Kharboucha was known by other names, such as “Hadda” and “Huwayda”, and that she is a Moroccan woman from the Ouled Zeid tribe, who lived in the late 19th century in the Abda region. The effects of smallpox disease, which is attributed to him describing her as “Kharboucha.” Others say that the names she was given, such as “Al-Karedah” (the curly-haired woman) and “Zarwala” (the one with blue eyes), suggest that her beauty was mesmerizing.
The real fame of Kharboucha was not in her form or lineage, but rather in her story as a woman who broke all barriers and norms in that masculine era with distinction, and with her ability to engrave her name in the Moroccan collective memory despite the scarcity of historical studies and artistic writings concerned with civilization, her real strength lies in the immortality of her name in Moroccan oral heritage "Huwayda" was also known for her love and belonging to her tribe, which the leader of Issa al-Abdi stripped of all her rights, choked the breath of her people and burdened them with taxes, which prompted them to revolt against him and split the stick of obedience, so he took revenge on them by slaughtering and abusing them. Which she excelled in, taking advantage of the effect of the art of "Al-Aita" in the souls, and investing her faculties in defending the weak in order to motivate and motivate the voices opposing and rejecting the forced rule.