NARSA, statut des infirmiers, salaire minimum légal…. au menu du prochain Conseil de gouvernement    Reconnaissance faciale, police montée, coordination continentale : Les moyens du Maroc pour sécuriser la CAN    Douanes : près de 91,82 MMDH de recettes à fin novembre (TGR)    Taux directeur de BAM : 73% des investisseurs financiers s'attendent à un statu quo    Maroc-BERD: 2025, une année record avec environ 1 milliard de dollars    Royal Air Maroc lance 10 nouvelles liaisons directes vers l'Europe, l'Afrique et l'Amérique    Revue de presse de ce lundi 15 décembre 2025    Lancement de « Blassty », première application de mobilité multimodale au Maroc    CAN Maroc: Voici le programme du groupe A    Une enquête ouverte suite aux inondations de Safi    Alerte météo: Chutes de neige et fortes averses de lundi à mercredi    Youssef Amrani : «Le Maroc gagne la confiance par l'action »    Santé financière de l'ANP : un équilibre global masquant des fragilités structurelles    Rabat renforce ses liens parlementaires avec le Malawi    CAN-2025 : Les Lions de l'Atlas, une génération talentueuse en quête d'un rêve en or    Gabriel Hicham Guedira : « Avec cet effectif, le Maroc peut rêver du titre de la CAN »    CA FIFA / Demi-finale Maroc vs Emirats : un duel indécis et intense cet après-midi    Liga : le Barça s'accroche, le Real à l'affût    Premier League / J16 : tête de classement sous haute tension    Marsa Maroc : un accord de paix sociale scellé avec les syndicats jusqu'en 2030    À Niamey, l'Initiative Royale redessine les équilibres logistiques et stratégiques du Sahel    Prévisions météorologiques pour lundi 15 décembre 2025    Températures prévues pour mardi 16 décembre 2025    Casablanca : le hooliganisme refait surface dans les quartiers, 14 individus interpellés    CAN 2025 : Hakimi et Amrabat rétablis, les Lions de l'Atlas sous haute confidentialité    Karim El Aynaoui : « Le multilatéralisme est en difficulté, mais le dialogue reste essentiel »    Inondations de Safi : le bilan monte à 21 morts    Intempéries : Suspension des cours ce lundi dans quatre provinces    Tragedy in Tinghir : Flash floods claim four lives in Fzou valley    Cours des devises du lundi 15 décembre 2025    Rabat : Driss Chraibi élu nouveau président de la FRMB    France : Did Moroccan officials attend the independence declaration ceremony of Kabilya ?    France : l'arrestation de Mehdi Ghezzar, une intox algérienne ?    Agadir Film Festival : La Mer Au Loin wins big with three awards    Attentat antisémite de Sydney. Le monde condamne    Kordofan/Soudan: 6 Casques bleus tués et huit autres blessés dans des attaques de drones    Hilale: La coopération Sud-Sud, un axe stratégique de la Diplomatie Royale    Un coup fatal porté au régime algérien : proclamation de l'indépendance de la République de Kabylie depuis Paris    Trois Américains tués en Syrie: Trump promet des représailles    Le Brésil se félicite de la levée des sanctions américaines contre le juge chargé du procès Bolsonaro    La France durcit les conditions de délivrance de certains titres de séjour    MAGAZINE - Jaylann : fée et gestes    Patrimoine culturel immatériel de l'Unesco : 67 nouvelles inscriptions    Lahcen Saadi : « L'identité amazighe est chère à tous les Marocains »    Trois prix pour «La mer au loin» au 21e Festival international cinéma et migrations    Après l'inscription du caftan, nouveau succès du Maroc à l'UNESCO    Le Royaume consolide sa diplomatie culturelle à l'international    Colloque international à Rabat – Lire le sacré : Enjeux géopolitiques de l'exégèse    







Merci d'avoir signalé!
Cette image sera automatiquement bloquée après qu'elle soit signalée par plusieurs personnes.



11th of January 1944, when the Istiqlal party wrote a Manifesto demanding Morocco's full independence
Publié dans Yabiladi le 11 - 01 - 2018

