David Asoulin Recounts His Childhood in Tinjdad, Morocco, and His Immigration to Israel, 2018
David Asoulin was born in Tinjdad, Morocco, in 1944 and immigrated to Israel in 1956. Baba Sali was the rabbi of the entire district. There were two communities in Tinjdad - the larger community belonged to Shalom Elkayim and the smaller community belonged to David Asoulin's maternal grandfather, Yehya Malka. David studied at a French school, the teachers were French and the students Jewish and Muslim. In addition, he studied Torah in a Jewish Beit Midrash. Passover was the festival of meat, they slaughtered a cow or a lamb for the Passover sacrifice. At Mimuna they ate green and white - colors for good luck, and muffleta which symbolizes the transition from matzah to bread. The immigration to Israel was sudden. The whole community immigrated almost without selling the fields and properties. "They sent a doctor to check us because they didn't bring sick people to Israel. My father brought the Torah scroll. We traveled through Casablanca, Gibraltar, France, and Haifa. We got off the ship and kissed the ground. From there we were taken to the transit camp (maabara) of Kiryat Gat. We studied in the same class all the new olim, of all ages. Years later I returned to the same school as a history teacher."
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This testimony was produced as part of “Seeing the Voices” – the Israeli national project for the documentation of the heritage of Jews of Arab lands and Iran. The project was initiated by the Israeli Ministry for Social Equality, in cooperation with The Heritage Wing of the Israeli Ministry of Education, The Yad Ben Zvi Institute, and The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot.
ASULIN
(Family Name)Surnames derive from one of many different origins. Sometimes there may be more than one explanation for the same name. These names are probably derived from the Berber geographical term meaning "the rocks/stones", the root of names of numerous places or tribes.
As a Muslim name, it is spelled El-Assouli. As a Jewish name, Azulin is a toponymic (derived from a geographic name of a town, city, region or country). Surnames that are based on place names do not always testify to direct origin from that place, but may indicate an indirect relation between the name-bearer or his ancestors and the place, such as birth place, temporary residence, trade, or family-relatives. This surname is associated with the branch of the Glaoua tribe called Ait Tizguin Ouasouline, located south of the Atlas mountains. Alternatively, it may come from a suburb of the town of Marrakech called Derb Assoul or from an area of the town of Coilo called Azoulin. The earliest record of Asulin and its variants is that of the famous Rabbi Mokhluf Ben Asulin, rabbi of the community of Toshavim in Fez, Morocco, whose signature can be found on the 'takkanah' promulgated by a number of exiled Spanish rabbis in Fez in 1556. Another famous rabbi of this name was Yehuda Ben Mordekhay Asulin, of Debdou, whose signature is found on a document of 1730. In the 18thand 19th centuries, rabbis with this name lived in Safed, Eretz Israel, in Tangiers, Marrakech and other North African centers of Jewish populations. Many Jewish-Berber names are derived from the names of Berber tribes, oases and villages in north and west Africa, while others derive directly from Arabic names, especially nicknames, or are Berber-Arabic names.
Israel (Baba Sali) Abuhatzeira
(Personality)Israel Abuhatzeira also known as the Baba Sali ("The Praying Father" or "Father Israel") (1889-1984), rabbi and kabbalist, born in Tafilalt, Morocco, into a family of famous rabbis. Abuhatzeira was born on the Jewish New Year 5650 (1889) and grew up in a family dedicated to the Torah study and prayer. He was the grandson of the famous Rabbi Yaakov Abuhatzeira and the son of Rabbi Masud Abuhatzeira.
His family lived on a large estate which included a yeshiva where young scholars studied night and day as well as the Beit Din (rabbinical court) headed by his father. As a child, Abuhatzeira studied Torah and Kabbala by day and by night. After his Bar Mitzvah he entered the family yeshiva where he studied with unusual devotion, and he was believed to have been able to perform miracles through his prayers.
