8es de finale CDM U17 : Maroc-Mali en fin d'après-midi    Dakhla / Programme JobInTech : Pour renforcer la souveraineté numérique nationale    Aide directe aux éleveurs : El Bouari dément le favoritisme et durcit le contrôle des aliments du bétail    Mobilité propre : 78 MMDH mobilisés au Maroc à l'horizon 2029    Détroit de Gibraltar : le Maroc et l'Espagne mènent des exercices navals conjoints    Après sa libération, Boualem Sansal hospitalisé à Berlin : le dernier chapitre d'une année d'arbitraire    Liban : Israël tire toujours sur les Casques bleus    ( Entretien) Région Dakhla Oued Eddahab : « La bataille "Laklat", une épopée lumineuse au cœur de la Fête de l'Indépendance », indique le Dr.Mohamed Bentalha Doukkali    JSI Riyad 2025 : Le Maroc améliore son classement    Prépa. Coupe Arabe FIFA Qatar 25 : Les Lions refont la victoire contre Djibouti    Interview avec Malak Dahmouni : « L'identité du FICAR s'est forgée sur 30 ans d'engagement envers le cinéma d'auteur »    Rationalité et idéologie: Quand la deuxième triomphe de la première!    Sahara : Le Polisario veut impliquer l'UA dans les futures négociations    Guterres : la résolution sur Gaza, une "étape importante" vers la consolidation du cessez-le-feu    Dubaï Airshow 2025 : spectacle captivant de la patrouille de voltige "Marche Verte"    COP30 : le Maroc appelle à un compromis ambitieux sur le financement climatique    Jeff Bezos, va prendre la tête d'une startup spécialisée IA    Mondial U17 : Baha confiant avant le choc contre le Mali    Lancement d'une licence d'excellence en cinéma au profit des étudiants-détenus    Aides directes, semences, irrigation : Bouari dévoile son plan pour sécuriser la campagne agricole 2025/26    Sous pression, le polisario prêt à revenir aux négociations    Livre : Nadia Sabri présente «Les femmes et l'art au Maghreb» à Tunis    GP de la presse : Bensaid souligne le rôle fondamental du quatrième pouvoir    Hassan Alaoui : «Les provinces du Sud sont désormais un pivot stratégique intercontinental »    Aéroport Rabat-Salé : la structure organisationnelle se mue d'un commissariat spécial à une zone de sûreté    Dinos Alive à Casablanca : Plongez dans l'ère préhistorique des dinosaures    Marrakech. Arrestation d'un Franco-algérien recherché par Interpol pour tentative de meurtre    Nador. Un trafiquant arrêté avec plus de 5 kilos d'héroïne et près d'un kilo de cocaïne    Luís Filipe Tavares : « La résolution 2797 ouvre une nouvelle ère d'intégration africaine »    Christian Cambon : « Le développement prime sur les conflits, le Sahara marocain en est la preuve »    Bénin. Une révision constitutionnelle à six mois de la présidentielle    CAF Awards 2025: la liste finale des nommés dévoilée, forte présence marocaine dans toutes les catégories    Dakar Fashion Week : L'élégance africaine défile    Aminux signe son grand retour avec son nouvel album "AURA"    Macron et Zelensky signent un accord jugé "historique" par Kiev    Initially called up by Morocco, Nayef Aguerd returns to Marseille for recovery    Spanish group Cirsa acquires 50 percent of La Mamounia Hotel casino in Marrakech    Dakhla : Three new agreements to boost digital transformation and energy transition    Les aéroports du Maroc se mettent aux couleurs de la CAN 2025    Sécurité : La CAF organise une formation au Maroc en vue de la CAN 2025    OMPIC : Modernisation IT et cybersécurité renforcée    La Bourse de Casablanca démarre en hausse    Déploiement de la 5G : le Maroc frappe fort    Sahara : Le président israélien félicite Mohammed VI après la résolution du Conseil de sécurité    Italie : La cheffe marocaine Wijdane Merdad remporte le prix du meilleur couscous    "Fusion show Ayta d'bladi" par Public Events : Une première édition triomphale au cœur de Casablanca    Jeux de la solidarité islamique : L'équipe du Maroc de taekwondo remporte l'or et le bronze    Le Mali suspend des chaines française à cause de "contreverités"    







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



Halima Embarek Warzazi, a Moroccan woman with a long and distinguished diplomatic career
Publié dans Yabiladi le 08 - 03 - 2019

