Danièle Djamila Amrane-Minne
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Danièle Minne joined the struggle when she was 17, going underground under the nom de guerre of ''Djamila''. Minne was considered a woman combatant in the Algerian War known as a fidayat. She "planted at least two bombs during the Battle of Algiers, and joined the maquis in wilaya 3 in 1957". A historian, Alistair Horne, described one of Minne's missions:
"The targets were the Otomatic, a favourite students's bar on the Rue Michelet; the Cafeteria opposite (second time over) and the Coq-Hardi, a popular brasserie…placed in the ladies' lavatory, Daniéle Minne's bomb in the Otomatic seriously injured a young girl and several others".Arrested and jailed in December 1956, she was sentenced, on 4 December 1957, to 7 years in prison by a juvenile tribunal.
Freed after independence in 1962, she wrote a PhD dissertation on the participation of Algerian women in the war, based on interviews with eighty-eight women between 1978 and 1986; the dissertation was later published as a book, ''Des femmes dans la guerre d’Algérie'' (Karthala, Paris). The book was the basis for the film ''Algeria: Women at War'' by Parminder Vir.
Danièle Minne became Djamila Amrane by marriage in 1964. She later worked at the University of Algiers but, by 1999, was a professor of history and feminist studies at the University of Toulouse. Provided by Wikipedia