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c'est une honte!!
4 avril 2005 21:17
de la corruption et encore de la corruption:



"Samedi dernier, SM le Roi Mohammed VI a effectué une visite-surprise à un orphelinat de Aïn Chok à Casablanca. Découvrant l'état de délabrement des installations, le Souverain a ordonné l'ouverture d'une enquête.


Sa Majesté le Roi a effectué, samedi dernier, une visite-surprise aux locaux d'une organisation caritative de l’association musulmane de bienfaisance à Aïn Chock à Casablanca, à Aïn Chok plus exactement. Constatant que cet orphelinat ressemblait à un véritable champ de ruine, le Souverain a immédiatement ordonné l'ouverture d'une enquête, la réalisation d'un audit et la restructuration de l'administration de cette association.
La Justice est désormais saisie du dossier. Et sans aucun doute, des têtes vont tomber.
Dans la plus ancienne Association musulmane de bienfaisance (créée en 1927) SM le Roi Mohammed VI a découvert que les pensionnaires, des enfants et des adolescents, vivaient dans une précarité indescriptible. La seule mise en cause: la mauvaise gestion.
Arrivé sur place, à la "Maison des Enfants", en compagnie du ministre du Développement social, de la Famille et de la Solidarité, Abderrahim Harouchi, SM le Roi a effectué une tournée dans les différents pavillons de l'orphelinat. Il s'agit d'une imposante bâtisse en plein centre d'Aïn Chok et composée de plusieurs immeubles. Au moins 700 jeunes y vivent dans une misère totale. Grande fut la surprise du Souverain quand il demanda à voir la cuisine, l'infirmerie et les douches. La cuisine tout d'abord. Sa porte d'entrée était quasiment en ruine. Le sol et les murs y sont tellement sales qu'un chien affamé y perdrait l'appétit. Le réfectoire, où les 700 pensionnaires sont censés manger trois fois par jour, est en fait une salle dégoûtante meublée d'une dizaine de tables souillées, sans aucune chaise. A la "Maison des enfants", on mange debout.
Quant à l'infirmerie, son inspection a été "rapide": elle n'existe même pas. Faisant fi de toutes les normes internationalement reconnues, les gestionnaires de l'orphelinat ont estimé que les pensionnaires de la "Maison des enfants" n'avaient pas besoin de soins médicaux.
La cerise sur le gâteau est sans nul doute celle des douches. Toute description serait vaine. Toute comparaison serait taxée d'euphémisme. Même les "Poilus" de la Première guerre mondiale, aux fins fonds de leurs tranchées, étaient mieux lotis. Pas d'eau chaude pour se laver. D'ailleurs, au vu des images on a l'impression que l'on sortira beaucoup plus, après un passage dans les douches. Les toilettes sont toutes bouchées. Pour faire leur besoin, les pensionnaires ont certainement trouvé une astuce.
Malgré ce constat alarmant, le Souverain a tenu à visiter les dortoirs, certainement pas pour en avoir le cœur net, mais surtout pour pouvoir parler aux pensionnaires, en tête-à-tête. Pour atteindre les dortoirs, S.M le Roi a traversé des couloirs sales, clairsemés d'amas d'ordures qui dégageaient des odeurs nauséabondes dignes d'une véritable décharge publique.
Les carreaux des fenêtres sont quasiment tous cassés. Pour barrer la route au vent glacial, les pensionnaires colmatent les brèches avec des bouts de carton. Ils sont au moins six par chambre. A défaut de placards, les jeunes ont mis en place un système ingénieux pour accrocher leurs habits. Un grand fil où les vêtements des uns et des autres sont séparés par des CD.
Plusieurs jeunes ont élu domicile dans les escaliers ou dans les terrasses, quasiment en plain air. Plusieurs chambres n'ont pas d'électricité. On s'éclaire à la lumière des bougies. Les murs sont tous fissurés, l'humidité a laissé des traces dans tous les coins. Les canalisations de l'eau potable sont en ruine complet. En somme, la "Maison des enfants" ressemblait à nulle part, à un cauchemar. Et ce n'est pas faute de moyens financiers. L'association dispose de ressources financières permanentes provenant de ses recettes immobilières, de la taxe de l'abattage et des importants dons et contributions des bienfaiteurs. Pour ce qui est des recettes immobilières, rappelons que le ministère de la Justice versait mensuellement et jusqu'en octobre dernier, pas moins de 800.000 DH pour la location de plusieurs immeubles qui abritaient deux tribunaux de première instance. Celui de Ben M'sik-Sidi Othmane et Hay Hassani-Aïn Chok.
A noter que le Souverain a également donné ses instructions pour la désignation d'un gérant provisoire qui veillera à la bonne gestion de l'orphelinat jusqu'à la recomposition des organes chargés de la gestion.
Par ailleurs, SM Mohammed VI a appelé le Secrétariat général du gouvernement (SGG) à se pencher, en collaboration avec les parties concernées, sur l'amendement du cadre juridique des associations de bienfaisance, pour éviter qu'un tel cas ne se reproduise et pour veiller à ce que les associations, qui accueillent les enfants, les jeunes, les femmes et les personnes âgées, jouent pleinement leur rôle humanitaire."



