Goggo Addi was born in 1911 or perhaps 1912 in
Bibemi, in northern
Cameroon, during a period of expanding
German colonization and increasing resistance to this incursion. Her father was a wealthy
Muslim Fulani merchant, who had four wives. In 1914, her family left Bibemi for the city of
Garoua, where her father died two years later. That year, the city was taken over from the Germans by the French. Addi stayed there with her mother, who remarried, and her siblings, but their financial situation became increasingly difficult. Addi was made to enter a
forced marriage, but she left her first husband and married, by choice, the son of one of her father's friends. However, he turned out to be violently abusive, and she obtained authorization from a
moodibbo, an Islamic religious leader, to divorce him. She returned to settle in her birthplace of Bibemi, where she acquired a reputation as a storyteller, hosting gatherings of local women and children. Fiercely independent, Addi remarried six more times. She had no children, though she experienced two
stillbirths. In 1985, family members put her in contact with Ursula Baumgardt, a professor at the
Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales and a member of a research project on sub-Saharan African languages and cultures at the
French National Centre for Scientific Research. The two women worked together until 1989 to record and transcribe Addi's stories, with Baumgardt attending her evening performances and conducting interviews. They remained in touch, meeting again in 1993 and 1995. Addi died in Garoua, where she had returned to live in her later years, in November 1999. == Work ==