On the 11th of January 1944, the Istiqlal party, recently formed, wrote a Manifesto demanding Morocco's full independence. The party's struggle against the French protectorate was carried out throughout the years even after the exile of Sultan Mohammed ben Youssef. Flash back.
The 11th of January is a primordial date for Moroccans back in the 1940s and a turning point in the history of the North African Kingdom controlled at the time by the French. Today, we celebrate the Proclamation of Independence day, commemorating the handing of a manifesto that was signed by 70 nationalists. The day is also an important opportunity to shed light on the national struggle against the French occupation that was led by the Istiqlal party (Independence) created in 1943.
The American landing and hopes of independence
One of most direct triggers that led to the presentation of this manifesto is the Anglo-American landing in North Africa. The national struggle against the French occupation was reinforced after Operation Torch, in which Morocco played a crucial role, helping the allies control the Vichy regime controlling a significant part of France. This was confirmed by Douglas Elliot Ashford, an American writer in his book «Political Change in Morocco» (1961), in which he explains that «the Allied landings in North Africa in November 1942 were the signal for the revival of nationalist activity» in Morocco.
Indeed, the contribution of Morocco and Sultan Mohammed ben Youssef during the American landing have given nationalists a great hope for independence. And by entering war, the United States led by President Franklin D. Roosevelt was there to back Morocco's will to be independent from France. The American statesman and war leader, who appreciated the Kingdom's crucial collaboration during the Second World War, has promised in several occasions to help Sultan Mohammed ben Youssef in ending the French protectorate.
In a declassified document released by the Central Intelligence Agency, the President wondered «why does Morocco, inhabited by Moroccans, belong to France ? … Anything must be better, than to live under French colonial rule. Should a land belong to France ? By what logic and what custom and by what historical rule ?»
«When we've won the war, I will work with all my might and main to see to it that the United States is not wheedled into the position of accepting any plan that will further France's imperialistic ambitions».
However these hopes were quickly oppressed by the French. In his account, Ashford, explained that although «hopes were further raised by the historical meeting of the king with Roosevelt, Churchill and Hopkins in mid-1943» the initial optimism was «dispersed with the appointment of a new Resident General, Gabriel Paux, who was well known for his suppression of the independence movements in Syria and Lebanon».
A manifesto presented by the Istiqlal party
One year after the signing of the famous proclamation of independence manifesto, the Istiqlal party, founded initially as the National Party for Istiqlal in April 1937, became the Independence party in December the 10th 1943. In a meeting attended by the «old nationalists, merchants, teachers, high civil servants, and old college graduates from alumni associations of Fés, Rabat, Salé, Marrakech, Azrou, Oujda, Safi and Meknes» the party was formed and its objective was independence.
«The decision was made to ask for full independence in a petition to the King, the Resident General, and the governments of the Allied Powers», said the same book. Encouraged by the international situation, the authors of the Independence manifesto took a courageous step in an era that was marked by the future establishment of the United Nations and the post-war ups and downs.
However their manifesto hasn't fallen on deaf ears. The Resident General responded to the proclamation and the Istiqlal party's weight grew by the start of negotiations. According to Ashford, during the consultations with the French authorities, crowds gathered outside the palace and spontaneous meetings were held in several cities throughout the Kingdom. The Resident was planning to arrest Ahmed Balafrej, the founder of the party, Mohammed Lyazidi and other nationalist leaders for collaborating with the Germans. A number of riots and demonstrations took place in numerous cities denouncing the leaked news.
The national struggle after the manifesto
This has made the freshly formed party, manage its ranks and try to take the struggle against the French protectorate to another level. The party, under the initiative of Lyazidi, sent «a new appeal to France on the second anniversary of the 1944 manifesto and also presented a petition to the new Resident General, Labonne, in March 1946», wrote the American author. In their documents, leaders of the Istiqlal recognized the economic contribution of the French in Morocco, and while demanding the release and the return of Allal Al Fassi, Mohammed Hassan Ouazzani, exiled since 1937, and Ahmed Balafrej in exile since 1944.
The party's wish was granted by the new Resident General, who also enabled the Istiqlal to expand and grow outside the country. In fact, the Independence party established information bureaus in Paris, London, Damascus and Tangier. The Moroccan cause was carried by the party outside the borders of the country, campaigning for independence.
Free Morocco and the Istiqlal's bureau in New York
The party has continued with its struggle for independence, years after the 1944 Manifesto, and its attempts doubled when Sultan Mohammed ben Youssef was exiled. On the 20th of August 1953, French soldiers invaded the Royal Place in Rabat, forcing the royal family to board on a bus to an unknown destination. In less than a month, the Istiqlal party launched a campaign entitled «Free Morocco». In a communiqué issued by the Istiqlal's Moroccan Office of Information and Documentation, based in New York, and published by «La Grande Encyclopédie du Maroc» (8th volume, 1998, GEI), the party stated that «Morocco will not put up with the 'Fait Accompli'». signed by Ahmed Balafrej, the secretary general of the Istiqlal party at the time, the statement released on the 25th of September 1953, denounced the maneuvers of the French.
It wrote that «the crisis has begun this year as French propaganda leads us to believe. It goes back to 1947 when, in Tangier, the Sultan addressed the world, asking that the inspirations of the Moroccan people be taken into consideration». Complaining about the exile of the Sultan, the document pointed out that «15 nations of Asia and Africa have attempted to inscribe the Moroccan problem on the Agenda of the Security Council», adding that :
«However, the Great Powers joined their forces against the Moroccan people and did not allow the discussion of this grave problem (…) If the Moroccan people are denied a free discussion of their problems in the International Organs, does it not bring them to the verge of despair and methods of violence?»
And to conclude, the party commented on the exile of the king insisting that he «will remain the sole legitimate sovereign around whom all the forces of the people will be rallied and the national aspirations crystallized».
The Istiqlal party, and after the exile of the sultan and installation of Mohammed Ben Aarafa, was joined by others who saw the king as a religious leader. Morocco's demand for the sultan's return was unified resulting in the return of the Sultan.
Back from exile in 1955, the kingdom was proclaimed an independent state one year later. The Istiqlal party, and through its Manifesto of independence, gained a huge respect for its contribution and its leaders were considered instrumental in achieving independence in Morocco.


Cliquez ici pour lire l'article depuis sa source.