After the French Protectorate of Morocco was established in 1912, leaders of the Moroccan Jewish community pledged their allegiance to the government of France, recognizing that it had become the highest authority in the country. In the 21st century Moroccan Jews throughout the global diaspora express their unwavering attachment to the king and the Alawid dynasty. In this talk, I will examine how the French legitimized colonial rule in Morocco by preserving the ruler of the dynasty and his religious and moral authority over his Muslim and Jewish subjects. Rather than becoming subjects or citizens of France, Jews became “indigenous,” colonial dhimmis under the symbolic protection of the Islamic ruler. I aim to show how the loyalty of Jews to the Moroccan monarchy, still expressed to this day, was shaped during the colonial period.
I also wish to give a shout out to our
stellar staff uh Cleo and Johanna
um for their their work on the
logistical support of these. Uh for, I see
a lot of faces a lot of students and I
would particularly like to say a couple
words about our Center because I think
that you have a lot of opportunities
available for you at the center,
including fellowships
um and uh FLAS fellowships and all
sorts of things. So for those of you not
familiar with the Center for near
Eastern studies at UCLA, CNES is a
research hub where over 100 faculty
from the humanities, social sciences, arts
and the law school collaborate in a
variety of research and pedagogical projects.
It's one of the oldest centers in the
country. It was founded in 1957. It is one
of the most distinguished also U.S
centers for interdisciplinary research
on the Middle East broadly construed. We
are actually a national Research Center.
We get funding from the Department of
Education that provides for this for
programming but also a tremendous amount
of funding for language learning. We get
very few applications from
undergraduates, so those of you who are
undergraduates please please apply in
the future for these things. These are
full year fellowships, plenty of
opportunities for you to take advantage
of this to learn or to perfect your
languages: Arabic, Persian, Hebrew, Armenian–
all the language of the region.
Our colleague Aomar Boum will introduce
um our our speaker and talk a little bit
about the Averroës lecture series that
you're attending today. But I want to
briefly introduce uh introduce him. He's
very shy. Distinguished as he is, he does
not want to people to talk a lot about
him but, he is a socio-cultural
anthropologist and holds Maurice Amado
Endowed chair in Sephardic studies here
at UCLA. I think he's probably the only
Muslim who will have such endowed chair
of that sort. Aomar's stellar
ethnographic research
deals with North Africa and specifically
addresses the place of religious and
ethnic minorities in Mena region. He has
published widely on this topic. his
publication includes an important book
Memories of Absence: how Muslim
remember Jews in Morocco which was
published by Stanford University Press
and recently co-edited The Collection
with Sarah Stein who I also wish to
thank in the Center for Jewish studies
that have consistently collaborated with
us on this series. So grateful to you. And
they edited the book Holocaust and North
Africa which was published also by
Stanford press. Aomar just published a
graphic novel about Jewish communities
in North Africa and and many other
interesting books. So please join me in
welcoming my colleague Aomar.
Thanks Ali. It's a really humbling
moment for me personally to have my former
advisor, teacher and Professor Daniel
Schroeter among us.
Thanks Daniel for everything
for all your mentorship.
Good afternoon everyone. Before I
introduce our speaker Dr Daniel
Schroeter, professor and the Amos S. Deinard
Memorial Chair in Jewish history
in the department of history at the
University of Minnesota Twin Cities,
I would like to thank to begin by
thanking the staff the center for
Near eastern studies.
The staff of the Alan D. Leve
Center for Jewish studies especially
Cleo and Johanna and Chelsea and Viv for
their help with the series over the
years. I also acknowledge my colleagues
Ali Behdad and Sarah Stein for their support.
Written by a generous Anonymous donor,
the Averroës lecture series focuses on
Jewish communities living in Muslim
lands prior to the 20th century.
Averroës is the Latin name of Ibn Rushd
the 12th century Andalusian polymath whose
philosophical Works integrated Islamic
Traditions with ancient Greek thought.
Over subsequent centuries, his commentaries
on Plato and Aristotle influence Jewish
and Christian thinkers throughout Europe
among them Maimonides ,Thomas Aquinas, and
Baruch Spinoza.
The series built on UCLA strength in
having a large number of Faculty across
disciplines whose research touches
on this topic as well as a number of
research centers interested in a series
exploring the experiences and Legacies
of Jewish communities in the Muslim
world.
Let me now shift back to introducing Dr Schroeter.
Professor of History Dr Schroeter earned
a B.A. from the University of Washington
Seattle in history and near Eastern
languages in 1975. He's still young by
the way, don't get befooled by the years
here. An MA from University of Michigan Ann
Arbor in near Eastern studies in 1977
and a PhD in the University of
Manchester in near Eastern studies in
1984. Before joining the University of
Minnesota Twin Cities in 2008 as the
Amos S. Deinard Memorial Chair in Jewish
history Department of History, Dr
Schroeter served as the Shoshana Shier
distinguished visiting professor and
Anne Tanenbaum Centre for Jewish studies at
the University of Toronto in 2016.
Visiting Professor at l'école des hautes études en sciences
sociales Paris in 2002. Teller Family
chair in Jewish history Department of
History University of California Irvine
between 1994 and 2008.
Professor [...] legislative
professorial professorship in Jewish
history Department of History the
University of Florida Gainesville
between 1989 and 1994. Many many many
other positions that I don't have time
to mention here. Dr Schroeter has
many fellowships and prizes over his
long and productive academic tenure. He's
literally one of the pillars of the
field and we are him in in our small
field we owe him a lot of gratitude here.
