On October 3rd, the Birds Will Chirp—Friday Prayers, Family Visits, Children at Play, and Prayers for Algeria’s Prosperity…The Algerians’ Only Hirak Was in 2019, Now Past…And in Morocco, Mohammed VI Is Gone, and Its People Are Free in 2025, Enough Already
✍️ BY: Maamar Gani
Algiers – October 2025 – On October 3rd, the birds will continue to chirp, life will flow as it always does—Friday prayers, family gatherings, children’s laughter—and for Algeria, sincere prayers of prosperity. Algerians had their movement once, in 2019, and it has long since passed with dignity. Meanwhile, across the border, Morocco sinks into turmoil: King Mohammed VI is politically moribund, and his people, in 2025, have entered an era of reckoning.
Today, the Moroccan Makhzen, trembling with internal crisis, stretches out its faltering hand toward Algeria in a desperate attempt to export its own ailments. Its latest fabrication: hollow media bubbles like the fictitious “Gen Z 213,” an imaginary creation designed to deceive Algerian public opinion, just as it misled its own people for decades. But the truth shines brighter than the sun: Algeria is not Morocco, and Algerians are not in need of any “imported protest.” Their authentic Hirak took place in 2019—peaceful, civilized, and sovereign—where the state responded, the security forces never fired a single bullet, and not a drop of blood was shed.
Moroccans should not forget: when Algerian youth took to the streets, they marched under the protection of their army and police, who shielded them rather than harm them. By contrast, Moroccan youth who rose between September 27th and 30th were met with batons, mass arrests, and prison doors slammed shut—because the Makhzen knows nothing but repression, brutality, and humiliation.
The contrast could not be starker. In Algeria, political leadership stems from the people and speaks directly to them. President Abdelmadjid Tebboune regularly addresses the nation, opens all files to scrutiny, punishes negligent officials, and repeats with unyielding conviction: “The citizen is a red line.” In Morocco, however, the people live estranged from a monarch they only glimpse in carefully staged photographs from Parisian palaces or Zanzibari retreats, far removed from the suffering of his subjects. It is a kingdom torn between an absent sovereign and powerless institutions, until the people’s anger finally erupted into a call for systemic change.
The Algerian Press Agency has been unequivocal: these orchestrated calls for demonstrations on Friday, October 3rd are not genuine social demands, but a sordid political maneuver aimed at exporting Morocco’s crisis abroad and undermining Algeria’s internal cohesion.
Algeria, with its revolutionary heritage and liberationist principles, raises the banners of Palestine and Western Sahara, standing firm with oppressed peoples worldwide. Morocco, meanwhile, has been stained with the shame of normalization, collaborating with the Zionist colonial entity, aiding the blockade of Gaza, and opening its gates to Mossad operatives. Is it not disgraceful that the Makhzen ruthlessly suppresses weekly demonstrations—entering their second year—simply because Moroccans reject normalization and chant against Israel?
The disparity is glaring in the social sphere as well. Algeria is a genuine welfare state: wages are rising, basic goods are subsidized, housing is distributed, education and healthcare remain free. Morocco, by contrast, has embraced predatory neoliberalism, abandoning its citizens to hunger, poverty, and the collapse of public services. Moroccan women die en masse in maternity wards devoid of equipment, while the regime boasts of building stadiums and dreams of hosting the World Cup—on land barren of hospitals, schools, and facilities for its own citizens. Little wonder that Moroccan youth now chant: “No World Cup without hospitals!” “Bread, not stadiums!” “Education and health, not billions for FIFA!”
The Makhzen craves to polish its tarnished image with sporting facades, even as its cities drown in poverty and despair, crushed beneath the arrogance of its security apparatus. Algeria, on the other hand, will spend October 3rd in serenity: Friday prayers, family visits, children in playgrounds, the rustle of autumn leaves, and the gentle song of birds. The nation remains shielded by its unity, vigilant to the schemes of its neighbors, and unshaken by imported slogans.
For it is Morocco, not Algeria, that is reaping the storm it has sown. By gambling on the Zionist entity, the Makhzen has sold its very soil, only to find itself besieged today by a radical uprising demanding the monarch’s departure and declaring the end of Mohammed VI’s reign.
Algerians have moved beyond their Hirak with honor, building a new Algeria under wise and accountable leadership. Moroccans, meanwhile, have entered their decisive revolutionary moment. The gulf between the two nations is now too vast to obscure with propaganda: here, a state that builds and reforms with confidence and self-awareness; there, a decaying regime collapsing beneath the fury of its people.
The Algerian Hirak ended with dignity in 2019. The Moroccan Hirak has just begun—and it will not end until the Makhzen and Mohammed VI fall. The contrast is unbridgeable: one nation forging progress with clarity of purpose, and another crumbling under the weight of treachery and normalization.
Let Moroccans reflect deeply upon this truth, lest their uprising be hijacked by the very criminal clique that has oppressed them. For we Algerians, both people and leadership, wish them only liberation, and we care profoundly that their revolution succeeds—so that their Morocco may finally be freed from the Makhzen and the monarchy, disentangled from Zionist plots and foreign agendas, and so that the Maghreb Union may at last return to its rightful path: a union of free, sovereign peoples, unchained from colonialism and expansionist regimes.
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