An incomplete fragment that was found of a undated handwritten text by Said Hajji:

When the Moroccan press came to be, it was faced with a situation which is hard from me to describe.

Misfortunes surged from all corners; wrongs multiplied and diversified; favoritism dominated all aspects of public affairs. It was facing a reactionary circle (of setters) while at the same time was trying to work for the rights of the oppressed. The government must (be brought to) appreciate its efforts as has been done by its people on the whole. It must recognize press's existence and to endow it with a legal framework to shelter it from unjustified repressive measures and, by so doing, to neutralize the abuses of power that it constantly has to pay for and that the nation sees as a usurpation of one of its most sacred rights. It is time to end the practice of baseless seizures and threats. It is time to give competent oversight of all its affairs to courts which understand the press's mission and its true value. The Moroccan journalist is not one to commit crimes relevant to a military court. His mission is none other than to be of service to the people and the public authorities by employing all his intellectual abilities to find a platform for loyal but frank agreement between the governed and the governing (entities).