Rami was born in
Tafraout,
Morocco, the son of a
Berber sheikh. While attending the
école normale supérieure in
Casablanca, Rami joined the
National Union of Popular Forces. After graduating in June 1963, Rami taught history, geography, French and Arabic at secondary schools in Casablanca. In autumn 1965, Rami enrolled in the Royal Military Academy in
Meknes with the intention — as an officer — of becoming more effective in his opposition to the regime. and the station was accused of being a vehicle for
antisemitism. In 1989, "Rami was charged by the
Swedish Chancellor of Justice with
hate speech (
hets mot folkgrupp)." The charge was based in particular on programs aired on Radio Islam but also on passages of his book
Vad är Israel? ("What is Israel?"). Rami was sentenced to six months imprisonment in 1990, however, in 1993, Janzon was convicted of the same crime. In March 1992,
Robert Faurisson visited Sweden at the invitation of Rami and was interviewed in two Radio Islam broadcasts. Rami was a featured speaker at the annual conference of the
Institute for Historical Review, an organization which promotes Holocaust denial, in 1992. Radio Islam was off the air from 1993 to 1995, but the program returned in 1996 under Rami's direction, the same year that he established the Radio Islam website. In October 2000, Rami was again convicted and fined by a Swedish court. and the group distributed his books on their website. Rami also distributed NSF's own pamphlets and books. ==Bibliography==