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'Number One' opens gender debate in Morocco
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'Number One' opens gender debate in Morocco

Female Imams - Morocco
March 2006 The Moroccan government has found a new weapon in the war against extremism -- female priests. It's hoped that women will spread a more balanced and tolerant version of Islam. Thousand...






Film uses humour to challenge traditional views of gender roles in Moroccan society.

By Zakia Tahiri - CASABLANCA, Morocco

Five years after the 2004 family code reform, Moroccans are still debating the identity of the Moroccan family. "Nawal", a young Moroccan woman, is proud of these reforms. For her, like for many Moroccan women, it is a victory. But other Moroccan women, such as "Ilham", do not understand much about it. And "Najat" is opposed to it because she has been told it does not comply with God's will. Female opinion is divided.

"Rachid", a young Moroccan male, refuses to get married because he's heard that in the event of divorce he would have to divide his assets with his wife. And the "Mustafas" of Morocco feel they've lost their dignity since the family is now under the shared responsibility of both husband and wife.

These diverse opinions are reflected in the 2008 film, Number One, so named because its main character is a male manager – or the "Number One" – of a clothing factory operated by 50 female workers. The Moudawana is a recurring theme throughout the film, which portrays the discussion of gender equality in Morocco in a new light.

Thousands of women watched this film: among them, women who, for lack of means or interest, had never been to the cinema before. They came because other women told them that it was about them, about their everyday lives.

Many women identified with the situations pictured in the film. They recognised their husbands, their cousins, their bosses. Men's perspectives too were shattered. One man told me after watching: "I realised I was a male chauvinist too when I saw the film." Another said, "I want my daughters to see this film so that they will never accept what they think is their fate."

Five years after the Moudawana, Number One is using humour and entertainment to open discussions and challenge traditional views of male and female roles in Moroccan society.

Zakia Tahiri writes and directs films with her husband, Ahmed Bouchaala. This article was written for the Common Ground News Service and can be accessed at GCNews.

http://www.middle-east-online.com/English/?id=31779






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