The first time that I heard the story, it was from a female.
It was either my mother, my grandmother, my aunt, our neighbors.
The stories that were told back then, they were stories about morals of family, morals
of being, how to be a kid.
In our culture, the moral lessons in the stories are very important.
Whenever you listen to a story, you learn a moral lesson.
When I was a kid, my mother used to tell me that if I had a child, I would go to the forest and give them water with water.
When my mother wanted to take it, she would throw it away.
She would throw it away and give it to her mother, her mother, and her mother.
She would throw it away and give it to her mother, her mother, and her mother.
She would throw it away and give it to her mother, her mother, and her mother.
I am a family part of Hicca in Morocco, a program which aims to preserve the tradition of storytelling.
Even my father has forgotten many stories that my grandmother used to share.
Now there is a big gap between those people who used to tell stories and our generation and the generation before us.
Moroccan storytelling is an art that is dying.
And especially we as a younger generation, we are not paying attention to it.
So that is the point of reviving something that is old and ancient and dying at the same fact, but giving it our own touch.
You have fun throughout the story, you like the characters, you laugh with the characters, you cry with the characters.
For me as a young Moroccan, what really makes me fall in love with them is that whenever I get the chance to tell a story, to go and collect a story,
I remember my childhood and I remember the kid that I was.
I remember my childhood and I remember the kid that I was.
One of our goals is to empower youth and to share with them our experiences and try to help them stand up and express their opinions.
What do you like to do every day?
What do you like to do every day?
What do you like to do every day?
What do you like to do every day?