And I would like to mention some of
these
fellowships– the Ina Levine Invitational
Scholar Fellowship in Residence
at the Mandel Center for Advanced
Holocaust studies at the United States
Holocaust memorial museum in Washington DC
for the 2014-2015 Academic Year. The
Shoshana Shier distinguished visiting
professor at the Anne Tanenbaum Center for
Jewish studies at the University of
Toronto in Fall 2016 and most recently
Jean & Samuel Frankel Center for
Judaic Studies, the University of
Michigan. He was awarded the Shaul Ben-Simhon
prize for the study of North
African Jewry by Ben-Gurion University of
the Negev and the World Organization of
North African Jewry in 2018. Professor
Schroeter is the author of numerous
books and articles on the history of
Morocco and Jews of the Islamic World.
These books include among others The
Sultan's Jew: Morocco and the Sephardic
World;
Jewish culture and Society in North
Africa;
and Merchants of Essaouira: Urban society
and imperialism in
Southwestern Morocco 1844-1886 which
this is and and this book's earned the
translation of this book received the
Moulay Rachid National
Book Prize for the best translated book
of the year in Morocco.
Dr Schroeter is interested in the
history of the Jews of the Muslim and
Mediterranean worlds with a particular
focus on the Jews of Morocco. His
research focuses on the Jews of the
maghreb from the 15th century during the
20th centuries. Dr Schroeter seeks to
understand how Jewish cultures and
identities or constitute and transformed
beginning with the mass immigration of
Jews from Spain to North Africa in the
15th century and paying attention to the
continuous interactions between
different parts of the Mediterranean
diaspora until the late 18th century. He
researches the encounter of the Jews of
Morocco with Europe in the period of
Europe of European expansion and
colonialism with the Maghreb in 19 and
20th Centuries with a particular
attention to French colonialism and its
impacts on both urban and rural Jewish
communities. And with that I would like
to invite Dr Schroeter to talk to us
today about
The Colonial Dhimmi: Islamic Sovereignty
and the Making of the Indigenous Jew in
Protectorate Morocco.
You've really raised the bar very high. I
don't know if I can fulfill everyone's
expectations after a very generous
uh introduction but I do want to also
thank um Ali and the Center for Bear Eastern
studies and all those who have uh
helped you know put on this really
interesting and excellent uh lecture
series and welcome everyone.
I'm glad to see the so many
students uh also uh turning out for this
for this occasion.
Um thank you. Okay
so I won't get distracted,
the screen.
Let's see I'm sorry. okay
thank you.
all right yeah before I begin I want to
preface uh my remarks by saying this is
still a part of a work in progress, a
piece at least of the work in progress
that uh that I'm working on with Aomar
um and you'll you'll hear a bit more
about uh about this project in the
course of uh discussing this particular
subject which I want to focus on today
on uh on what I call The Colonial Dhimmi.
And I'll hopefully I'll explain why I sort of
if I had to coin that term to
describe
um the discussion or a subject that I'll
be talking about.
Um so in June 1941 when the news reached Morocco of the
implementation of the by the Vichy
government, of the revised and much more
severe statute of the Jews, Moroccan
Jewish leaders were in panic.
The lives and livelihoods of the entire
Jewish community of Morocco threatened
by the impending legislation
soon to be implemented by the French
protectorate authorities.
Leaders of Moroccan jewry turned to
the sultan Sidi Mohammed bin Yusef later
Better known as Muhammad V.
They turned to him for his help invoking
their status as dhimmi, indigenous
Moroccan subjects of the Muslim ruler.
The anti-jewish statutes modeled on the
Nazi Nuremberg race laws aimed at
marginalizing Jews from society and the
economy. So with the fall of France and
the establishment of the collaborationist
Vichy government,
most of France's colonies became a de
facto part of the Vichy regime. And the
Jews and the French protective Morocco
the largest Jewish Community uh in the
French Empire uh were subject to Vichy legislation at
the metropole. But Morocco was in
accordance to the Treaty of 1912 that
established the protectorate
a sovereign country or in theory, a
sovereign country ruled by
um by the sultan, an Islamic ruler of the
Alawite dynasty founded in the 17th
century, a Sharif descended of the prophet.
The preservation of the Dynasty and the
staging of a figurehead Monarch was
used to legitimize the protectorate and to
camouflage violence and exploitation of
France's occupation of the country.
To maintain the semblance of sovereignty,
all legislation on a national level had
to be signed by Royal Dahir as a
Sultan's edicts were called.
The Sultan's signature on laws drafted
by the French protectorate authorities as
the Sine qua non, the dynasty's existence
or continued existence.
Statute of the Jews was no exception and
it needed to be first adapted in Morocco by
dahir, part of Morocco's official
legislation.
The first dahir of
thank you
see how do I navigate to the next slide?
Oh there we go, sorry.
I'm not friends with technology.
Technology is not friends with me.
So what you're looking at is the first
adapted dahir of 1940 which was an
adaptation in Morocco of the
Metropolitan statute of the Jews
um and this was certainly alarming
enough.
Um it stipulated the removal of Jews
from range of professions and civil
service jobs
but in part because of the lackluster
support of the legislation by The
Residency- The Residency is what we what
refers to the resident General and his
offices and administration.
The French authorities actually
procrastinated in carrying out the
anti-jewish measures.
The steps that were taken uh following
the 1940 dahir had an negligible
impact on most of the Jewish population
who are likely much more concerned about
all the hardships and shortages
affecting the entire population during wartime.