Abuhatzeira travelled a number of times to the Land of Israel, the first time in 1922, when he studied at the Yeshiva of Beit El. In 1940 he was named Head of the Beit Din in Arfoud, Morocco. In 1951 he immigrated to Israel, settling in Jerusalem, but left for France. Then he moved to Tunisia and returned to Morocco.
In 1964 Abuhatzeira made alyia again and settled in Yavne, then he moved to Ashkelon and eventually he settled in Netivot in 1970. He became one of the most venerated rabbis in Israel, especially among former immigrants from Morocco.
His funeral in 1984 was attended by some 100.000 people most of whom were his devoted followers. His gravesite in Netivot has become a very popular pilgrimage site.
Tinjdad
(Place)Tinjdad
In Arabic: تينجداد / also Tinejdad, Tinajdad, Tindjadj, Tinejad
A city in Errachidia Province in the Drâa-Tafilalet region, Morocco.
Tinjdad is situated in the Ferkla Valley, a location that facilitates the passage between the adjacent valleys of Dades, Todgha, Draa and Ziz. During the 19th and the first half of the 20th century it srved as a center for a number of small Jewish communities in the surrounding area.
All Jews left the area by mid-1960s, most of them immigrated to Israel.
Musee des Oasis located in Ksar Elkhorbat Oujdid, about 5 km southwest of Tinjdad, displays a number of artifacts depicting the daily life of the former Jewish communities in the Ferkla Valley.
Morocco
(Place)Morocco
المغرب
Kingdom of Morocco المملكة المغربية
21st Century
Estimated Jewish population in 2018: 2,100 out of 35,000,000 (0.006%)
Conseil des Communautés Israelites du Maroc
Phone: 212 522 48 78 51/ 522 29 57 52
Fax: 212 522 48 78 49
Email: ccimsec@gmail.com
HISTORY
The Jews of Morocco
687 | The Jewish Khaleesi
According to Sefer Josippon – a book written in the middle ages, which documents the history of the Jewish people during antiquity – some 30,000 Jews fled after the destruction of the Second Temple to the Maghreb area (Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia), which was at the time inhabited by Berber tribes.
Legend has it that these Jews founded Jewish kingdoms in the vicinity of modern-day Morocco and even caused many of the Berbers to convert to Judaism. Some sources, part historical and part mythical, mention a Jewish queen named Dihya al-Kahina, who headed the resistance to the Arab conquest in the late seventh century. Al-Kahina, who was described as “A true desert queen, beautiful as a horse and strong as a wrestler”, fascinated many scholars. They describe her as a beautiful, charismatic leader, tough and brave, who yet treated captive enemy warriors mercifully, even adopting two of them.
800 | Fez De-Talmud
In the early ninth century, the great yeshivas of Babylon passed the torch to several heirs, among them the Jewish center in the city of Fez, in northeastern Morocco.
While the Arab conquerors imposed an inferior “dhimmi” status on the Jews of Fez, they still thrived relatively speaking. Muslim historian al-Bakhri noted that “In Fez the Jews lived better than in any other city in the Maghreb”.
Indeed, in Fez there gathered many Jewish scholars, who contributed to its growth as a vibrant spiritual center. The best known were linguist and poet Judah ibn Kuraish and Rabbi Isaac Alfasi, who founded a great yeshiva in the city and wrote the “Sefer HaHalachot”, which refined the essence of religious rulings from the Mishna and the Talmud and won its author eternal fame, as it is an integral part of any yeshiva's library and curriculum to this day.
1146 | Doctor Muhammad and Mister Moses
In order not to fall prey to the cruelty of the Almohad dynasty, which seized control of Morocco in 1146, the Jews were forced to choose between two options: Die or convert. Some chose a third option: To become anusim (crypto-Jews), which is to say, Jews at home and Muslim in public. This situation roused Maimonides, who lived in Fez at the time, to write his famous “Epistle on Martyrdom”, which gave the anusim permission to live in a bi-polar state of identity, until the need should pass. According to tradition, the house in which Maimonides' family lived stands to this day in the old city of Fez.
