Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The history of women in Morocco can be divided into periods: before, during, and after the arrival of Islam. After Morocco's independence from France, Moroccan women were able to start going to schools that focused on teaching more than simply religion, expanding their education to the sciences and other subjects.
The women and wife's role are to care for and discipline the children while maintaining home for her family and husband. Because islamic law taught that husband is above wife under God, women are subordinate to men in this patriarchal society. In 2004 the government of Morocco introduced a new "family code" known as the Moudawana. This code in ...
The education system in Morocco comprises pre-school, primary, secondary and tertiary levels. School education is supervised by the Ministry of National Education, with considerable devolution to the regional level. Higher education falls under the Ministry of Higher Education and Executive Training. School attendance is compulsory up to the ...
Pages in category "Women's education in Morocco" This category contains only the following page. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Lucette Mazzella (6 May 1910 – 19 June 1987) was a teacher, communist organizer and women's rights activist in Algeria and Morocco. She taught school in French Morocco from 1929 until 1952, and then in French Algeria from 1954 to 1964.
Women's education in Morocco (1 C, 1 P) H. History of women in Morocco (5 C, 4 P) M. ... Pages in category "Women in Morocco" This category contains only the ...
Entrance to Amal Women's Training Center and Moroccan Restaurant. Nora Belahcen Fitzgerald first conceived the idea of creating an organization to help Morocco's underprivileged women through career training in 2006 after meeting a single mother begging on the street who lived on 20–30 dirhams per day (about €2.70, $3.40 in 2006).
The Democratic Association of Moroccan Women was founded in Rabat in 1985. Its co-founders included Rabia Nacir, Amina Lamrini, Farida Bennani, [2] and Najia Zirari. As an organization, the ADFM grew out of the women's section of the Party of Progress and Socialism (PPS). Amina Lamrini was a member of the PPS central committee, and the ADFM has ...