Mongo Beti, also known as Alexandre Biyidi Awala, was born in 1932 in the village of Akométan, near Mbalmayo in Cameroon.
Expelled at an early age from a missionary school in Mbalmayo for challenging ideas of colonialism and religion, he moved to France in 1951 to continue his education in literature, first at Aix-en-Provence then at the Sorbonne in Paris. He wrote regularly for the journal African Presence, where he published his first short story 'Without Hatred or Love' in 1953.
His most acclaimed novel, The Poor Christ of Bomba (1956) was banned in Cameroon for its controversial criticism of the Catholic Church and colonial rule. Beti maintained his hope for independence, however, and was eventually forced into exile. He worked as a literature teacher in France at the Lycée Corneille for the next thirty years before returning to Cameroon permanently in 1994 where he continued his activism through demonstrations and in his writing.
Beti died in 2001.