The more severe stipulations of the 1941
statute and legislation that followed
was much more alarming as it aimed at
further defining and expanding the web
of excluded professions and eventually
stripping the Jews of their wealth and
expropriating their property and businesses,
aryanizing the economy as it was as it
was called.
So as a protectorate authorities were
deliberating about how and when to adapt
the revised Statute in Morocco, the Jews
turned the sultan to protect them.
How the sultan responded to the
situation is told and retold until today.
And as The Story Goes Muhammad the fifth
defied the French authorities
repudiating the racist anti-jewish laws
by asserting that Jews were under his
protection and that he made no
distinction between his subjects.
Enduring significance of the story of
the good Muslim King
is in its adaptability to the changing
political context of Morocco's
transitions since World War II– The
anti-colonial Struggle, Independence, and
Morocco's positioning itself in the Middle East
Sahara and in the international arena.
The story and the contested debates
about its historicity also reflect the
politics of identity of Moroccan Jews in
the formation of a global diaspora. And
these are things which we will be
exploring at Great length in our book.
Today's talk is a kind of prequel to The
Story of the Savior King that was being
told– that was first being told when
Jewish leaders appealed the sultan as
Dhimmi subjects in 1941.
Well admittedly I was rather surprised
to find that Jews invoked their status
as dhimmi in supplication to the
monarch or in the subsequent discourse
surrounding the story. The language of
equality and citizenship is used. So the
Islamic concept of the dhimmi literally
implies a protective person under a kind
of contract of protection known as the
Dhimma which is guaranteed by the Muslim rulers
the people of the book
that nonetheless was predicated on their
acceptance of an inferior and separate
status from Muslims, not equality.
Citizenship as such.
But this arrangement one could say it
guaranteed a large measure of stability
and security for Jews in Morocco and
throughout the Islamic world for much of
history as the protection of the dhimmi
this responsibility of the ruler. Indeed
it was really a sign of the strength of
ruler's ability to protect his dhimmi
subjects.
Yet in contrast
the discrimination of Jews
uh in Morocco under Islamic rule as it
was perceived or represented by
Europeans was one of the pretexts for
foreign interventions. It has therefore
been presumed that the modern uh and
reformed monarchy under the supposed
tutelage of France would have repudiated the
discriminatory dhimmi laws
and would have instituted the idea of
citizenship based on the principle of
equality for all Moroccan subjects.
In invoking their status as dhimmi,
Jewish leaders were in effect saying
that France was no longer able to offer
the protection promised by the
protectorate authorities.
In a secret memorandum submitted by two
French high French officials to the
resident General, it was reported that
Jewish leaders quote, refrained from
questioning the legal ground of
anti-jewish laws because of their
unwavering Devotion to France knowing
that his majesty the sultan would be
violating Islamic law if he were to
ratify by dahir measures contrary to the
letter and spirit of the Quran.
Christensen Jews can in effect live in
Muslim territory and exercise all of the
non-canonical meaning non-islamic
occupations provided that they pay taxes
and respect the Muslim religion. In
effect the definition of the dhimmi.
The Vichy anti-jewish laws
fundamentally exposed the fiction that
Morocco was an independent sovereign
state by questioning the religious
Authority invested in the sultan as
Islamic ruler whose Duty was to protect
his dhimmi subjects. Loyalty or at least
acceptance by uh acceptance of France as
the protecting power
um was dependent on the extent to which
the Islamic ruler was seen as exercising
his moral religious authority.
The French officials were anxious about
the potential destabilization of the
system that might result from the
issuance the Royal dahir of the
anti-jewish laws.
In referring to the Islamic dhimma system
in all but name as fears were mounting
with the new wave of anti-jewish
legislation, the French were justifying
their actions by the belief that the
Jews understood their position as what I
call colonial dhimmis.
Following the collapse of the Vichy
regime Moroccan, Jewish leaders again
restored their allegiance to Republican
France while understanding that this was
a privilege that they could could enjoy
on condition that they remained Colonial
dhimmis, indigenous Moroccan subjects of
the Islamic Sovereign in the French
Empire, not citizens of France.
But in the Nationalist struggle after
World War II when Muhammad V emerged as
the unifying figure who led Morocco to
Independence, the story of how the sultan
had courageously protected the Jews
during the Vichy regime became part of
the Nationalist anti-colonial narrative
and it subsequently allowed Jews to
imagine themselves as part of the
Moroccan nation owing to the unwavering
protection of the pious Islamic King. As
part of the national narrative,
the story emblemized that Morocco had
since ancient times been a place of
Refuge for Jews and that the Alawite
Kings had always been solicitous to the
welfare of their Jewish subjects
and that this was reciprocated by the
timeless veneration of Jews for the
Moroccan monarchy. The symbiotic bond
between the Moroccan rulers and the Jews
continued seamlessly through the colonial and
post-independence period and follow the
the Moroccan Jews into into the Moroccan
Jewish diaspora from Ashdod to Paris
from Caracas to Buenos Aires from
Montreal to yes to Los Angeles. And
actually thank you Aomar for sharing this
Photograph but you see a picture of that uh
well-known Moroccan Jewish synagogue
Em Habanim with its set up and you see
the Kings, the three kings since
Independence. Mohammed the fifth, uh
the pious King in white uh on your I
guess on your right uh being being
celebrated for an occasion.
Um so the reverence of Moroccan Jews of the
Alawite Kings throughout the Moroccan
Jewish diaspora however contrary to
popular belief is a relatively recent phenomena.
It was produced by the fundamentally
transformative role played by colonial
rule in the making of both the colonial
monarchy and the making of the colonial
Dhimmi as indigenous subjects. And this
largely accounts for the strength of the
monarchy and the attachment of Moroccan
Jews throughout the diaspora to the
kingdom of Morocco to the state.