source: aujourd'hui le maroc
:o
l
4 avril 2005 21:54
cool j'éspére qu'il vas en fair bcp de visite surprisesmiling smiley
s
4 avril 2005 21:57
Et que dit le coran à propos des orphelins !

Ces gens là n'ont rien de musulmans , si ils profitent du malheurs de ses enfants !

Tu l'as dis Amir , honte à eux .
siryne
4 avril 2005 22:05
le cas de cette orpholinat est vrament une goute dans un ocean...

pourquoi les occidentaux qui ne sont meme pas musulmans sont plus "musulmans" que nous, humainement parlant?

des fois je me pose de serieuses questions...
:o
C
4 avril 2005 22:05


Salam,

J'ai vu le reportage au journal de 2M, les enfants tout contents d'accueillir le Roi msakines sad smiley

Et ces gens là prétendent être musulmans...
4 avril 2005 22:09
le pays est en train de tomber en ruine par la corruption et c'est justement les plus corrempus qui nous "demagogisent" avec leur patriotisme a la noix.
:o
4 avril 2005 22:15
une honte!!
Auteur: siryne (IP enregistrée)
Date: le 04 avril 2005 à 21h57


Et que dit le coran à propos des orphelins !

Ces gens là n'ont rien de musulmans , si ils profitent du malheurs de ses enfants !

Tu l'as dis Amir , honte à eux .

siryne
---------------------------------

en plus ma chere siryne il y a aussi les chatiments corporels digne du moyen age qu,on inflige a ses pauvres gosses qui a leur tour l'infligent a d'autres une fois adultes: quand ils deviennet flique ou dilinquants.
:o
s
4 avril 2005 22:15
Alors , il faut esperer que cette visite ne sera pas la derniere , et qu'il y'aura d'autres !

Et comme ça , pour certains rien que le fait de savoir qu'ils risquent d'avoir un controle à leurs tours , ça les obligeront peut-etre à faire leurs travails correctement ,

Il faut l'esperer !
siryne
s
4 avril 2005 22:30
C'est désolant , triste , et monstrueux !

Comment les etres soit dit humains arrivent à faire subirent des telles choses à des pauvres innocents , qui ont le malheur d'avoirs deja d'etres seuls au monde !



siryne
4 avril 2005 22:38
et surtout pourquoi nos somme cruels?

jeune je me rappele comment nous etion tabassés presque toujours que par des instititeurs marocains "musulmans"
:o
N
4 avril 2005 22:42
Amir ecrit :

"pourquoi les occidentaux qui ne sont meme pas musulmans sont plus "musulmans" que nous, humainement parlant? "

Cette phrase me rapelle celle de mon grand-pere maternel qui etait en visite en France lors de l'introduction du SIMIC au parlement. Apres avoir ecoute l'explication de mon frere pour ce qui est du SIMIC, il a dit la chose suivante :

"Chez nous on prie. Ici, on applique l'islam".

m
4 avril 2005 23:05
Salaam Najib_Canada,

>>>>>>>"Chez nous on prie. Ici, on applique l'islam".


