At that time there was a well-known Egyptian journalist, Malak Hifni Nasif, who used the name Bahithat El Badiyya.
After she went to Dar Fkiha, her father brought her tutors in various disciplines, including Arabic and French grammar, and sports education.
Being a musician from a very young age (she plays the lute and the accordion), she founded with Haj Driss Touimi Benjelloun Jamiyât Houat "El moussika al andaloussia".
Her husband being Prince Moulay Hassan's teacher, from 1942 onwards, she had her entrances to the Palace without attracting the attention of the colonizer.
On the night of August 19, 1953, she entered in disguise to see the late His Majesty Mohammed V, she was able to bring him a new Bayïâa of the Ulemas, and they took an oath to fight against the occupier, and he gave her his instructions for the Resistance2.
She started fighting illiteracy long before independence and she militated for girls to go to school and continue their studies.
She lobbied the French Director of Education to create schools for girls, and chaired delegations to this end, and eventually won her case.
Just after independence, she presented a motion to the late His Majesty Mohammed V for the vote of women, which he adopted immediately.
This association takes care of the destitute, disaster victims, cancer patients in need and their families, as well as fighting illiteracy.
In 1935, at the age of 15, she published in the magazine al-Maghreb the first of a long series of articles in which she claimed the right of Moroccan women to education.
Inevitably, she will trigger societal debates that have contributed to making the reform of the status of women a national necessity.