But if we turn the page backwards to the
second decade of the 20th century
Moroccan Jews would likely have imagined
a very different scenario and future.
After the establishment of the uh of the
protectorate, Moroccan Jewish leaders had
no Illusions about who held the reigns
of power in Morocco.
The chief Rabbi of Fez, Vidal Hasarfaty
adapted in 1918 the traditional prayer.
He who gives salvation to Kings [...]
reciting all the synagogues of Fez on
Saturdays as he put as it's put
here to exalt and magnify and lift up
higher the government of France. May its
mighty glory be exalted. Dismissive to
all the rabbis of all the congregations
of Fez he explains that the prayer
traditionally for a king is for the
government of France, a Republic. And the
Jewish people are now under its protection.
Nowhere in his message nor in the
formulaic prayer for government was the
reigning sultan, Moulai Youssef
mentioned even though the Jews were his subject.
There's a picture of Moulai Youssef.
I tried to find the picture where it is
where he wasn't scowling but I guess
that was his typical
um look or at least how he was captured
um.
So, need not be necessarily a
reflection of this personality.
Okay so what I would say is this was not so much
rejection of the sultan but a clear
recognition that the sultan no longer
will get power in the country and thus
was no longer able to protect the Jewish
community. So apart from some elite
Jewish artisans who continued to work in
the palace and other Jews who could reap
benefit from maintaining a special
connection to the monarchy which
remained after all an important
institution for colonial rule,
Sultan Youssef had become all but
irrelevant to the leaders of the Jewish
community and the Jewish masses for the
strong bond and the pre-colonial period
between the Alawite Dynasty and the Jewish community
mediated by Jewish leaders was based on
reciprocity and interdependency. Jews performed important
functions for the ruler who is duty
bound to protect his dhimmi subjects. The
more powerful the Monarch able to
provide stability and
um um in the country as a whole and to
protect his subjects the stronger the
relationship um between the monarchy and the Jews.
Somewhat of a you could say even of a
truism you could say this system. But the
system was undermined by the French
occupation and the disempowering of the
monarchy and the protectorate system.
Just for for those who don't know this
history but during the
protectorate of Morocco from 1912 to
1956 the Sultan of the Alawite dynasty was
under the control and the authority of
the French resident General and the
administration, the country is divided
into three zones– a French
and Spanish protectorate established in
1912 in an international zone of Tangier
that formally came into being in 1923.
Um the preservation of the uh Alawite
dynasty was a cornerstone of uh Colonial
policy in Morocco devised by the first
resident General Hubert Lyautey, the key
architect of the Moroccan protectorate
system. So there you can see a picture
then already Lyautey I guess visiting
visiting Morocco
with the newer resident General and then
you see the young Sultan uh Mohammed V
and his uh grand vizier Muhammad El Mokri
Lived through the pre-colonial
independence period uh
that that I think he passed away in 1957
at the ripe
old age of not sure. If anyone knows,
exactly over a hundred for sure.
Um so this system right the protectorate
system was based on the theory as I said
that Morocco was a sovereign country that
needed the um tutelage of France protectrice,
the protecting power that would restore
stability and help modernize the country,
French created a kind of neo-[...] with
sharifian offices representing the
various sections of the government
bureaucracy. It served as a kind of
facade of sovereignty so they had
uh right uh various offices and but then
in control, truly where it was the
residency in the French civilian and
military offices.
By maintaining the sultan with governing
institutions under the guise of indirect
rule, the French protectorates sought
discreetly to rule the country while
gaining the acceptance of the Moroccan
population. It could also help legitimize
French Supremacy over all of Morocco
including the Spanish protectorate
as well.
Um for all Moroccans were considered
part of this sovereign country under the
reigning Alleyway monarch.
Um the the Moroccan Sultan was also represented as a symbol
for Islam and was very important for
France's larger French
imperial Islamic policy. And here
famously uh they built a uh a mosque
still there today because the
Grand Mosque of Paris was inaugurated in
1926. You see the uh Sultan
um there as well and again
the visit of um
of the uh um of the sultan. So still the young
Mohammed Ben Youssef uh and you have the
different sort of officials of uh uh
protocol. um and the rector of the mosque there
then Benghabrit
Uh as well so so it's a kind of staging
you could say uh and and really uh it
kind of exploitation of the symbol of
this this holy figure, this uh
figurehead Monarch as a way to really
gain uh uh authority in a sense or over
over the larger world,
larger Islamic world and French
particular role uh in
um representing itself as as uh as a
sort of protector and respecter of Islam.
The Jews were very much a part of the
system also of this colonial system. And
many of the educated elite uh who had
benefit especially those who had
benefited from the expanding network of
the Alliance Universelle and other
Jewish leaders and saw their interests
tied to France hoped to see French
citizenship granted to the Jews which
was a case in Algeria that the Cremieux
decree of 1870. But the French had no
intention of expanding uh the privilege
of citizenship to Moroccan Jews as a
whole and to repeat what had become uh
seen as a grave error by uh in
Algeria and in much of the colonialist
thinking. You could say uh the Cremieux
decree had been such a you know had been
a mistake. It had disrupted the hierarchy
and it provoked discord and resentment
towards colonial rule by the Muslim
majority population. And so instead when
they French moved into Tunisia and then
in Morocco and established the
protectorate, the idea of granting Jewish
citizenship en masse was out of the
question for the French Administration
and so Morocco, Moroccan Jews were to
be were to be defined as indigenous
subjects of the sultan. So it is in this
logic that the French had no reason to
abrogate dhimmi status even if some of the
discriminatory stipulations were
abandoned. Abolishing the dhimma by
decree would not only question the rap
the rationale of refusing French
citizenship to the Jews but it would
disrupt the hierarchy and challenge the
traditional religious prerogatives of
the Sultan of exercise of the Muslim
religion, the very symbol of Moroccan
sovereignty that legitimized the
protectorate.