Je pense que c'est Taha Hussain qui a dit:

"Chez nous il ya les musulmans et chez eux il ya l'Islam."
a
4 avril 2005 23:16

Meme dans les ecoles d'internat , ils ont jamais eu d'eau chaude !

C'est révoltant , vivement un changement .

Et que dire des jeunes qui mangent de la bouffe empoisonné , vu les rats et j'en passe !!!!!!!

a
4 avril 2005 23:23
Pour renforcer ce que vous venez de dire je cite pour la deuxieme fois ce qu'adit le chanteur CAT STEVENS converti à l'Islam:

<< Heureusement que j'ai connu l'Islam avant de connaitre les Musulmans



il n'ya pas de mots assez durs pour qualifier les responsables de ce site, rongés par la corruption et la cupidité.
5 avril 2005 04:38
exuses-moi l'ami car je n'ai pas compris ce que tu veux dire avec:

"il n'ya pas de mots assez durs pour qualifier les responsables de ce site, rongés par la corruption et la cupidité."

???

on parle des corrempus qui l,argent destiné aux orphelins...
:o
N
5 avril 2005 05:28
Salam brother mdlazreg,

Happy to read you. I heard of Taha Hussain and I'd like to know more about him. Any hint will be appreciated.

Ma salaam
m
5 avril 2005 08:25
Salaam Najib_Canadasmiling smiley,

Taha Hussein is one of the greatest arab writers. I found this after some goodling :


Taha Hussein was born on October 28, 1898, in AI-Minya province, Upper Egypt, and grew up, the seventh of thirteen children, in a lower middle-class family. At a very early age, he contracted a simple eye infection and, due to faulty treatment by an unskilled local practitioner, was blinded, which caused him great anguish throughout his life.

He was placed in a kuttab (a school where children learn Quran and reading and writing) and was later sent to Al-Azhar University, where he acquired a thorough knowledge of religion and Arabic literature in the traditional manner. He felt deep discontent with the narrow thinking and conservatism of his tutors.


University Education
In 1908, he learned of the founding of a new, secular university as part of a national effort to promote education in Egypt under British occupation, and was very keen to enter it. He was blind and poor, but overcoming many obstacles, he was accepted in that university. He later stated, in AI-Ayyam (The Days) that the doors of knowledge were from that day opened wide for him. He was the first graduate of this university to receive a Ph.D. with his thesis on the skeptic poet and philosopher Abu-Alalaa’ AI-Ma'arri.



Meeting Suzanne
Again with much trouble, he was sent to study in France on the university's educational mission. His blindness caused him continuing pains, aggravated by a careless brother, presumably sent to take care of him. It was in France that he met his ‘sweet voice’, Suzanne, who came to read to him since not all the references needed were available in braille. She later became his wife, his mentor, advisor, assistant, mother to his children, great love and best friend. He states that since he first heard that 'sweet voice', anguish never entered his heart." After his death, she wrote Ma'ak (With You), published in Arabic; a touching remembrance of their life together.


Sorbonne Ph.D.
Taha Hussein specialized in literature and classical studies and was, again, the first Egyptian, and the only member of the mission, to succeed in obtaining first his B.A. from Montpellier University, and then his Ph.D. from the Sorbonne. His doctoral dissertation, written in 1917, was on lbn Khaldun, the fourteenth century Arab historian, the founder of sociology.

Through his own will and craving for knowledge, he grew to be the leader of the Arab cultural renaissance.


Advocate of Liberal Thought
His quest was to revive and sustain Islamic and Arab culture and language while espousing a western mode of thought. He became an advocate of liberal thought and translated many valuable works. Before Taha Hussein, the Classical Arabic language, was stagnant and heavily clicheed, and not in the reach of the general populace. His own style was quite easy to comprehend, yet it adhered to the rules of the language and fully exploited expressions and vocabulary. He urged for a cornrnon language to sustain Arab unity. Otherwise, he argued, the Arab nations would suffer the same problems of isolation suffered in Europe due to the language barriers.


