Princess Lalla Aicha of Morocco explained

Dynasty:Alaouite
Father:Mohammed V of Morocco
Mother:Lalla Abla bint Tahar
Birth Date:17 June 1930
Birth Place:Rabat Royal Palace, Rabat, Morocco
Death Place:Rabat, Morocco
Place Of Burial:Moulay El Hassan Mausoleum
Spouse:
Issue:Lalla Zubaida al-Yaqubi
Lalla Nufissa al-Yaqubi

Princess Lalla Aicha of Morocco (17 June 1930 – 4 September 2011) was the younger sister of the late King Hassan II of Morocco, and daughter of King Mohammed V of Morocco and his second wife, Lalla Abla bint Tahar.[1]

Biography

Princess Lalla Aicha was born at Dar al-Makhzen in Rabat. She was privately educated in Rabat and received her primary school certificate, both the Moroccan and French certificate, in 1943.[2] [3] She pursued her education at the Lycée de jeunes filles de Rabat (nowadays Lycée Lalla Aïcha).[4] At the age of 14, her father charged the doyen of Salafism in Morocco, Si Mohammed bel-Arbi Alaoui, of her education.[5] In 1947, when she was seventeen, she appeared in public unveiled with the support of her father the King, who wished to send a signal that he supported the emancipation of women.[6] She was awarded her Baccalauréat degree in 1953.[7] [8]

The same year, on August 1953, the exile of her father Mohammed V and her family on Corsica first then Madagascar interrupted her studies in languages.[9] The exile lasted almost two years until 1955, when she and her family returned in great fanfare in Morocco on November 16, 1955. After her return from exile, she pursued her studies at the University of Rabat where she graduated with a bachelor's degree in languages in 1959.[10] After graduating Lalla Aisha began organizing women's society and social service groups.

She came to play a role in the women's rights movement in Morocco: she held speeches in favor of women's education, and represented Morocco at an international women's conference in Tunisia in 1960. [11] She was the first president of the Entraide Nationale in 1956.[12] [13] When it was founded, the Entraide Nationale brought together the League for the Protection of Mothers and Children, the League against Tuberculosis, the Red Crescent and the League against Illiteracy.[14] She was as well honorary president of the Moroccan Red Crescent Society from the 1950s until 1967[15] [16] and honorary president of the National Union of Moroccan Women from 1969 until her death in 2011, at age 81.

Lalla Aicha was the Ambassador of Morocco to the United Kingdom between 1965 and 1969, and then to Greece from 1969 to 1970, and to Italy between 1970 and 1973.[17]

Family

She first married on 16 August 1961 (in a triple ceremony with her sisters, Fatima, Malika and their husbands), at the Dar al-Makhzen in Rabat, Moulay Hassan al-Yaqubi (also named Hassan El Yacoubi) (born 1935). Together they had two daughters:

Secondly, after their divorce in 1972, she married in August 1972 Moulay Hassan al-Mahdi (1912-1984), third son of Moulay Muhammad al-Mahdi bin Ismail, Khalifa of Tetuan.

Honours

Honorary military appointments

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.telquel-online.com/263/maroc6_263.shtml Telquel Online no. 263 "Ambassadrice Lalla Aïcha, Au nom de la sœur" (retrieved 20 September 2008)
  2. Book: Sadiqi, Fatima . Women Writing Africa: The Northern Region . 2009 . Feminist Press at The City University of New York . 978-1-55861-589-2 . 161 . en.
  3. Book: Baker, Alison . Voices of Resistance: Oral Histories of Moroccan Women . 1998-01-01 . SUNY Press . 978-0-7914-3621-9 . 51 . en.
  4. Web site: Photos de classes Lycée de jeunes filles (Lalla Aicha) . 2023-07-27 . www.lyceefr.org.
  5. Book: Pennell, C. R. . Morocco Since 1830: A History . 2000 . Hurst . 978-1-85065-426-1 . 264 . en.
  6. Ruth Margolies Beitler, Angelica R. Martinez: Women's Roles in the Middle East and North Africa, p. 173
  7. Book: Corval, Pierre . Le Maroc en révolution . 1956 . Éditions T.C. . 47 . fr.
  8. Book: Gaudio, Attilio . Guerres et paix au Maroc: reportages, 1950-1990 . 1991-01-01 . KARTHALA Editions . 978-2-86537-312-3 . 112 . fr.
  9. Book: Asia & Africa Review . 1965 . Independent Publishing Company . 6 . en.
  10. Book: The Arab World . 1960 . Arab Information Center . 12 . en.
  11. Amy Aisen Kallander Tunisia's Modern Woman: Nation-Building and State Feminism in the Global 1960s
  12. http://www.entraide.ma/article/menuview/9 Entraide Nationale
  13. Book: Baker, Alison . Voices of Resistance: Oral Histories of Moroccan Women . 1998-01-01 . SUNY Press . 978-0-7914-3621-9 . 112 . en.
  14. Book: Daoud, Zakya . Féminisme et politique au Maghreb: sept décennies de lutte . 1996 . Eddif . 978-2-908801-92-7 . 265 . fr.
  15. http://www.croissant-rouge.ma/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=62 "Galerie photo de la princesse", Moroccan Red Crescent Society
  16. http://www.telquel-online.com/304/maroc8_304.shtml Telquel Online, #304-05, Hassan Hamdani, "Histoire: Lalla Aïcha, La princesse nationaliste" (retrieved 20 September 2008)
  17. Book: Sleeman, Elizabeth . The International Who's Who of Women 2002 . 2001 . Psychology Press . 978-1-85743-122-3 . 315 . en.
  18. Web site: Le onorificenze della Repubblica Italiana. web. Segretariato generale della Presidenza della Repubblica-Servizio sistemi informatici- reparto. Quirinale. it. 2018-02-24.