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JEWS IN MOROCCAN HISTORY
From the Beginning to the Arab Conquest
The beginnings of the Jewish community in Morocco are the
subject of many legends. Some say that Jews arrived after the
destruction of the First Temple of Solomon. Others have
reported that Jews came overland from Yemen to found a kingdom
in Morocco's desert oases. It is generally agreed, however,
that Jews arrived with Phoenician traders hundreds of years
before the Christian era. The two peoples lived together in
some of the coastal settlements that are today known as
Tangier, Rabat and Essaouira.
Jews were clearly part of the Roman cities that developed in
the first century. Many of them moved into Morocco by
migrating westward along the Mediterranean coast from the
large Jewish center in Carthage (Tunisia). Traces of Jewish
life can be found in Volubilis, the large excavated city near
Meknes. Volubilis was the most Western settlement of the Roman
Empire.
Other Jews moved inland from Cyrenaica (Libya), converted
Berber tribes, and established settlements in the foothills,
mountains and desert oases of Algeria and Morocco. Some of
these Jews did not recognize the authority of the Talmud, as
evidenced by the writings of religious leaders in Sijilmassa,
near today's desert oasis town of Rissani.
By the seventh century, the Byzantine Roman hold on Morocco
was extremely weak. Berber tribes resisted the invading Arab
armies. A Jewish woman, the Kahina (the Priestess), is reputed
to have led the Berber resistance in Algeria and Morocco and
slowed down the Arabs' westward movement through burning crops
and evacuating villages. By the year 732, the Arabs had
established an empire extending to Morocco and Spain.

Menorah found in Volubilis
Home Page
Arab and
Berber Dynasties From the 7th to the 17th Century
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