January 22nd, 2012 | By Mary Stucky
Of Harems and Morocco
Places: Africa, Morocco, Next Generation Journalism | Issues:
“I was born in a harem in 1940 in Fez, Morocco…” thus begins Fatma Mernissi’s stereotype-busting account of her remarkable childhood. Mernissi is a renowned Moroccan feminist and academic — her book has long been a favorite of mine. Now I am in Morocco, six days into what will be a four month stay, leading a journalism program which will pair American college students with Moroccan students at the University of Mohammad V to jointly report on a country where, just this week, three young college graduates set themselves on fire to protest the lack of jobs.
I’ve rented a house in the heart of Rabat’s 14th century Medina, not unlike the one Mernissi grew up in (though, in the case of my house, its former grandeur has faded, as the Medina went from a bourgeois neighborhood to one that’s mostly middle or lower middle class). That said, the gorgeous tile and plaster are intact along with the house’s prison-like qualities, designed to keep women sequestered from the public sphere. It is disconcerting to be in a house without windows. There’s a lovely rooftop but with high walls preventing a view of the street. From the roof one sees the sky and the occasional satellite dish and mosque minaret.
Still, I am reminded that Mernessi’s book reveals a rich world on the roof, ruled by women, which created a remarkable sisterhood. Perhaps it was that sisterhood we saw on the streets of Rabat this week, protesting the lack of women in Morocco’s new parliament.





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