1492 | A Moroccan Righteous Among The Nations
The expulsion from Spain has been burned into the collective Jewish consciousness as a national disaster that will live in eternal infamy. Like other cases in Jewish history when Jews were uprooted, in the Spanish expulsion too there was no great desire among most nations to take in the Jewish refugees.
One exception was King Muhammad al-Sheikh, a ruler of the Wattasid dynasty, a “Righteous Among the Nations” of his time who was one of the few rulers to open his country to the Jews fleeing Spain.
The refugees from Spain acclimated naturally to their new country. They settled mostly in the urban communities of Fez, Meknes, Sal'e and Marrakesh, and soon integrated into the local Jewish community, creating a new economic and rabbinical elite.
1631 | The Holy Zohar
Like in Christian Europe, so in the lands of Islam, the political game of musical chairs never stopped for a moment. The Jews of Morocco were tossed from one regime to the next, each with its own whims and caprices regarding the Jews. These frequent changes ended in 1631 with the ascension of the Alawite dynasty, which rules Morocco to this day. The rulers of this house treated the Jews warmly, allowing them to find their way to key positions in high places, as royal mint managers, royal treasurers and more.
But the main hero of Morocco's Jews in those years was not a high-ranking official, nor a learned rabbinical leader, but a book: The Holy Zohar, considered the foundation text of Jewish mysticism. The “Zohar” had its greatest influence on the cities of southern Morocco, where Kabbalah literature flourished. Among the most famous sages of this stream of thought one can list Rabbi Shimon Lavi, Moshe Ben Maimon Elbaz and Yaacov ben Itzhak Ifargan, and also Rabbi Avraham Azoulay, great-grandfather of the Hid”a, the gaon Chaim Yosef David Azoulay.
1739 | Imprint of a Genius
While the printing press was invented in Germany back in the 15th century, it had yet to be heard of in Morocco even 300 years later, and so the belated creative explosion experienced by the Jews of Morocco during the reign of King Moulay Ismail ibn Sharif in the late 17th and early 18th century has not received the acclaim it deserves. Among the greatest of that forgotten generation were the members of the Toledano and Bardugo families and the rabbis Even-Tzur, Azoulay and Ben-Hemo. But one member of that era still managed to win eternal fame: Rabbi Chaim Ben Attar, author of “Or HaChaim” (“Light of Life”).
It was fate that drove Ben Attar to make aliyah in 1739, after a bitter inheritance dispute within his family. En-route to Israel Ben Attar stopped in Livorno, Italy, where he printed his books, and the rest is history.
The greatness of Ben Attar crossed all sectarian and geographical boundaries. According to legend, when the founder of the Hasidic movement, the Baal Shem Tov, heard that Ben Attar was making aliyah, he wished to join him, but heaven itself prevented it, on the grounds that if the two great tzadikim were to meet, the messiah would have to come, and the People of Israel were not yet ready.
1838 | The Moroccan Roots of Tel Aviv
In 1838 a clipper set sail from the shores of Morocco bound for the Land of Israel. Aboard it were Moroccan Jews whose hearts longed for the Holy Land. But the treacherous sea ended their hopes and sank the vessel. Among the few to survive the tempest was Avraham Shlush.
Although most discussions of the aliyah of Moroccan Jews focus on the early years of the State of Israel, the great Shlush family – which in 1887 founded the neighborhood of Neve Tzedek (the first Jewish expansion outside of Jaffa and one of the kernels of the city of Tel Aviv), and participated in the founding of Tel Aviv itself 20 years later – is but one of the proofs that this community began making aliyah long before the establishment of the state, and continued doing so in a slow but steady manner until it was founded.
Another famous pioneer who bears mentioning is Chaim Amzaleg, who participated in the purchase of land for the moshavot (colonies) of Rishon LeZion and “The Mother of Moshavot”, Petah Tikva.
