She tells of raising her brothers and sisters, teaching them good manners and attempting to provide them with some semblance of a normal life. She recalls their day-to-day struggle for survival in harsh conditions, being watched around the clock by prison guards, and communicating with her family solely through prison walls for more than a decade. In Stolen Lives, Malika recounts her family's story with unflinching and heartrending honesty. In 1996, after twenty-four years of incarceration, the Oufkir family was finally granted permission to leave Morocco. Their freedom ended five days later, however, when they were captured and returned to prison. The Oufkir family spent the next fifteen years in prison, the last ten in solitary confinement, until they managed to dig a tunnel and escape. Along with her mother and five siblings, Malika, then nineteen, was imprisoned in a penal colony. Her world was shattered on August 16, 1972, when her father was executed for his part in an attempt to assassinate the King. She spent most of her childhood and adolescence within the gilded walls of the palace, living an extraordinarily privileged yet secluded life. The eldest daughter of General Oufkir, the King of Morocco's closest aide, Malika Oufkir was adopted by the king at age of five as a companion for his daughter. Announced An Introduction to Stolen Lives
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