Education for All
Taha Hussein strongly believed in the Egyptian Revolution of 1952, in Arab unity, and in social reform. He fought fiercely for free education in Egypt, insisting, that "knowledge is like water and air," the natural right of every human being, and he made this his condition for accepting the post of Minister of Education in 1950. The new government, subsequently, declared ex-gratia primary education, a policy that remains in effect to this day. Millions of Egyptians owe their literacy to Taha Hussein.

His daughter, Amina, was among the first Egyptian women to graduate from university. She and her brother Moenis, later, translated his novel Adib (The Intellectual) into French. This is a deeply sympathetic story describing the cultural shock suffered by an Egyptian in the years he spent in France.


Constant Struggle

Taha Hussein lived a life of constant struggles - political, social and personal. After his death, his biography was completed by his son-in-law, Mohamed El Zayyat, in a book entitled Maba'd AI-Ayyam (Beyond the Days).


Three Kinds
Taha Hussein's works can be divided into three categories: scientific study of Arabic literature and Islamic history; creative literary works with social content combating poverty & ignorance, and political articles. The latter he published in the two papers of which he was editor-in-chief, after being expelled from his post as professor of Classical Arabic literature at the Egyptian University. His expulsion came as a result of public reaction to his book 'On Pre-lslamic Poetry', published in 1926, which gave full expression to his modern method of literary cirticism.


His Novels
His novels express an astounding sensitivity, insight and compassion in that age for a person with his background. His arguments for justice and equality are supported by deep and honest understanding of Islam. Equally remarkable are his sympathy with his downtrodden compatriots and his understanding of the deepest emotions and thoughts of woman as girl, lover, wife and mother.


Doyen
Taha Hussein, who had to bear the brunt of conservative attacks and confront enemies of his reforms, enjoyed affection of his pupils & colleagues. During his life time, he was elected member of many educational academies in Arab countries, and was honored by many international institutions. The American University in Cairo paid no heed to Egyptian Premier Isma'il Sidqi, when he warned against offering employment to Taha Hussein. Its Ewart Hall, where AUC holds its extra-curricular activities, was teeming in the 1930s with listeners eager to hear him and to declare him Doyen of Arabic Literature.

He was awarded honorary doctorates from French, British, Spanish and Italian universities. President Gamal Abd AI-Naser bestowed on him the highest Egyptian decoration, normally, reserved for heads of state. In 1973, he received the United Nations Human Rights Award.

Taha Husein died in October 1973, immediately after witnessing his country's victory in its last war against Israel. He died in his home, alone with his "sweet voice"; Suzanne.

She wrote: "We were together, alone, close to an extent beyond description. I was not crying - the tears came later. Each of us was before the other; unknown & united as we had been at the beginning of our journey. In this last unity, in the midst of this very close familiarity, I talked to him, kissing that forehead that was so noble and handsome, on which age and pain had not succeeded to carve any wrinkles, and no adversity had managed to cause to frown - a forehead that still emanated light”.

"For before anything, and after everything, and above all things, he was my best friend, and he was, my only friend".

Exerpts from his writings:


"To those burning with their yearning for justice".
"To those rendered sleepless by their fear of injustice".
"To those and those together, I direct these words".
"To those who have what they do not spend".
"And to those who do not have anything to spend".
"Are these words directed".
He also wrote:
"I cannot find a more means of depicting Egypt during the later years of the monarchy than these two dedications". "He who belonged to the majority was unable to secure the means of his livelihood and the livelihood of those whom he supported. Thus he suffered his own deprivation and underwent the greatest and most hateful anguish in seeing the deprivation endured by his children”.

"His eye was capable of coveting objects at the farthest reaches of sight, yet his hand had no reach at all. He would see delicacies at arm's length, and his heart would long for them and the hearts of his sons and daughters would long for them. Yet, when he attempted to grasp them, his hands would refuse to stretch out, as though paralysed, or as though bound to his body by the heaviest of chains”.

"He would suppress his frustration and bid himself be patient with what he hated and bid his family be patient in the face of suffering and adversity, and he would await justice - but justice was very tardy in answering his call.

"He saw many blights attacking his body and spirit, and the bodies and spirits of his children. He would resolve to remedy their damage, but his ordeal would confine him and weaken his determination and he would be obliged to surrender himself and his family to these blights to work their will”.

