Rokhaya Diallo

Rokhaya Diallo Wiki

Celebs NameRokhaya Diallo
GenderFemale
BirthdateApril 10, 1978
DayApril 10
Year1978
NationalityFrance
Age42 years
Birth SignAries
Body Stats
HeightNot Available
WeightNot Available
MeasurementsNot Available
Eye ColorNot Available
Hair ColorNot Available
Feet SizeNot Available
Dress SizeNot Available

Explore about the Famous Journalist Rokhaya Diallo, who was born in France on April 10, 1978. Analyze Rokhaya Diallo’s net worth, age, bio, birthday, dating, height-weight, wiki. Investigate who is Rokhaya Diallo dating now? Look into this article to know how old is Rokhaya Diallo?

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Rokhaya Diallo Biography

Author, journalist, and activist known for her work in France advocating for minorities, women, and gay rights. She founded the anti-racist organization Les Invdivisibles.

She studied marketing at Pantheon-Sorbonne University and graduated in 2003.

She won an award for Best Documentary Film for Steps to Liberty. She’s written more than half a dozen books, mostly addressing racism.

She’s of Senegalese and Gambian descent.

She worked with Sonia Rolland on an article in Le Monde in 2012.

Rokhaya Diallo was born in 1978, in Paris, from Senegalese and Gambian parents. Her father was a mechanic and her mother a sewing teacher. Her family moved to La Courneuve, a suburb of Paris, in 1989.

Rokhaya Diallo (born 10 April 1978), is a French journalist, author, filmmaker, and activist for racial, gender and religious equality. She is a BET-France host and has produced and/or directed documentaries, TV and radio programs. She has published: Racism: a guide, France Belongs to Us, France: One and Multicultural and How to talk to kids about racism, a graphic novel Pari(s) d’Amies, and Afro! featuring Afro-Parisians who choose natural hairstyles.

As an anime enthusiast, Diallo helped found the Japan Expo. She was also briefly a voice actress, performing Kamui Shiro as a child in X1999, by CLAMP, and Ex in Ah! My Goddess: The Movie.

In 2001, she participated in the youth outreach program of La Courneuve. She was asked to join in the city’s Youth Council and rose to the position of president within two years. As a feminist, she campaigns for the anti-sexist association Mix-Cité. She also campaigns for the organization ATTAC, which fights for sustainable and socially just globalization policies, notably during the Film Festival “Images mouvementées”.

In 2002, Diallo took part in different humorous short-films by the group Une case en moins, as an actress, singer and songwriter.

After obtaining a bachelor’s degree in International and European law, Diallo went on to study business, which led her to work for a short period at IBM, which she left because she felt “like a pawn”. So she decided to work toward a marketing and distribution degree at the Université Panthéon-Sorbonne (Paris I), which she earned in 2003. She now works in broadcasting production.

In 2006, having heard that “most people consider being black and from a working class background to be a problem”, Diallo founded the association, The Indivisibles. “People’s looks seemed to associate me with a certain image and uncomfortable stereotypes.” “When we were young, my brother and I had never asked ourselves “where do we come from?”, until we were asked by others”. Diallo was not bothered by attaching the question to one’s origin, but she objects to people placing their own yearning for exoticism over her. The Indivisibles campaigns to put a stop to “a partition of French citizenship by physical appearance” or by geographical origin. Originally created in secrecy, to “work with institutions such as the French Education Department”, the association burst on to the publishing scene in 2009 with a large media exposure program oriented around their newly created “Y’a bon Awards” recognizing the most outrageous racist statements by French public figures.

From 2009 to 2013, she was a commentator for La Matinale on Canal+, and since 2009 on RTL (French radio station). In March 2010, she was chosen to participate in the International Visitor Leadership program and as a guest of the US government. She visited the country to study its diversity.

Since 2011, Diallo has hosted Fresh Cultures on the Mouv’ (French radio station); she also hosted and co-directed a monthly show Egaux mais pas trop (Equals but not too much) on LCP.

Diallo became a radio and television commentator and in 2011 she published Racism: a guide, in the philosopher Vincent Cespedes’ collection. “France is my country. I know Paris better than Senegal. But how should she behave in a “structurally racist” environment? Mentalities need to change. Especially in the media, when their coverage of a news story focuses solely on a defendant’s skin color or geographical origin”. Exposing Islamophobia holds an increasingly important place in her reasoning: “We only speak of secular education when the subject is Islam (and not in regard to any other religion), a religion we are led to believe is only practiced in France by sexist and violent fundamentalists of North African origin.”

In December 2012, she took part in a demonstration supporting the right of gay couples to marry, where she noticed the lack of black participation.

In June 2013, someone found guilty of using Twitter to call for Diallo’s rape was sentenced to pay a fine of 2000 euros, of which 1400 were suspended, and 1000 euros for damages to the plaintiff. The following year, Diallo produced a documentary for French channels LCP/AN and France 3, Networks of Hate, covering hate speech and freedom of speech online.

Diallo was listed by Slate as 36th out of the 100 most influential French women in 2013, and appears among the 30 most influential black figures in Europe on Britain’s Powerful Media’s ranking.

In March 2014, she published an editorial opinion piece in the weekly review Politis for International Women’s Day.

What's Rokhaya Diallo Net Worth 2024

Net Worth (2024) $1 Million (Approx.)
Net Worth (2023) Under Review
Net Worth (2022) Under Review
Net Worth (2021) Under Review
Net Worth (2020) Under Review

Rokhaya Diallo Family

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