Making Jews indigenous dhimmi subjects
thus had great symbolic value for the
colonial monarchy a symbol of the Muslim
rulers enduring authority over his
Jewish subjects. In turn, in real terms of
disempowered uh sultanate little
practical or institutional control over
his Jewish subjects. He exercised little
real authority in the reformed judicial
system. There was no longer any effective
mechanism for which Jews could appeal to
the sultan to intercede on their behalf
with claims of injustice as they had
been able to do in the past.
Neither was there an effective way for
appealing to the French authorities. The
Affairs of the Jewish Community were
regulated by dahirs
that implemented reforms of the Jewish
Community but came at the initiative of
the of the residency not the sultan. For
the Jews being dhimmi subjects of a
disempowered sultan meant Jews
themselves were disempowered.
As subjects of the sultan Jews were
considered to be Moroccan citizens but
with no clear idea what that meant when
the protectorate began uh in Morocco
there was no legal concept of
citizenship. French jurists came to
determine uh that the legal precedent
for citizenship was the notion of
Perpetual Allegiance, which referred to a
clause um in the Madrid convention uh or
conference or the Treaty of the
conference which was an international
meeting that sought to bring together
the powers to control the abusive system
of protection or capitulations as it was
known in the Ottoman Empire. In this
system native Moroccan Protege of foreign powers might
be exempt from local laws and taxes and
would come under the jurisdiction of the
protecting power. And so a
disproportionate number of these protege
were Jews who enjoyed extra territorial
rights and increasingly as well they
were able to obtain uh foreign
nationality uh right and and could then
return to Morocco
um as foreign nationals rather than as
dhimmi subjects.
So there's a clause here that you're
looking at of the convention that
stipulated that after a period of time
Moroccan subjects naturalized abroad and
returning to Morocco would have to abide
by Moroccan law.
So that's the territorial rights enjoyed
by Moroccan Jews was a constant source
of friction between Morocco and the
foreign powers in the 19th century and
on a symbolic level this was
significant since Jews, as dhimmis were
already proteges a sense of Islamic
ruler. And when confided with foreign
protection the hierarchical system was
challenged.
Already Jews were positioned as
intermediaries with Europe and Moroccan
Jewish Elites navigated between the
advantageous and privileged ties with
the sultan and the new opportunities
that the connections to foreigners
facilitated. For the European powers and
European Merchants Jews were used to
penetrate and dominate Morocco
politically and economically for the
sultan [...]
and the ulama, this amounted to a
grave threat to Moroccan sovereignty. To
counterbalance this challenge, the
Sultans ,especially under Moulay Hassan
the first um whose Reign was 1873-1894.
um we sought to consolidate the Royal
alliance with the Jews and incentivized
Jews not the sidestep Sultan's authority.
By uh the increasing number of personal
um dahirs or writs of protection that
Moulay Hassan the first conferred to
influential Jews, some of whom were also
proteges of foreign power, was part of a
strategy to demonstrate his solicitude
while at the same time consolidate his
hold on the Jewish community and in
this manner, the question of dhimmi status
of the Jews became entangled in the very
definition of sovereignty which
anticipated I would argue the creation
of the colonial monarchy.
For the Moroccan rulers,
the dhimma contract was integral to the
Islamic legal and moral code that
provided stability as they saw it. And
protection of non-muslims within the
Islamic State insured by the ruler as
arbiter of justice.
For the foreign powers the inequities of
Islamic law and the discrimination
against the Jews as it was perceived and
represented became a justification for
intervention and a pretext for expanding
the system of protection.
European Jews and their organizations
exercising their own new bound rights as
citizens and post emancipation Europe
sought to ameliorate the conditions of
their co-religionists in the Middle East
and North Africa through the language of
emancipation.
Well the goals of European Jews and
European governments differed. They did
join forces in highlighting the
oppression of the Jews reporting on
incidents of violence and arbitrary
actions taken by Muslim authorities as a
justification intervention. An increasing
number of Jews including in the interior
of the country turned simultaneously to
Jewish organizations and to the sultan
to request intervention on their behalf.
The persecution of the Jews of Morocco
as it was perceived and represented
had become internationalized and a
justification for more intervention of
the foreign powers. These pressures from
the Moroccan government were in
conjunction with efforts by the European
powers with the support and sometimes
the initiative European Jews across the
Middle East and North Africa to reform
the legal system and transform the
status of religious minorities. The
Ottoman Empire, a few of the large
Christian minorities whose loyalties
were questioned and who were often tied
to the interests of European states, the
incentive to eliminate the dhimmi status
was much greater than in Morocco not
only as a result of foreign pressures
but by reformers in the Ottoman Empire
were interested in strengthening the
Empire from within. And so by the mid
19th century, dhimmi status was
eliminated by decree in the Ottoman
Empire, by the semi-autonomous dynasty of the khedives
in Egypt, by the Ḥusaynid dynasty of
Tunisia, a country nominally part of the
Ottoman Empire. And under foreign
pressure to implement the reforms the
so-called Tanzimat reforms of the Ottoman Empire.
European Jews were deeply involved in
these efforts and in the late uh by the
late 19th century, Morocco seemed like an
outlier in maintaining the old system.
