Second, : Zetoun rarely spoke publicly. In interviews she gave late in life, she said: “I did what had to be done. I do not want medals. I want justice, but justice was never served.”

To remember her is to resist the erasure of the silent, the broken, and the brave. In the end, Djamila Zetoun’s legacy is not a statue — it is a question mark placed against every nation’s preferred version of its past. Would you like a shorter version for a social media post, or a timeline of her life compared to other “Djamila” figures in Algerian history?

But freedom came at a price. The war had carved deep wounds. Her health was shattered by torture. Her family was fragmented. And in the new, independent Algeria — flush with revolutionary fervor — Zetoun faded into anonymity. She did not seek political office, write memoirs, or appear on television. She lived quietly, refusing to be a symbol. Why is Djamila Zetoun not a household name? The answer is layered.

By her early twenties, Zetoun had joined the and its underground network. Her role was not glamorous. She was a liaison — carrying messages, hiding fighters, smuggling weapons, and raising awareness in women's quarters where colonial surveillance rarely ventured. In the asymmetrical war of urban Algeria (1954–1962), such work was as dangerous as carrying a gun. Arrest and the Machinery of Torture In 1957, during the infamous Battle of Algiers , French paratroopers under General Jacques Massu swept through the Casbah, detaining thousands of suspected FLN sympathizers. Zetoun was among them. She was taken to the Villa des Tourelles — a clandestine torture center disguised as a military intelligence post.

Unlike Boupacha — whose case was championed by Simone de Beauvoir and Gisèle Halimi — Zetoun had no international campaign fighting for her. She was tried, convicted, and sentenced to death. The death sentence was never executed. Why? Not because of a change of heart in French courts, but because of the Évian Accords (1962), which ended the war and granted amnesty to many prisoners. Zetoun was released along with thousands of other FLN detainees.