Sembene Ousmane's "God's Wood" Sembene Ousmane's novel "God's Wood of Bits" explained the strike of Senegal's train workers aimed at pursuing equal welfare and compensation for French employers. In order to bring workers back to work, the French blocked the water and food supply of the three villages, Thies, Dakar and Bamako, where these incidents occurred. Ottoman novels explore how these difficulties evolved workers and their families until the strike was eventually resolved.
As soon as I was walking through the village where the railway was built, I noticed the source of familiarity. It is the literary and descriptive power of Ousmane Sembene of God of Bits of Wood. At first glance it looks random - Baobab's tree is on the hut, shadow of intentionally placed giant, unbearable afternoon sun in the cold mud house, huge baobab tree from the train Standing on The truck is just a few steps away, the house is dotted on dusty dirt roads, it spreads to where the eyes are visible, and the scorpion lives on the red and green lawn .
Born on January 1, 1923 at Ziguinchor in Senegal, Ousmane Sembene is one of the most outstanding people in the African film and literary circles. Sembene is mainly self-taught, and he is often exposed to various experiences and circumstances that echoes his work. As soon as he was 15 years old, he began making a living as a fisherman. Sembene also served brick craftworker, plumber, apprentice mechanic, harbor worker, and union member. These experiences have greatly contributed to the creation of Sembene's wonderful literary works and movie works. In this regard, Ousmane believes that his education is the result of his training at "Life University" (qtd in Amuta 137). After the outbreak of World War II, Sembene was elected to the French Army. He returned to Senegal after the war, but he returned to France, worked in Marseille, became an association activist, and joined the French Communist Party in 1960 until Senegal became independent. He died on June 9, 2007