Since the Damascus affair of 1840, the
leader of the British Jewish community
sir Moses Montefiore
um was at the forefront of the ongoing
International campaign that sought to
defend Jews from persecution in foreign
lands. His active involvement in the
interest and Welfare of co-religionists
in the Muslim World led this
octogenarian Jewish leader to Morocco in
the winter of 1863 to 1864 following an
incident involving the execution of a
Jewish boy in the Atlantic coastal town
of [...], a story that's well well known
maybe to many of you and told and retold.
He meets with the sultan in Marrakesh
Mohammed IV and obtains a dahir which you see
here, which ordered Muslim governing
authorities to treat the Jews
with justice in accordance with the Sharia.
The sultan wish to placate Montefiore
and the foreign powers who backed him up
by issuing uh you know by the issuing of
the of of the dahir and deploying to a
certain extent the liberal language of
equality familiar to Europeans but at
the same time, to have affirmed the
existing legal system based on upholding
the uh the dhimma. That's the best way to
ensure Justice. From the point of view of
contemporary Moroccan intellectuals at
the time the dahir had very negative
repercussions and it could be said that
the dahir did result in heightening
tensions between Jews and the
authorities in Morocco and to increase
foreign intervention. The Moroccan
monarchy also realized the extent to
which the Jewish question had become a key
means by which foreign powers encroached
on Moroccan sovereignty. While the Montefiore mission and
dahir he secured from the sultan
became part of the larger historical
Narrative of Jewish emancipation and
empowerment.
Less known is the extent to which the
dahir was used to expand monarchical
power in the words of the dahir into all
of our provinces. [...]
The Montefiore dahir enabled the
sultan to articulate a policy on the
Jewish question based on religious
precepts and the idea that the sultan
had authority over all the Jews in
his realm. It's kind of an innovation in
that sense right, almost like a
proto-national statement of of Royal
authority over all the all the Jews in
in the realm.
um the dahir it should be noted was
not only issue therefore for foreign
consumption but also as a means to
consolidate the [...] the central
government's control of the territories.
And so the dahir was renewed by
Mohammed the fourth successor Moulay Hassan
who faced with the growing
foreign encroachments in centrifugal
forces in Morocco saw it into reign in
powerful Regional Chiefs uh through
military campaigns to confront uh to
collect taxes which included collecting
the jizya, the tax from the Jews. Uh this
involved also exercising control of his
Jewish subjects even in the far-flung
peripheries of the country.
The Montefiore dahir was constantly
invoked by British and then French
Jewish organizations backed by foreign
powers to demand that action be taken uh
when the allegations of maltreatment of
Jews by powerful dynastic Chiefs on the
peripheries were reported when the this
where the sultan exercised little control.
So asserting authority over his Jewish
subjects throughout the country was not
only a way for Hassan the first to
counteract the exploitation uh of the
Jewish question by foreign powers for
imperialist aims but also part and
parcel of a centralizing
proto-nationalist efforts of Hassan the
first strengthening uh the position of
the sultan as protector of the Jews of
the entire country as a reciprocal
relationship based on mutual interests
of the Islamic rule and his Jewish
subjects. So herein really lies the
foundations of the colonial dhimmi during
the period of the protectorate, the
Montefiore dahir as it came to be
known and its renewal uh was still being
invoked by the Jewish Community as the
guarantee that Jews were protected
subjects to the sultan. For it could be
understood as simultaneously based on
the one hand on Islamic precepts upheld
by the Islamic Sovereign and on the
other hand, the liberal principles of
equality supervised by the colonial
powers that served the French
Administration and Authority well as a
deflection from France being obligated
to extend rights to the Jews. It was the
Islamic ruler uh and and the [...]
officials were responsible for the
welfare of Moroccan Jews as indigenous
subjects the sultan under the auspices
of the colonial authorities. And for this
reason the Montefiore dahir remained one
of the very few pre-colonial dahirs of
any sort cited in the protectorate
um for it established the principle that
the sultan was the upholder of justice
for his subject throughout the kingdom
and Jews thus in this way really became
essential elements in defining the
nation and in the creation of a modern
monarchy in the colonial period. At least
I would make that argument.
None of this would have been evident
however in 1918 when Rabbi Vidal
Hasarfaty exhorted Moroccan Jewry to
recite the traditional prayer to the
French, a rational decision in the wake
of the French conquest of Morocco still
underway and with the
disempowerment of the monarchy. Yet as
colonial dhimmis, Jews lost many of the
powers they had enjoyed in the older
hierarchical system.
So the the French sought to replace the
authority of religious institutions of
which the sultan traditionally upheld
such as reducing the powers of the
Sharia courts uh or put it and then
putting them under their control.
The jurisdiction of the Sharia courts
were reduced basically to matters of
personal status. Well the power of the [...]
courts or authorities were
expanded but then under the surveillance
and controls of the civilian and Military
controllers administrators. And as
Colonial dhimmis, Jews were also greatly at
disadvantage in the system. Just like the
Sharia courts Powers were reduced. So
were the rabbinical courts and reduced
at least in theory only to religious
um cult and personal status matters. And
again also under the surveillance of the
French authorities, they also reduce or
put under their controlled local
community councils right who also had
reduced authority. A new position the
Inspector General of Jewish institutions
was created in 1919, an office of the
Department of Sharifian Affairs. The
pro French Jewish notable Yahya Zagury
was appointed to this post and served
for many years as principal advisor for
the French to control Jewish Affairs.
