[1][5] Moyal represented Syria as a member of the Women's Congress at the 1893 World's Columbian Exhibition in Chicago.
[1] The magazine was widely praised and contained articles on modern domestic issues, women's health, literary topics, and global news.
[1]In response to a misogynistic journal article published in 1894, Moyal wrote a series of letters to the editor that summed up her vision of feminism: "I say that the woman who spends some small change on ink and paper, and spends her free time reading and writing and does not kill it with idle chatter, knows quite well how to manage her household and raise her children with the moderation, economy, and wisdom that assure both the happiness of her children and richness of her afterlife.
[6] This Jewish newspaper written in Arabic countered attacks on Zionism and proposed a vision of a "shared homeland" in Palestine within the framework of the Ottoman Empire.
[1] Moyal's life and work presents a vision of a pluralistic Middle East dependent on free and open discourse.
In her introduction to a set of biographies of Arabic women, Moyal wrote that she was thankful to live in an era "in which a large arena has been opened for the sages to disseminate their truths among peoples; for this has been the biggest ally in the advancement of knowledge and the greatest aid to its promulgation.