The Paris Criminal Court ordered the imprisonment of Moroccan singer Saad Lamjarred, which means that he will be imprisoned immediately
A criminal court order in Paris was issued, on Friday, to imprison Moroccan singer Saad Lamjarred, which means that he will be imprisoned immediately, and the famous artist in Morocco and in the Arab world will spend the first night in a French prison, in implementation of the judicial ruling, following a marathon trial over a rape case.
Saad Lamjarred’s name was associated with songs that achieved Moroccan and Arab fame, led by “You Are a Teacher”, when the young singer surprised his followers with a musical arrangement, with sentences from the Moroccan vernacular that reached the Arab world, and lacy outfits with a Moroccan folk background.
But Saad was not only Saad in his career, as Moroccans commented on social media, but the artist has black traffic accidents in his singing path, sexual assault and beating of women inside and outside Morocco.
Saad Lamjarred
Saad admits that reaching the top was not easy, but he went through the first attempts in the United States of America, when he was working in small professions to earn a living, before he began presenting the first singing connections in an American restaurant in New York.
But Saad Lamjarred cannot return to the United States of America, because his name is linked to an incident of sexual assault against an American girl who filed a complaint before the justice of Uncle Sam’s country.
And when Saad, the son of the Moroccan singer Al-Bashir Abdo, and the son of the Moroccan actress, Nouzha Rekragui, reached the pinnacle of success for the first time in Morocco and in the Arab world, the news came from the French press that a young woman in her second decade filed a complaint before the French justice against him, on charges of rape with physical violence. .
The name Saad Lamjarred has now become associated with a judicial convict in cases of sexual and physical abuse, with lyrical successes, and with a voice capable of performing Moroccan and oriental songs from the heritage, while quickly shifting the trend towards modern lyrical rhythms that mix the speed of music and phrases that mix Moroccan colloquialism with French.
Saad Lamjarred’s friends still remember his beginnings in the Moroccan capital, Rabat, and his first singing attempts. Talent appeared from a young man who wanted to surpass the successes and fame of his parents, who had a place in the hearts of Moroccans.
Al-Bashir Abdo is an artist from the modern Moroccan singing school, and a player on the oud instrument, who had appearances through television works in drama series.
While his mother, Nouzha Al-Rakkari, is one of the ladies of the Moroccan theater, especially in plays with the Moroccan star Mohamed El-Jem, before she moved to stand in front of the Moroccan TV drama camera.