Zagury in a sense in a way was the
symbolic parallel of the Court Jew of
pre-colonial times serving instead as
intermediary between the French
government and the Jewish community.
So the system obviously greatly limited
the authority of the autonomous immunity
the Jews had enjoyed as dhimmi subjects to
the sultan
um you know as as we've talked about and
the whole the whole [...] court system
that was created and run by Muslim who
ruled on many legal matters on now took
charge of matters formally under the
jurisdiction of the rabbinical courts. So
denied French civil status, Jews could
not take full advantage of the French
courts unless they were French citizens.
It's therefore no surprise the Jewish
leaders saw little to gain and remaining
indigenous subjects of the sultan and
most continued to hope and advocate for
change of status that would allow them
to obtain political rights reserved to
French citizens.
So when Moulai Youssef died in 1927
there was hardly an echo in the Jewish
Community though perhaps there was some
pleading concern based on collective
memory of the Jewish community that
inter regnums could create habit for the
Jews. The quick selection of Mohammed bin
Yusef and his coronation alleviated any
fears the community had. It was of course
expected by the French authorities the
Jewish leaders would pay their respects
for the deceased Sultan and participate
in the ceremonial inauguration of
Muhammad V. Jewish notables in Fez came
to present their condolences to the
palace and [...]
together for the procession of wisdom
notables and ulamma leaders
representatives of the Jewish Community
were present of the elaborate coronation
ceremonies in Rabat.
For the Jewish leaders and subjects, the
Sultan celebrating the inauguration of
the reign of Mohammed bin Yusef in
1927 was a recognition that the colonial
monarchy was an extension of French
power in Morocco. Yet in the collective
imagination of rock and jury the
ascension of Mohammed V in 1927 was
greeted with an outpouring of joy by
Jews throughout the kingdom, a
celebration of the glorious reign of the
king whose love and concern for the Jews
never wavered.
The French reliance on the monarchy as a
symbol of Moroccan sovereignty to
legitimized Colonial domination
eventually came back to haunt them. The
colonial monarchy itself under Muhammad
V was able to use the symbolic Capital
invested in his office to
turn the tables and build national
political power that eventually rid
Morocco of colonial rule. This process
began in the 1930s, so not initially at
the instigation of the young and still
politically inexperienced Sultan. It was
rather the incipient nationalist
movement that adopted for itself the
colonial monarchy as the popular symbol
of national unity in order to press
their demands to the French authorities
for greater autonomy and power for all
Moroccan subjects of the sultan, Muslims
and Jews. The watershed moment which is
well known to everyone a student of Moroccan
history uh for the Nationalist
movement came in 1930 following the
promulgation of a law popularly known as
the Berber decree.
The law was the culmination of a Berber
uh policy that sought to separate the
Arabs from the jurisdiction of the
Berber or as as we as the preferred term
today is the Amazigh population which
represented at least half of the
population of the country. In particular
it mandated that the French Napoleonic
Code would replace the Sharia for
criminal matters and for the emerging
nationalist movement, this measure
blatantly exposed the French aim to sow
deeper divisions in the country pursuing
a policy that was an affront to all
Muslims. It also revealed the French
facade of respecting Islam, articulated
through the performance of the sultan,
commander of the faithful and descendant
of the prophet.
Enlisting the sultan is the symbol to
the Nationalist cause, this was a
tremendous tremendous value to the
nationalists. The sultan thus came to be
identified with the the nation
and thus his adoption is a national symbol uh in
the struggle for autonomy, ultimately for
Independence. There's certainly more than a small measure of
irony that it was the French themselves
that enabled the nationalists to rally
their movement around the figure of the
sultan by their by the fact that the
French themselves are promoting the
Prestige of the monarchy.
In contrast to the nationalists the
French of course used the symbolism of
the sultan to placate the pop uh the the
population to conceal their true
intentions of domination and with the
larger interest in their domination of
the larger French Empire with its
millions of Muslims that colonized
Muslims in different parts of the world.
But so the result of this in a sense was
a kind of discursive battle between the
residency and the nationalists over the
symbols of the monarchy. The result of
the struggle over who owned the monarchy
was that both sides for contrary
purposes elevated the prestige of the
sultan among the Moroccan population.
So in this battle over the monarchy
symbolism, Jews represented for both
sides important symbolic components of
the indigenous Moroccan population both
the nationalists and the protectorate
authorities were opposed to the Jews'
upward mobility and their quest to
acquire French citizenship. Both were
dependent on the same definition of Moroccan
nationality based on the
principle of perpetual allegiance to the
sultan. However the French goal
encountering Jewish claims for French
naturalization is citizenship always
justified by the principle of perpetual
allegiance was to deny all Moroccans all
Moroccans political rights and to
further consolidate colonial rule.
The nationalists opposed Jews seeking
foreign nationality for the opposite reason.
Strengthening Moroccan sovereignty and
Independence through the symbol of the
sultan as as National unifier of all his
subjects, Muslims and Jews, as well.
So seizing on the momentum
produced by a growing and large protest
movement that began in 1930,
the nationalists rallied around the
sultan as the unifying symbol of the
nation to push for reforms and this was
represented in the national press that
was launched in 1933. L'Action du peuple
published in Fez succeeded by La Volonté des pauvres.
The call for an official holiday on November
18th to Mark the Ascension of Muhammad V
was launched in October of 1933. You can
see this in the publication of L'Action du Peuple
with the picture of the
sultan. So it was nationalist paper later
shut down by the authorities.