When she graduated university in Cairo, Casablanca-native Halima Embarek Warzazi realized that she wanted to pursue a career as a diplomat. The woman with the big ambitions has been serving as a UN diplomat since the 1950s, defending women's rights.
Halima Embarek Warzazi is a Moroccan diplomat with the longest-running career in the United Nations. The Casablanca-native dedicated her life to the cause of women in Morocco and in the United States.
Warzazi's exciting journey as a diplomat started when she 14 years old. Daughter of a Casablanca businessman, the young woman was sent to Egypt to study in a French school. She spent ten years in the North African country, where she attended the Cairo University.
In 1957, Warzazi graduated with a «bachelor's degree in literature», recalled history professor Emmanuel Kwaku Akyeampong in his book «Dictionary of African Biography» (OUP USA, 2012). While in the Egyptian capital, the Moroccan student was lucky enough to rub shoulders with Moroccan nationalist leader Abdelkhalek Torres, who was a friend of her father.
Becoming a female diplomat
Upon her graduation, Torres, who was at the time serving as Morocco's ambassador to Egypt, threw her a party, celebrating her success. «The elegant way in which Torres welcomed and mingled with his guests helped her to realize that she wanted to pursue a career as a diplomat», wrote Akyeampong.
Since then, the idea of becoming a diplomat never left Warzazi's mind. Despite her father's opposition, the young woman rushed into «secretly» applying for a job at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs once she joined the Kingdom.
Halima Embarek Warzazi was hired by the Ministry, but as the fourth secretary, «the lowest position within the department», the same source added. In Rabat and as an employee at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Warzazi realized that being a working woman in the diplomatic field was a challenge more than an achievement.
According to the «Dictionary of African Biography», when Warzazi joined the Ministry she was one of the three women who worked in the department. «They were seen as intruders», explained the same book, recalling that this «mindset led to the nick-name 'daddy's daughters' given to her by her male coworkers, who found it difficult to understand why a wealthy woman would also wish to be a working woman».
From Rabat to Washington
But this mentality, that governed Morocco in the 1950s, did not stop Warzazi from trying to realize her ambitions. A tragic event paved the way for her future career in Washington. In 1959, Warzazi and her fiancé, Abderrahman Anegay, who was the director of the royal cabinet of King Mohammed V, had a car accident.
Her fiancé, who was nominated at the same year as Morocco's ambassador to Washington, died in the accident. «After her release from the hospital, she met with King Mohammed V and seized the opportunity to ask him if she could replace her deceased fiancé in his diplomatic post», wrote Akyeampong, adding that the King agreed.
By 1959, Halima Embarek Warzazi became the first female Moroccan Cultural Attaché at the Kingdom's embassy in Washington. In the United States, Warzazi's ambitions saw the light in 1961 in a reception, held by the Moroccan delegation at the United Nations General Assembly.
During this reception, Abdellah Ibrahim who was head of the Moroccan delegation in the UN, named Warzazi as a member of the delegation. The diplomat was assigned to the UN's Third Committee, which was quite marginalized at the time.
Women in the UN and patrialism
In the UN, Warzazi felt discouraged by the behavior of some of her colleagues. «He peers within the UN Moroccan delegation treated with partialism», explained the dictionary. In one of her speeches, Warzazi recalled these feelings, stressing that she was disappointed to see that women were marginalized.
«When I joined the committee, I was surprised by the overwhelming majority of men», she said.
In 1961, Warzazi was forced to return to Morocco after she got married to Morocco's Consul General in New York. In the Kingdom, the Casablanca-native was assigned to several positions at the Moroccan administration, but continued with her fight for human rights and the struggle of women and equality.
According to the same source, Warzazi had a keen interest in voicing women's issues and enabling them to speak about themselves. Warzazi argued that women must address their own issues at the parliament, through equal membership.
She has even suggested a «quota system as a viable solution that would enable people to become acquainted with seeing women not only in the parliament but also in political decision-making positions in general».
In 1965, Warzazi felt like she had to strengthen her presence in the UN. Unbeknown to her superiors in Rabat, the diplomat applied for the vice presidency of the UN Third Committee and she won. In New York, her career flourished and she held several positions.
In 1973, she was nominated to the UN Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Ministries as an expert member of the UN Special Commission Against Apartheid and Racial Discrimination. She was also Special Rapporteur of the Sub-Commission on Exploitation of Labor through Illicit and Clandestine Trafficking.
In the 1980s, Warzazi was mandated to study traditional practices affecting the health of women and children and she presented a report on the issue, focusing on a tribe in Thailand. In 2003, the UN diplomat was elected head of the UN Advisory Committee of Human Rights.
In Morocco, and after a long journey in New York, Warzazi was named by King Mohammed VI as a member of the Advisory Council of Human Rights. Her journey as a diplomat is still ongoing, giving hope to young women and girls who wish to embark on similar careers.


Cliquez ici pour lire l'article depuis sa source.