1860 | Renewed Ties
For many years the Jews in Morocco were relatively cut off from Jewish communities in Europe. This changed somewhat thanks to the “Tajar al-Sultan” (Royal Merchants) – a new class of Jews that developed in the late 1850s. This group of merchants conducted trade relations with the powers of Europe on behalf of their sovereign, while at the same time establishing ties with their European brethren.
In those years there also began a large migration of Jews from Morocco to South America, following the booming rubber trade in the area, mostly in Brazil. One of the leading international merchants of Jewish origin in this period was Moses Elias Levy from the city of Mogador, who upon reaching adulthood migrated to Florida of all places, and in an act of solidarity purchased hundred of thousands of acres with the intention of providing refuge for persecuted Jews in Eastern Europe.
1912 | All Israel Are Friends
In 1912 the signing of the Treaty of Fez turned Morocco into a French protectorate. For the Jews of Morocco this treaty heralded the end of a dark period replete with pogroms and the beginning of a new era, in which the Jews enjoyed a cultural, social, and political renaissance.
During these years the teaching of Hebrew, combined with the ideas of Enlightenment (both the general kind and Jewish Haskala) spread throughout Morocco via the global Jewish school network Alliance Israelite Universelle (translated into Hebrew as "All Israel Are Friends"), which took the children of Morocco under its wings. It was then that the Jews of Morocco began to exit the Mellahs (the Jewish quarters, somewhat akin to the European ghettos) and move to the new European-style neighborhoods in the major cities.
1940 | The Holocaust Stops in Morocco
In 1940 the Nazis conquered France and established the Vichy regime – a German wolf in French sheep's clothing. Historians are divided as to the extent to which Moroccan King Muhammad V acquiesced to the edicts of the Vichy regime. In any event, the Jews were soon expelled from government positions and thrown back into the ghetto-like Mellah. In addition there is a well-known story of 153 Moroccan Jews who happened to be in Paris and were sent to Auschwitz. In 1942 the Allies conquered Morocco and stopped the plans of the Nazi death machine in North Africa.
1948 | Aliyah to the Melting Pot
The establishment of the State of Israel caused much excitement among the Jews of Morocco. However, this was not just due to love of their people, but also resulted from the hardships of life in Morocco.
During those years the struggle for national independence escalated in Morocco and the national press often incited against Jews. The high tensions led to deplorable incidents including the pogroms of Oujda and Jerada, in which 42 Jews – men, women and children – were murdered.
Between 1948-1956 some 85,000 Jews made aliyah from Morocco, then still under French rule. The immigrants were forced to adjust to the national “melting pot” policy led by then-Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion, and many of them felt that their rich culture was being trampled by the Zionist steamroller. Thousands of them were led in the dead of night to frontier settlements in order to man and populate the borders. In time these settlements would come to be known as “Development Towns” (“Ayarot Pituach”). This trauma stayed with the immigrants for many years, and found expression in Israeli music, literature and film.
1967 | The Perils of Independence
In 1956 Morocco was liberated from French rule, and banned the Jews living in its territory from emigrating to Israel. One reason was apparently the important role played by the Jews in the Moroccan economy. In 1960 the Israeli Mossad embarked on a daring mission to smuggle the Jews of Morocco to Israel aboard the fishing vessel Egoz. On one of its excursions the ship sank near the Straits of Gibraltar, and nearly all those aboard perished, including 44 immigrants. The disaster drew significant global notice, followed by international pressure on Morocco, until it relented, allowing its Jews to leave under various restrictions. Between 1961-1967 approximately 120,000 Jews made aliyah from Morocco to Israel.
In 1967, following the Six Day War and the growing threats to the Jewish community in Morocco, the final wave of aliyah from the country began, leading to the relocation of some 10,000 people.
In 2014 the Jewish community of Morocco numbered around 2,500 people, as opposed to 204,000 Jews who lived in the country in 1947. Many of the Jews of Morocco also immigrated to other countries, including France, Canada and the United States.