Early nationalist activity According to al-Fassi, he became politically conscious in 1925 when the French authorities attempted to appropriate water from the
Oued Fes to divert it to French companies. In 1927, along with other students at Qarawiyyin, al-Fassi founded the Students' Union which sought the purification of Islam and aimed to alter the teaching methods of the university. It joined with the Supporters of Truth, a student group in
Rabat led by
Ahmed Balafrej, in 1929 to form The Moroccan League. By 1930, al-Fassi began to lecture at mosques, Quranic schools and the Qarawiyyin on the theme of the
Prophet and the
Rashidun caliphs. or 1932. He was also barred entry into Morocco in August 1933 after visiting France. He along with his colleagues were removed from their position as
ulama at Qarawiyyin.
Beginnings of mass nationalist protest In response to the Berber Dahir being passed, Allal al-Fassi began to coordinate alongside other nationalists like
Ahmed Balafrej and aroused public protest against the dahir. In al-Fassi's view, the dahir was "barbaric" and an "attempt at the annihilation of native people" by suppressing Arab and Islamic culture while replacing it with pre-Islamic Berber customs. As a result of the Dahir, he also met prominent Lebanese Pan-Arabist
Shakib Arslan. He co-founded the first political party in Morocco, the National Action Bloc (; or the Kutla) or founded in 1931, This party emerged from the protest movement against the Berber Dahir. Allal al-Fassi served as its president. In February 1934, al-Fassi met with
Sultan Mohammed and he called him "a great monarch" and said that Sultan Mohammed promised to recover the lost rights of Moroccans. The Kutla published the
Plan of Reforms () in 1934 in both Arabic and French. Allal al-Fassi was one of the ten signatories of the reform plan The demands of the reform plan included the abolition of the Berber Dahir, unification of legal systems under
Maliki law, expansion of the education system open to Moroccans, the forming of municipal councils, the promotion of Moroccans into positions of power and making Arabic an official language. Allal al-Fassi discussing the reform plan says: The plan was rejected by the French administration and by 1937, the nationalist movement started to split. The Kutla was also outlawed by the French protectorate in October 1937. The Kutla split into the (Ḥizb al-Waṭanī) which al-Fassi co-led and the Popular Movement (Ḥaraka Shaʿbiyya) later the
Party of Democracy and Independence (Ḥizb al-Shūrā wa-l-Istiqlāl) which was led by al-Fassi's former ally
Mohamed Hassan Ouazzani. Traditionally, the split has been characterised as one between "traditionalists" and "Westernists" but this split was likely more to do with personality differences and disagreements over the structure of leadership. In one document, the French justified the exile by accusing al-Fassi of conspiring to overthrow the protectorate to crown himself king. This was unlikely as al-Fassi had not made demands for independence at this point nor was he opposed to the monarchy. It is more likely he was exiled because his opposition to the French caused political instability. Despite being exiled, he still managed to maintain his influence over the nationalist movement. Scholar Ian Shaw says "His years of exile had given him the mystique of political martyrdom". He was isolated during this exile only being allowed to speak to his father but that too was restricted. During al-Fassi's exile,
Charles de Gaulle was in contact with him starting from 1941. De Gaulle aimed to use al-Fassi in a coup against the
Vichy government in Morocco to bring it to the
Free French fold but De Gaulle eventually broke off contact. The
Istiqlal Party was founded in January 1944 by former members of the Kutla. This party submitted their manifesto for independence although al-Fassi did not sign it. Allal al-Fassi was given the "purely honorary" role of
zaʿīm of the Istiqlal. In 1947, Allal al-Fassi, alongside other nationalist leaders, returned to Morocco from exile. This ten year period of exile only increased his legitimacy as a representative of the nation. His return along with the return of other nationalists was met with huge banquets and parades in Fes and Rabat and helped expand the membership of his organisation. Al-Fassi shortly left for Cairo to self-exile due to clashes with the king and the Istiqlal leadership as well as the hardening of French policies in Morocco. Whilst in Cairo, he became a lecturer at
Al-Azhar University. In 1952, al-Fassi went for a world tour to gain international support travelling to and lecturing in Europe, South America, North America and the Middle East. He also went to the
UN to plea the case for Moroccan independence and put pressure on France. While this only led to limited reforms by France, it raised awareness around the world for Moroccan independence. This period in Cairo was when he wrote his most important writings like
