Fatna El Bouih
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Fatna El Bouih (born 1956) is a Moroccan
human rights Human rights are Morality, moral principles or Social norm, normsJames Nickel, with assistance from Thomas Pogge, M.B.E. Smith, and Leif Wenar, 13 December 2013, Stanford Encyclopedia of PhilosophyHuman Rights Retrieved 14 August 2014 for ce ...
activist and writer. Imprisoned for five years during the Years of Lead, she continued her work, particularly as an advocate for women's rights, on her release. Her memoir of her experience during the Years of Lead was published in English translation as
Talk of Darkness
' in 2008.


Biography

Fatna El Bouih was born in 1956 in
Ben Ahmed Ben Ahmed (Moroccan Arabic: بن أحمد) is a town in Settat Province, Casablanca-Settat, Morocco Morocco (),, ) officially the Kingdom of Morocco, is the westernmost country in the Maghreb region of North Africa. It overlooks the Med ...
, Morocco. Her father, a teacher, encouraged her to go to school. As a student during the Years of Lead, she became an activist with the leftist youth protest movement, calling for democracy as a member of the National Union of High School Students. She was arrested in 1974 as a leader of a high school student strike, but she was released after a night in jail. She became a leader of ''
Harakat 23 Mars ''Harakat 23 Mars'' ( ''March 23 Movement'') was a Marxist Leninist movement founded in Morocco on March 23, 1970. Background The group is named after the Uprisings of March 23, 1965, which broke out the day after a violently repressed peacefu ...
''. In 1977, she was arrested again during the mass arrests of members of the "March 23"
Marxist Marxism is a Left-wing politics, left-wing to Far-left politics, far-left method of socioeconomic analysis that uses a Materialism, materialist interpretation of historical development, better known as historical materialism, to understand S ...
group. This time, she spent five years in prison, during which she was tortured at
Derb Moulay Cherif Derb Moulay Cherif () is a neighborhood in Hay Mohammadi, Casablanca. Derb Moulay Cherif prison The neighborhood was the site of a clandestine torture and detention center during the Years of Lead of King Hassan II, though its history dates bac ...
. However, thanks to a solidarity movement among the inmates, she was able to gain better detention conditions, political prisoner status, and the opportunity to continue her studies. She earned a bachelor's and master's degree while in prison. After leaving prison, El Bouih taught Arabic at a school in Casablanca and began writing articles and stories. She joined the Union de l’Action Féminine (the Union of Women's Action), led by Latifa Jbabdi, who had also been a political prisoner in the 1970s. A few years later, she became a founding member of th
Moroccan Observatory of Prisons
and the Moroccan Forum for Truth and Justice, both founded in 1999 at the end of the Years of Lead. The Forum for Truth and Justice was the first organization for political victims of the Years of Lead, a precursor to the
Equity and Reconciliation Commission The Equity and Reconciliation Commission ( ar, هيئة الإنصاف والمصالحة; - IER) is a Moroccan human rights and truth commission created on January 7, 2004, when King Mohammed VI signed a '' Dahir'' (royal decree). The commissi ...
that was created in 2004 by King Mohammed VI, who succeeded Hassan II in 1999. El Bouih has also worked with the National Institute for Solidarity with Women in Distress to support women who are struggling, particularly pregnant women who are incarcerated. El Bouih has written several books and other publications on the Years of Lead, the fate of political prisoners, and violence against women. Her first book, a memoir of her experiences titled ''Hadit al-atama'', was published in 2001; it was released in French a year later under the nam
''Une femme nommée Rachid''
and in English in 2008 under the name ''Talk of Darkness''. Other notable works include

' (2006).


See Also

* ''
Harakat 23 Mars ''Harakat 23 Mars'' ( ''March 23 Movement'') was a Marxist Leninist movement founded in Morocco on March 23, 1970. Background The group is named after the Uprisings of March 23, 1965, which broke out the day after a violently repressed peacefu ...
'' * Latifa Jbabdi *
Hay Mohammadi Hay Mohammadi or Hay Mohammedi ( ar, الحي المحمدي) is an arrondissement of eastern Casablanca, in the Aïn Sebaâ - Hay Mohammadi district of the Casablanca-Settat region of Morocco. As of 2004 it had 156,501 inhabitants. Notable res ...
*''
Carrières Centrales ''Carrières Centrales'' () is a series of modernist housing developments in Casablanca, Morocco designed in the 1950s by architects Georges Candillis, Shadrach Woods, Alexis Josic. The development aimed to create utopian "habitats" that would p ...
''


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Bouih, Fatna El 1956 births Moroccan women activists Moroccan women writers Moroccan feminists Moroccan dissidents Moroccan democracy activists Moroccan torture victims Living people People from Casablanca-Settat