Fedwa Misk

Fedwa Misk is a Moroccan journalist, feminist, and women's rights activist. She participated in the 2011 February 20 Movement and subsequently opened an online magazine with the aim of promoting discussion about women in Morocco. Misk's publication Qandisha featured several high-profile stories and was targeted by hackers twice. She has been working as a writer for the Le Courrier de l'Atlas newspaper.

Fedwa Misk
NationalityMoroccan
OccupationJournalist
Known forFounding Qandisha

Career

Misk attended six years of medical school and has worked as a freelance writer for Moroccan and foreign newspapers.[1] As a journalist, she has been employed by the Le Courrier de l'Atlas newspaper focusing on articles about cultural events, interviews and portrait pieces.[2] Misk also runs a literary café.[1] In 2011, she participated in demonstrations by the February 20 Movement during the Arab Spring against corruption, lack of freedom and injustice by the Moroccan regime.[3] She has been blogging for many years.[1] In 2013, she called for a sit-in protest in front of the Moroccan parliament building to call for the release of jailed journalist Ali Anouzla.[4] She describes herself as a feminist.[5]

Qandisha

On 14 November 2011, Misk founded the Qandisha website, a French-language online collaborative magazine inspired by what she believed was a lack of media support for improvements to the rights of women following the Arab Spring.[1][6][7] The magazine was named after the mythical Qandisa, a female Jinn famous for her powers of seduction.[1] Qandisha covered topics of relevance to women such as their families and husbands, religion, secularism and the wearing of the veil.[3] Misk's aim was to demonstrate that women were interested in subjects broader than the fashion, beauty, and cooking items featured in other women's publications.[1] She was the magazine's moderator, coordinator and editor-in-chief of the publication which was issued daily.[1][6] More than 80 people worked for the magazine in some form within its first year, including several dozen writers.[1] By 2015 it had 100 female volunteers and 20 male. In a jocular fashion, any article written by a man is simply credited to "un homme" (a man).[1][7] Misk wanted to spread the message of Qandisha to a wider audience by beginning radio broadcasts and opening a web-based radio station.[1]

The magazine frequently covers contentious topics including that of a Moroccan politician who was acquitted of rape, despite the victim subsequently giving birth to what she said was his baby. The scandal caused by Qandisha's coverage of the story led to the case being reopened and a retrial being scheduled. A 2012 story on a rape case demanded that the minister for justice repeal a law allowing a rapist to marry his victim. In 2011, Qandisha elicited a formal apology from the French consul general in Casablanca after it revealed a young woman had been rudely treated by its staff.[7]

The site has been targeted by its opponents. Misk frequently receives hate mail and threats online.[1] Some of its opponents allege that the site was funded by Israel, the US, or France.[6] In June 2012, the site was hacked and the page changed to show the Moroccan royal emblem and national motto "god, the country and the king".[1] The hacking occurred after Qandisha published a letter about homosexuality written by a gay man.[7] The site was subsequently hacked for a second time.[5]

gollark: I'm sure if you don't mind your games needing to run as root you *can* do crazy stuff like that on Linux.
gollark: Tronzoid: that sounds like "drivers but stupider".
gollark: The drivers convert the commands etc. specified by graphics standards to GPU internal commands.
gollark: ... ow, my brain.
gollark: What?

References

  1. Boyet, Antoine. "Qandisha, la libre parole marocaine" (in French). Le Journal International. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  2. "Fedwa Misk" (in French). Le Courrier de l'Atlas.
  3. Charlotte Bienaimé (2016). Féministes du monde arabe (in French). Paris: Editions des arènes. pp. 64–67. ISBN 978-2-35204-434-5.
  4. Elboubkri, Nadia (26 September 2013). "Moroccan and foreign journalists call for the release of Anouzla". Morocco World News. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  5. International Association of Women in Radio and television. "Report IAWRT Biennial Conference 24–26 October 2013 in Casablanca, Morocco" (PDF). Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. "The struggle for women's rights in Morocco: an interview with Fedwa Misk". World Policy Institute. Archived from the original on 1 January 2017. Retrieved 3 November 2017.
  7. "Qandisha". Journal of Middle East Women's Studies. 11 (2): 246–47. July 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.