Map
Introduction
Section 1. Political and Social Interactions
Chapter 1: Refuge in Morocco after 1492: From Iberian Outcast to Moroccan Dhimmi
Jane S. Gerber
Chapter 2: Jews and the Moroccan Monarchy in the Age of Imperialism
Daniel J. Schroeter
Chapter 3: Sultan Sidi Mohammed ben Youssef and the Jews of Morocco During the Second World War: New Discoveries
Joseph Chetrit
Chapter 4: Centering the Margin: Family Networks, Occupational Mobility and Saharan Jews
Aomar Boum
Chapter 5: Jewish Bodies, Muslim Bodies, and French Medicine in Morocco
Jonathan G. Katz
Section 2. Cultural Commonalities
Chapter 6: Sebaa Ouled Ben Zmirou in Jewish and Muslim Contexts: Return to the Dead and Encounters After Death
José Alberto Rodrigues da Silva Tavim
Chapter 7: Invisible Neighbors: Demonology Between Jews and Muslims in Morocco
Noam Sienna
Chapter 8: A Common Language: Popular Music in Morocco
Vanessa Paloma Elbaz
Chapter 9: The Aḥwash: Articulations of a Shared Amazigh (Berber) Cultural Tradition in Morocco and its Diaspora
Sarah Levin
Section 3. Religious Traditions and Halakhic Developments
Chapter 10: Liturgy: An Overlooked Space in the Moroccan Jewish Musical Map
Edwin Seroussi
Chapter 11: The Image of Morocco in the Poetry of R. David Ben Ḥassin (1727-1792)
André Elbaz
Chapter 12: Muslims and Christians in the Writings of 20th Century Hakhamim of Morocco
David Moshe Biton
Chapter 13: Traveling Between Place and Faith: Moroccan Jews Migrating to the Holy Land in the Nineteenth Century
Michal Ben Ya’akov
Chapter 14: Takkanot Concerning the Inheritances of Wives and Daughters among Moroccan Rabbis in the 15th – 20th Centuries
Moche Amar
Chapter 15: Rabbi Refael ben Dva”sh: Precursor of Moroccan Legal Activity
Elimelech (Melech) Westreich
Section 4. Memoirs in Word and Image
Chapter 16: Memories of Jewish-Muslim Coexistence in the New Mellaḥ of Meknes and Jewish Heritage Conservation in Post-Colonial Morocco
Ahmed Chouari
Chapter 17: Growing up in the Mellaḥ of Taroudant: Spaces, Time, Acquaintances and Rupture. A Memoir with Two Poems
Joseph Chetrit
Chapter 18: Delacroix and the Jews of Morocco
Maurice Arama
Photo Essay
About the Contributors
Drora Arussy is director of the American Sephardi Federation Institute of Jewish Experience.
Joseph Chetrit is professor emeritus of socio-pragmatics, French linguistics, and Judeo-Arabic linguistics at the University of Haifa.
Jane S. Gerber is professor emerita of history and founder and director of the Institute for Sephardic Studies at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.
Capturing the dialectics and historical vicissitudes of
Jewish-Muslim relations in Morocco in all their intricacy and
multivocality is a challenging project. This comprehensive volume,
which brings together the contributions of 18 leading scholars from
a wide gamut of disciplines, faces up to this challenge
admirably.
*Yoram Bilu, Hebrew University*
This volume weaves a rich tapestry of Jewish life in Morocco in
pre-colonial, colonial, and post-colonial times. Topics include the
role played by Jewish exiles from the Iberian Peninsula;
Jewish-Muslim relations; and interaction with the French during the
Protectorate (1912–1956). Developments in popular religion,
folklore, poetry, music, liturgy, and law make this volume a
fascinating introduction to the history and culture of this
important and diverse community in the Islamic world.
*Mark R. Cohen, Princeton University*
Two thrusts have enriched the study of North African Jewish
communities in recent decades. One is the deepening grasp of how
scholarly, mystical, and liturgical developments in other Jewish
centers were absorbed, preserved, and cultivated in the Maghreb.
Second is the expanding appreciation of how Muslim society—both as
the empowered majority and as quotidian neighbors—interpenetrated
Jewish life. Jews and Muslims in Morocco weaves together these
perspectives, providing a striking tapestry that both enhances our
knowledge and invites continued research.
*Harvey Goldberg, Hebrew University*
This collection of studies by some of the world’s leading scholars
from a variety of disciplines offers a wide-ranging peregrination
through Moroccan Jewish history and culture and its intricate and
complex connection with the surrounding Islamic Arab and Berber
cultural matrix. Readers are provided with in-depth, nuanced
expositions of social and political interaction between Moroccan
Jews and non-Jews and their shared cultural elements of language,
literature, music, and popular beliefs and practices. It is a
welcome addition to the growing literature on what was once the
world’s largest non-Ashkenazi Jewish community with a unique and
rich cultural heritage.
*Noam (Norman) A. Stillman, University of Oklahoma*
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