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In May 1948,
Arab armies launched their war against the new
State of Israel. Sultan Mohammed V declared his
support for the Arabs. With the war, Moroccan
nationalists found a cause that could unite
Moroccans without giving the appearance that the
real enemy was the French Government, and the
ultimate goal Moroccan independence. As part of
this campaign, some nationalists organized a
boycott of Moroccan Jewish merchants, whom they
identified as Zionists. Such a campaign, along
with minimal efforts to recruit Jews into the
nationalist struggle, created a feeling of
isolation among many Moroccan Jews.
In response to anti-Jewish rhetoric, Sultan
Mohammed V warned Muslims not to hurt Moroccan
Jews, reminding them that Jews had always been
protected in Morocco and had always showed their
devotion to the Throne. He also warned Moroccan
Jews not to support Zionists. He emphasized that
Jews were well-treated Moroccan subjects with the
obligation to support the Sultan, and he voiced
support for other Arab leaders. The speech was
read in all synagogues.
Tensions associated with the Israeli-Arab War and
the beginnings of Moroccan Jewish emigration to
Israel contributed to two pogroms in the eastern
towns of Oujda and Djerrada in June 1948. The
pogroms, which were not well controlled by the
French authorities, resulted in 8 deaths, 600
wounded, and 900 homeless in the Jewish community
of Oujda. In Djerrada, there were 39 dead and 44
wounded. The Pacha of Oujda expressed his regrets
about these incidents and met with each victim's
family. Following these gestures, he was
attacked violently in Oujda's Grand Mosque.
Even though the nationalists supported the
Palestinian struggle and opposed Moroccan Jewish
support for Israel, they nevertheless sought
World Jewish support for Moroccan independence.
In 1955, nationalist leaders from the Istiqlal
Party met with the World Jewish Congress in
efforts to seek American support for Moroccan
independence. At the meeting, they stated their
intention to guarantee the liberty of Moroccan
Jews and their equality with other citizens as
well as the participation of Jews in the
Government.
With the founding of the State of Israel in 1948,
some Moroccan Jews decided to emigrate to Israel.
They emigrated both during the period before
Moroccan independence in 1956, when emigration to
Israel was legal, as well as from 1956 until
1961, when it was illegal. As a result, the
Jewish population dropped from 218,000 in 1952 to
162,000 in 1960, according to Government
censuses.

Jews
who acted as consuls of foreign states together with prominent
local leaders,
at
a garden party in honor of the second anniversary of Morocco's
independence.
Tetuan,
1958.
Beth
Hatefutsoth Photo Archive
courtesy
of Israel Salomon, Tel Aviv
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