As Berbers set up a Watchdog for the Fight against Antisemitism (as reported by JTA in the Jerusalem Post) Jews seem to be caught at the centre of a power struggle between Moroccan Berbers and Islamists. (With thanks Jeremy; Michelle; Eliyahu)
A group of Moroccan Berbers launched an organization dedicated to
fighting anti-Semitism and to strengthening cultural ties with Israel.
The
Moroccan Observatory for the Fight against Anti-Semitism founded last
week is headed by Berber minority rights activist Omar Louzi, according
to a report Thursday on the online edition of the Ya Biladi daily.
"We
are here to stop the anti-Semitic attacks in mosques and elsewhere
against Jews and their culture,” the news site PanoraPost.com on
Thursday quoted Louzi as saying about his association, which he
co-founded with two other Berbers. Media reports did not name the other
co-founders.
Louzi is planning to organize trips to Israel for
Moroccans to “meet the Moroccan Jews and visit their holy places,
especially in Jerusalem,” Ya Biladi reported.
The initiative comes
amid a debate in Morocco about the country’s relatively friendly
relations with Israel. Last year, five political parties, including the
Islamist ruling party, jointly sponsored two bills to make it illegal to
trade with Israeli entities. At least one bill proposes to make it
illegal for Israelis to enter Morocco.
Among the supporters of the bills is the Moroccan Observatory against Normalization with Israel,
an association launched last year. It seeks to challenge the policy of
relative openness to Israel advanced by Moroccan King Mohammed VI.
The
formation of Louzi’s group follows the cancellation last month of a
planned visit by three Berber activists to Israel. The three — Omar
Ouchann, Boubker Ouchann Inghir and Mounir Kejji — were scheduled to
attend a conference which was organized by Tel Aviv University’s Moshe
Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies but they cancelled
amid allegations in national media that they are Israeli spies.
Read article in full
Fourth museum victim had Berber-Jewish parents (French - with thanks: Sylvia)
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