"He had resigned himself to ignorance, since his father had not been able to educate him. He strove to extract his children from the ignorance to which he had been confined, but could not find the means to do so. Thus, he accepted ignorance for his children as he had accepted it for himself, and he awaited justice that would allow them some of the enlightenment he had been denied in his youth. But justice slackened too long and was very tardy in answering his call and his children's call”.

"He found wretchedness his detestable companion. It accompanied him when he set forth, and remained with him when he went home. It lived with him and his family in their home, if he and his family were allowed a home in which to find shelter”.

"He would bid himself be patient with that detestable companion and he would bid his family be patient, certain that he was incapable of escaping it since he could neither hide underground nor flee to heaven. He awaited justice, which would rid him and his family of this despised companion. But justice was very slow to answer his call”.

"Wretchedness would only accompany this majority along with its friends: hunger, nakedness, sickness, humiliation, degradation, toil that consumes and is never exhausted, and anxiety that intensifies and never relents. The people felt the greatest hatred for these companions and were most weary of them. But they found no means of ridding themselves of such burdensome fellows, unless justice should come and drop a veil between them. But justice was excessively tardy in coming, as though walking in chains; hardly taking a few steps when some force would pull it back to its resting place, where it remained, as far as it could possibly be from those who loved it and whom it loved, who pined for it and for whom it yearned."

He also serialized during the later years of monarch.

"Governments, willingly or unwillingly strove to please the prosperous. Perhaps some government members attempted to steal some reforms, looking upon the wretched of the earth with some compassion and endeavoring to touch them with a wing of mercy. But hardly would they start to do so, than they would find the earth quaking beneath them and find themselves isolated and bombarded by lecture after lecture, commanding them to comprehend that the aim of government was to increase the prosperity of the affluent and intensify the destitution and suffering of the wretched."

The government then in power took no heed of those words and paid them no attention. But one day they were assembled into a book, so that they might reach the hands of all readers and counsel the spendthrift, enlighten the privileged, and console the deprived. Thus was this book confiscated, among others that were meant to enlighten Egyptians with the reality of their affairs; advising the tyrants and oppressors, and relieving the wretched and desperate.


His type of literature
His type of literature became an independent form and readers competed in it passionately, reading and interpreting, discussing analyses, and extracting clear meanings from ambiguous allusions ... Looking at his publications, one will find allusions to phenomena that one abhorred and could not speak of openly during those dismal days. We preferred ambiguity to clarity, symbols and riddles to declaration, allusion and insinuation to calling things by their names.

The government of that era and its controllers would read and not understand. Thus, he defeated the oppression of tyrants and escaped the censorship of censors and manage to record the injustices of the unjust and the corruption of corruptors.

r
5 avril 2005 10:30
tout a fait révoltant votre altesse ....

jai aussi vu le reportage et sa ma fais très mal au coeur de voir ces orphelins et surtout de voir des jeunes hommes orphelins ki n'ont pas d'emplois ....
t
5 avril 2005 12:19
Le roi n'y pourra rien changer car c'est un problème qui vient du système tt entier dont le roi fait partie. Il y a au Maroc un problème de la responsabilité individuelle qui est structurelle: personne n'a de compte à rendre à personne du bas jusqu'en haut de la pyramide. Chacun ds son petit carré détient et exerce un pouvoir absolu.
Tant que le pouvoir absolu d'un seul s'exercera ss controle sur ts les marocains cela légitimera la corruption , l'irresponsabilité. Ce n'est pas une question de morale, de religion , mais une question politique.
Le fait que le roi fasse qques opérations spectaculaires n'est pas condamnable, mais mais c'est l'arbre qui cache la foret et qui empeche de remonter aux responsables qui devraient organiser la societé de telle sorte que ces situations ne soient pas génerales. Ds tt autre pays, ce st les plus hauts responsables qui auraient du rendre des comptes.
a
5 avril 2005 17:43
Salam, Amir
excuses moi , il fallait bien lire:

"il n'ya pas de mots assez durs pour qualifier les responsables de ce site, rongés par la corruption et la cupidité."

Le site en question est bien entendu l'orphelinat en question.
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