u/Eastern_Parsley1649

Image 1 — Interesting development in which the US embassy "threatens" Algeria following the recent Polisario terrorist attack in Smara which killed one civilian.
Image 2 — Interesting development in which the US embassy "threatens" Algeria following the recent Polisario terrorist attack in Smara which killed one civilian.
Image 3 — Interesting development in which the US embassy "threatens" Algeria following the recent Polisario terrorist attack in Smara which killed one civilian.
▲ 36 r/Morocco

Interesting development in which the US embassy "threatens" Algeria following the recent Polisario terrorist attack in Smara which killed one civilian.

The group, which is famously financed by Algeria, used iranian rockets, like always, and ended up killing one moroccan sahrawi woman (there are blurred pics of the body around, but I don't know if i'm allowed to post it)

It's interesting that the US embassy in Algiers is condemning it.

u/Eastern_Parsley1649 — 14 days ago

I have a terrible anxiety when it comes to health issues and I know it's stupid but I can't calm down.

My indoor kitten (unvaccinated) which i've had for 2 months scratched me pretty deeply around 5 days ago, now he appears a little sick, barely has been eating at all for 4 days, lost some weight too, but he stays reactive and playful, cuddles as well. Since he's barely been eating and is more sleepy now, my brain is worried it might be rabbies and it infected me, i'm worried it might've come into contact from the window with a stray cat that mom keeps feeding.

Can someone please bring some sense into me. I know my worries are stupid since 1) it's indoor 2) we don't even live in a rural area with many "strays" around 3) the other stray cat seems to be fine overall. but im still anxious as hell i can't calm down

reddit.com
u/Eastern_Parsley1649 — 15 days ago
▲ 12 r/Morocco

Her real name being Lalla Aicha, she was given the title of "sayyida al hurra", which meant that she was a sovereign lady who bowed to no superior authority - not a father, not a husband, or a king, she could participate in diplomatic affairs, govern, travel, be completely "free" without a "mahram". Sadly, due to the Ottoman and Saadi empires who strictly favored male succession, she became the last woman to have been given this title.

Revenge was her primary motivator, since she never forgot the trauma of her childhood when her family was forced to flee their home in Granada during the spanish reconquista. She spent 30 years as a pirate queen specifically targeting the Spanish and Portuguese to make them pay for her family's exile.

She was a feared and respected queen who forged a legendary alliance with the Ottoman admiral Hayreddin Barbarossa, together they dominated the sea : she commanded the western half of the mediterranean while he controlled the other half. She wreaked havoc on Spanish and Portuguese shipping lanes, making her the "undisputed leader" of the pirates in the west.

Not only was she the queen of Tetouan, she also forced a whole king (Sultan Ahmed Al Wattasi) to come to her all the way from Fez, since she refused to leave Tetouan for marriage. It was a massive power move to show the Sultan and her subjects that she would never give up her independent rule for a marriage.

While European records paint her as a ruthless "Pirate Queen," local records and modern Moroccan perspective see her as Hakimat Titwan (Governor of Tétouan). Her "piracy" was actually a form of legitimate naval warfare and resistance to protect Morocco's borders from Spanish and Portuguese incursions.

She didn't just rule Tetouan; she helped rebuild it from ruins. The city had been destroyed decades earlier (genocide made by the Castilians who wanted to punish the city for hosting pirates and prevent any retaliation - Tetouan's destruction was so bad that it was left abandoned and in ruins for nearly a century). Lalla Aicha worked alongside her first husband to turn it into a thriving, fortified hub for Andalusian refugees, becoming the "white dove" and UNESCO heritage site that it is today.

Her reign ultimately came to an end in the most dramatic ways, when her son in law Muhammad Al Hassan Al Mandri betrayed her and organized a palace coup. He stripped her of everything; no power and no property left, and was forced to return to Chefchaouen, the "blue pearl" that her father built. She lived there for 20 years, dedicating herself to *sufism* and religious devotion.

u/Eastern_Parsley1649 — 21 days ago