Over 1,500 Jews from around the world gathered last summer at the tomb of Rabbi Hayim Pinto, Essaouira's most illustrious rabbi. The pilgrimage is one of several Jewish cultural events encouraged by Andre Azoulay,'the most powerful Jew in the Muslim world', in his capacity as de facto foreign minister to the king of Morocco. Azoulay and the activists of the Jewish-Muslim group Mimouna vaunt the long tradition of Jewish-Muslim coexistence . Yet Armin Rosen, writing in Tablet, is troubled by the local Jewish community's near-total absence.
Andre Azoulay, adviser to King Mohamed VI
National myths only work if other countervailing narratives can be
sufficiently ignored. During his talk, Azoulay motioned towards the idea
that he understood Muslim Moroccans better than they understood him.
One wonders what Moroccan subjects think of their king or the Jews a
couple towns up the road from Essaouira, or even within Essaouira
itself. One also wonders why hundreds of thousands of Jews would leave a
country where they were apparently so appreciated, and what Morocco
might have permanently lost when its Jews decided to leave.
These are questions Moroccans themselves have asked. Also present at
the Muslim-Jewish Interfaith Coalition forum was El Mehdi Boudra, the
founder and president of Mimouna, an organization dedicated to
sustaining the memory of Morocco’s Jewish community. Like most of
Mimouna’s officers, Boudra, who holds a master’s degree from Brandeis
University’s Peace, Conflict, and Coexistence Studies program, is not
Jewish, although he says he is “Jewish by culture—it’s part of the
Moroccan plural identity.” The organization wasn’t founded by political
operators in Rabat or Casablanca, but by students at Al Akhawayn
University in Ifrane, a midsize town in the country’s interior. As one
of its first events in 2007, Mimouna “turned the campus Jewish for a
day,” Boudra said, bringing in exhibits from Casablanca’s Jewish museum,
posting Hebrew signs, and holding performances of Moroccan Jewish
music. Today, Mimouna has organized Arabic-language Holocaust education
curricula, held numerous conferences, and helped send non-Jewish
Moroccans to build ties with the sizable Moroccan Jewish community in
Israel. “Our work is not preserving heritage but keeping memory,” says
Boudra. “For me, preservation is not enough.”
When Azoulay dies, Jewish historical memory in Morocco will be the
responsibility of young and motivated non-Jews like Boudra. He
contrasted “the old generation that talked with nostalgia about Jews and
a new generation that knows nothing.” Still, he believes that Arabs are
curious about the Jews who left or were forced out of their societies.
“We are the silent majority in the Arab world,” he said.
In Essaouira, the Jews are largely present through cultural events,
the occasional interfaith forum, the annual Pinto pilgrimage, the
rebuilt melah, and Azoulay’s existence. For the rest of the
year, the Jews are names on memorial lamps in empty synagogues. There is
no getting around the community’s near total absence, even if Morocco’s
Jews self-deported under happier circumstances than their counterparts
in Egypt or Spain.
For some Moroccan-descended Jews, the dissonance is impossible to
avoid. Rachel Benaim, the young writer who started the Muslim-Jewish
Interfaith Coalition, found her great grandfather’s name inscribed
somewhere in the city’s Slat Lkahal shul, and she knows exactly where
he’s buried in Essaouira’s Jewish cemetery. When she visited the
cemetery for the first time a few months before the conference, she was
“struck with this deep sense of there not being peace, that there was
something that was waiting to happen here. I didn’t know what it meant. …
I sat down in a corner and cried for a long time.”
The forum, and the process of organizing an intensive weeklong
interfaith event in the city that her father’s family eventually left,
answered certain questions for her while raising others that could never
really be answered. “I think the unease is still there,” she said. “I
don’t know if that discomfort is from stepping into somewhere so
simultaneously familiar and foreign.”
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More about Andre Azoulay
More about Essaouira
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