Career
Addi Bâ arrived in France in 1938 with the family of a colonial tax collector and spent a year in Langeais in Indre-et-Loire before returning to Paris. He enlisted in the French army in 1939 as part of the 12th regiment of Senegalese Tirailleurs. Bâ was taken prisoner, but managed to escaped and joined others in the maquis des Vosges.
He was arrested on 18 November 1943 by Germans after the attack of the maquis of the Délivrance group.
Bâ was tortured but did not speak. On 18 December 1943, Bâ was shot at Épinal along with the leader of the maquis, Marcel Arburger.
In 2010, the former football player Lilian Thuram devoted a chapter to Addi Bâ in his work Mes étoiles noires ("My Black Stars") on historically important black individuals. Some extracts of this chapter were published on 4 September 2010 in the journal L"Humanité, as part of a feature titled "Portraits de résistants."
His life was recounted in a romanticised manner by Tierno Monénembo in his novel le Terroriste noir, published by éditions du Seuil in 2012.
In September 2013, Étienne Guillermond published Addi Bâ, résistant des Vosges, with éditions Duboiris, the result of ten years of research into the young Guinean.
A street in Tollaincourt and another in Langeais are named in his honour.