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{{Moroccan literature}}
{{Moroccan literature}}
'''Malika al-Fassi''' (1919–2007) was a Moroccan writer and nationalist. She was the only woman to sign the independence treaty of [[Morocco]] in 1944.<ref>Latifa Akharbach, Narjis Rerhaye, ''Femmes et politique'', Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, ed. Editions Le Fennec, 1992, p. 17</ref>
'''Malika al-Fassi''' (1919–2007) was a Moroccan writer and nationalist. She was the only woman to sign the independence treaty of [[Morocco]] in 1944.<ref>Latifa Akharbach, Narjis Rerhaye, ''Femmes et politique'', Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, ed. Editions Le Fennec, 1992, p. 17</ref>. She was a student of [[Abdeslam Serghini]].


At a very young age she wrote articles under the pseudonyme El Fatate, later after her marriage, under the pseudonyme de Bahitate El Hadira (researcher of the city), and not El Hadara (civilisation). At that time there was a well-known Egyptian journalist, Malik Hifni Nasif, who used the name Bahithat El Badiyya. Her articles appeared in Majellate El Maghrib of Saleh Missa and Rissalate El Maghrib of Saïd Hajji, and later in the daily newspaper El Alam, since 1934.
At a very young age she wrote articles under the pseudonyme El Fatate, later after her marriage, under the pseudonyme de Bahitate El Hadira (researcher of the city), and not El Hadara (civilisation). At that time there was a well-known Egyptian journalist, Malik Hifni Nasif, who used the name Bahithat El Badiyya. Her articles appeared in Majellate El Maghrib of Saleh Missa and Rissalate El Maghrib of Saïd Hajji, and later in the daily newspaper El Alam, since 1934.

Revision as of 09:19, 9 May 2012


Malika al-Fassi (1919–2007) was a Moroccan writer and nationalist. She was the only woman to sign the independence treaty of Morocco in 1944.[1]. She was a student of Abdeslam Serghini.

At a very young age she wrote articles under the pseudonyme El Fatate, later after her marriage, under the pseudonyme de Bahitate El Hadira (researcher of the city), and not El Hadara (civilisation). At that time there was a well-known Egyptian journalist, Malik Hifni Nasif, who used the name Bahithat El Badiyya. Her articles appeared in Majellate El Maghrib of Saleh Missa and Rissalate El Maghrib of Saïd Hajji, and later in the daily newspaper El Alam, since 1934. She also wrote plays which have been staged and some small novels, a.o. La Victime.[2]

Notes

  1. ^ Latifa Akharbach, Narjis Rerhaye, Femmes et politique, Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, ed. Editions Le Fennec, 1992, p. 17
  2. ^ Agnès Fine, Claudine Leduc, Femmes du Maghreb, ed. Presses universitaires du Mirail, 1999 ISBN 2858164614, p. 70

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