So though the protectorate authorities were
alarmed by the militancy of the newly
founded nationalist party. They could
hardly ignore the call to celebrate the
sultan. It was the symbol again there's a
symbol that they used of Moroccan
sovereignty in the bedrock of
legitimizing the protectorate. Shortly
thereafter the first Throne day
um was authorized and promoted by the
protectorate authorities.
um and and the that was the first Throne
Day actually was authorized by The
Authority but then it was made official
um the following year uh it was uh as as
a national as a kind of national holiday.
But for the nationalists it became a
site for rallying anti-colonial protests
Well the French could only attempt to
harness it for their own purposes by
attempting to control the events that
took place on the annual occasion when
it was held. The contest between the
nationalists and The Residency and
appropriating the symbol of the sultan
uh for the contrary this is continued
throughout the 1930s and the national
anti-colonial protests accelerated as
did efforts by the French authorities
to suppress the movement. Yet the very
contest of its symbolism of the monarchy
elevated the statue of this of the
sultan among the population on the
national scale and so the throne day [...]
um
yeah
uh itself became an elaborate annual
celebration with the day off work, music
was played in the souks, which were
decorated with sharifian and French
flags and banners. And carpets were
spread out into the streets. In the main
cities there were uh where there were
royal residences the French civil and
military authorities accompanied by the
pashas and [...] officials marched in
procession through the different
quarters of the Town including the mellahs
to officially participate in the
festivities and delegations of officials
and notables paid their respects to
members of the royal family with some
charitable societies distributing goods
clothing and money to the poor.
It was in the interests of both the
nationalists and the residency, that
Moroccan Jews would take notice of the
elevated status of Mohammed bin Yusef
Although for different reasons. The
Arabic language and pro-nationalist
monthly magazine Majallat al-Maghrib
translated an article that appeared in
the French language press,
a newspaper The French Press
representing the interests of the
European settler community. Uh and that
wrote um sorry and and I translate here,
The president of the Jewish community of
Rabat on the occasion of Throne day sent
instructions to the community to recite
the prayer of "Kings"– right the previously
mentioned prayer– an homage to his
majesty the sultan.
It is known that His Highness is much
beloved by all Moroccan Jews who take
every opportunity to show their strong
attachment to him the aforementioned prayer was recited in
every synagogue in great celebration at
the moment that the Scrolls of the
Mosaic law were taken from the ark and
the faithful stood reverently and chanted
amen from the depths of their heart.
The article then includes a translation
of the prayer itself whether this marked
a turning point in which henceforth the
Jews in Morocco in a national scale
began again to recite the traditional
blessing for the government on [...]
right
And the name of the sultan is unknown.
However the fact that the article uh
appeared in this French press in the [...]
Marocaine with a translation of the
prayer. Uh actually I never was able to
find the original French article but I'm
assuming it's uh it's true.
um
but it demonstrated that the Jewish
leadership in Rabat was interested in
encouraging Jewish communities
throughout Morocco to participate in
showing their allegiance to the sultan
and it was important to demonstrate this
to the French authorities if only
um if only to prove their continued
loyalty to France by accepting their
status as indigenous Jews confided on
them by the French. Otherwise why run the
article which could only have been
written with the collaboration of Jewish
informants.
Significantly as well, the article also
appeared in the Arabic language press
that was sympathetic to the goals of the
nationalists whose initiative was the
reason that you know that the Throne Day
was inaugurated in the first place.
For the nationalists demonstrating the
Jews were loyal subjects to the sultan
was also very important to them if only
as a counter the hegemonic control of
the colonial monarchy by the by the
French.
What can be certain is that the French
controlled performance of the ceremonies
of Throne day and the delegations of
Jewish notables including lay and
religious leaders were annually a part
of the celebrations and participation
and participated in some of the official
processions which included meandering
through the mellahs attending receptions
with Muslim and French civil and
Military authorities of the Sultan's
palaces.
The formal participation of Jews in the
uh in this in the um ceremonial
ceremonial aspects of Throne day
indicated that in the vertical ties that
Jewish leaders sought to consolidate the
highest authorities in the land the
figurehead Sultan had become all the
more important in the colonial system.
So for the the mass of uh of Jews,
stop the oh
congratulations me.
Um anyway so for the mass of Jews, there was very
little evidence about how the attitude
towards the monarchy may have shifted in
the 1930s, still still looking.
But there is some indication at least to
think that the elevation of the Sultan's
prestige on a national scale, his image
of of the infallible and pious figure
may have reignited the smoldering
memories of the benevolent and
protective Monarch who could bring
Improvement to the lives of the many [...]
This historical memory was sustained by
the French who created a symbolic
monarchy a sultan who was above politics,
his only concern being the welfare of
his subjects both Muslims and Jews.
And if we think about against the dismal
landscape of the 1930s with economic
depression growing incidents of violence
and altercations between Muslims and
Jews, the rise of the Third Reich
political Strife in Palestine that was
galvanizing the Arab world including
Moroccan nationalists, the increasing
anti-Semitism of European settlers
who now their number actually surpassed
the total Jewish population of the
country and the hostility towards the
Jews of at least some in the French
Administration, the symbol of the
irreproachable benevolent Sultan
promoted by both the French and the
nationalists helped the Jews to imagine
their place in the emerging nation.
As I think um the stage was set for the story to
unfold of Muhammad V assuring the
protection of his Jewish subjects when a
weakened France abdicated their
responsibility that defined the
protectorate and
at least metaphorically speaking broke
the colonial dhimma contract. In the
vacuum, the Jews turned to the sultan and
the prestige the monarchy to invoke
their status as dhimmis protected by
the good Muslim King Mohammed V. Thank you.