The Independence Movements in Arab North Africa (1947) and '''' (1951). His exile led to the rise of militant nationalism in both urban and rural areas leading to the formation of clandestine armed groups like the
Moroccan Army of Liberation (MLA). The MLA initially praised Allal al-Fassi as their nominal leader and al-Fassi was linked to the MLA through his cousin Abd al-Kabir al-Fassi. Al-Fassi refused to do any negotiations with France until Mohammed V was allowed to returned. Mohammed V returned the same year in November. On October 17, al-Fassi went to
Tetouan from Cairo and toured the Spanish zone. He received enthusiastic crowds from cities like Tetouan,
Larache and
Ksar el-Kebir. However, al-Fassi, despite being accompanied with a MLA commander, never inquired into the morale or physical conditions of MLA troops. MLA and Istiqlal leaders met in March and after, Allal al-Fassi declared an end to the
jihad. This led to the MLA high command responding with their own declaration saying that no one other than them spoke in their name or were able to mediate the relationship between them and the king. In March 1956, Morocco's declaration of independence was signed with Spain quitting the northern zone in April. In July 1956, he put forward a map of Morocco in the Istiqlal newspaper,
Al-Alam, which included all of Mauritania, parts of Western Algeria and a section of Northern Mali and all of the
Spanish Sahara. Between 1947 and 1956, the Istiqlal went through a period of significant expansion. In 1944, party membership was estimated at around three thousand later expanding to ten thousand in 1947 and after 1952, one hundred thousand. In the 50s, it reached two hundred and fifty thousand members and by the early months of Moroccan independence, it reached 1.6 million. After independence, al-Fassi was appointed secretary-general and later president for life of the Istiqlal. By 1956, two factions emerged within the Istiqlal: a left wing and right wing. The right wing of the party was made up of older leaders like Allal al-Fassi, Ahmed Belafrej and Mohamed Lyazidi whilst the left wing was made up of leaders of the MLA and younger leaders associated with the
Moroccan Workers' Union. It came to include
Mehdi Ben Barka They opposed the presence of American military bases, advocated for the holding of popular elections and introducing limits to the power of the monarchy. Al-Fassi proposed giving the left wing several government posts but it was rejected by Bouabid as he insisted that
Driss M'Hammedi should be minister of the interior due to his familiarity with the and ability to speak
Berber. This plan was successful as it led to al-Fassi retiring from the party and the radical Ben Barka being excluded from the government. This eventually led to the formation of a new party led by Ben Barka called the
National Union of Popular Forces (UNFP). After independence, al-Fassi was appointed professor of law in the newly created
University of Rabat. Allal al-Fassi was selected to become the head The purpose of the Mudawana, according to anthropologist Jamila Bargach, was to try to reclaim the "pure uncorrupted sources of Islamic teachings, to shed their un-Islamic interpretations, all of this in a more accessible, more 'modern' format" and it was influenced by the
Salafiya movement. Despite his involvement in the Mudawana, his progressive views on women were not incorporated into it. At this time, the Ministry only had a marginal role with the only purpose of overseeing the administration of
waqf lands. In 1961, in Tangier, the League of Moroccan ’Ulema was established with Allal al-Fassi as head. He resigned as minister as a result of the
Baháʼí affair, which was the arrest of 14 Baháʼí Faith adherents in
Nador in 1962 who were accused of proselytisation. Al-Fassi was one of the main supporters for their prosecution and he even tried to go further than the king to show his commitment to the Islamic cause. After international backlash, he resigned out of embarrassment. Despite his constitutional monarchism, he opposed Hassan's growing authoritarianism. Allal al-Fassi was present during the first coup and was among the injured. As a result of the first coup, Hassan II invited both the Istiqlal and the UNFP to join the cabinet where they entered into an alliance called the National Bloc. They began talks with the palace, but these talks shortly broke down when the king announced a new constitution without consulting the parties. The National Bloc subsequently boycotted the next
constitutional referendum with Allal al-Fassi publicly turning down a renewed offer of participation in the government. on a visit to Romania where he was scheduled to meet with
Nicolae Ceaușescu. He was meeting Ceaușescu to lobby him to support Morocco's claim over the
Spanish Sahara. He was succeeded as leader of the Istiqlal by
M'hamed Boucetta. == Views ==