Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles
available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. The Bahá'í Faith
in Morocco began about 1946. In 1953 the Bahá'ís initiated a Ten Year
Crusade during which a number of Bahá'ís pioneered to various parts of
Morocco many of whom came from Egypt and a few from the United States
including Helen Elsie Austin. By April 1955 the first Bahá'í Local
Spiritual Assembly of Ceuta was elected. By January 1958 the first
Bahá'í summer school was held in Rabat. By spring 1958 the Bahá'í
population may have been 100 and there were six assemblies and a
regional committee coordinated activities promulgating the religion. In
1960 the first all-Moroccan local assembly was elected in Zaouiat Cheikh
and most of its members were Berbers. On December 7, 1961 an article in
Al Alam laments the decline of Islam and attacks the Bahá'ís.