, as his mother ritually claimed. ´Novel´ is an inaccurate term for this genre. His works deal repeatedly with the manipulation of history through myths. The claim that reality and fiction cannot be clearly separated takes form in a complex structure of time frames and narrative threads. This does not apply to his most recent work, however. "I made this novel as simple as possible by not worrying too much about formal devices, aesthetics or peculiarities in narrative style", Diop stated in an interview." I want young people to be able to read, understand and discuss it."
Because he believes in the magical forces of symbolism but does not want to allow the reader to escape into a certainty that the story is far-fetched, Diop has only incorporated accounts which were verified by third parties. According to the author, the real issue in genocide reappraisal is not finding the right words, but the danger that outsiders will suspect that survivors tend to exaggerate.



