Sunday, December 13, 2015

12th Zagora Film Festival Opens This Week


The twelfth edition of the Trans-Saharan Film Festival at Zagora opens on December 17th and runs to the 20th under the theme: Film and Tolerance


Again this year the festival will hold an international competition for feature films, with entries from Morocco, Tunisia, Bahrain, Holland, Canada, Egypt, Iran, Iraq, the United Arab Emirates.

Featured films will have a common link with subjects related to desert culture; water, nomadism oasis lifestyle, customs and manners, Kasbahs and climate change.

Egyptian actor Abdelaziz Makhyoun has been chosen to chair the competition jury. Makhyoun is known for Beggars and Proud Ones (1991), Alexandria... Why? (1979) and Hadduta misrija (1982).

Abdelaziz Makhoyoun

Besides the competition section, the festival devotes a lot of energy into promoting training for young people in the region, with workshops led by experts on acting, audiovisual reportage,  documentary making and a master class provided by the Moroccan writer Mohamed Ariouès, focusing on writing film scripts.

The Association for the Trans-Sahara Zagora movie hopes to promote the image of Zagora as a city with high cultural and human values and a place of innovation, openness, dialogue and tolerance.

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Saturday, December 12, 2015

Moroccan Photo of the Day - Dyers' Souk

Today's photograph was taken by renowned Australian satirist, Bryan Dawe. He was given a sneak preview of the nearly completed renovations of the famous Dyers' Souk in Fez


The Fez Dyers' Souk had was in desperate need of saving and thankfully, not only does the work look good, but the notorious pollution problems with the waste water, have been fixed. Hopefully, it will be open and working again within a matter of a couple of months.


This is Bryan Dawes third trip to Fez where he is spending a month as a guest of The View From Fez. Read more about Bryan HERE

You can see more in our series - Photo of the Day

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Thursday, December 10, 2015

Storytellers Donate to Fez Medina Children's Library


Yesterday a group of storytellers from around the world converged in Fez. After a tour of the Fez Medina, the group gathered for a Medina Children's Library fundraiser at Riad Zany, hosted by The View From Fez.


Following the afternoon at Riad Zany they held a storytelling session at The Ruined Garden, with a wonderful (and plentiful) menu of fine food.

The View From Fez and the Medina Children's Library would like to thank Christina Ammon and her storytellers for their generous donation and wonderful stories.

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Street Portraiture - Free Lecture in Fez

Click image to enlarge



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Tuesday, December 08, 2015

Royal Air Maroc Launches Cheap Winter Flights


Royal Air Maroc (RAM) is launching a unique promotion with unusually large discounts for flights to and from several European cities

This winter  flights to Venice, Turin, Brussels, Marseille, Montpellier, London and Madrid, will cost from only 1100 DH (102 Euro, 111USD, 153 AUD)  for a round trip, taxes included.

From within any of these European cities, customers can purchase plane tickets to Rabat from just 90 Euros (£ 99 from London).

All these flights are operated by B.737-800 aircraft.

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The Ouarzazate to Marrakesh Tunnel - A Tunnel Too Far?


The notion of a road tunnel linking Marrakech to Ouarzazate is a pipe dream that refuses to go away. There is no doubt a better connection from Marrakech could boost tourism and the film industry in Ouarzazate. A tunnel would also be free from the annual problems of snow and ice. But, there is also no doubt that Morocco would need a miracle budget in order to afford it

The concept of the tunnel is not new. One of the early attempts by the French in the 1940s was at the southern end of the Zate valley (under the Tizi n'Tainant) but the protectorate was coming to an end, so the tunnel was abandoned after only one km or so. Another early attempt in the 1950s was driven by the needs of a mining consortium to construct a telepherique (cable car) in the Zate Valley.

The Zate valley seems the logical route but the plans, such as they are, involve building a tunnel at the end of the Ourika valley, starting from Setti Fatma. As the Ourika valley is quite narrow any expressway would have a massive impact on the scenic beauty.

Early discussion was for a railway tunnel. The idea was to transport manganese for the mining industry. One exploration had even begun but stopped after few hundred meters. A study was developed during the era of independence in 1974,  and updated with a technical and financial investigation, initiated by the Department of Ouarzazate in 1996. Again, nothing eventuated.

It was not until 10 years later, in 2006, that the Ouarzazate provincial council decided to revive the project. But by 2012 the project was shelved for lack of funds. That was the same year that a bus crash on the Tichka pass resulted in forty-two deaths and resurrection of the tunnel debate. Again this went nowhere due to lack of resources. One estimate puts the probable cost of 10 k of tunnel at 1 billion per kilometre.

If it ever goes ahead there are two alternatives, a twin bore tunnel, or a single bore tunnel carrying two-way traffic. Hardly a good recommendation given Morocco's accident rate.

However, the other option is to improve the famous road across the Tichka pass. Not only is it one of the world's great road trips, rising to almost 2,300 metres above sea level, it is the highest pass in Morocco.

The Ministry of Infrastructure, Transport and Logistics has adopted a budget of about 1 billion dirhams for the rehabilitation of Highway 9 which includes 186 km connecting Ouarzazate and Marrakech.

The redevelopment work began last summer over a 13 km  section with an investment of 200 million dirhams.



The View From Fez travelled the pass last week and reports that a significant amount of roadwork is underway. In some places this is more than doubling the road width and making overtaking possible. It is a small step in the right direction.


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Monday, December 07, 2015

Dar Zerhoune Donkey Project ~ Education Day


Last Sunday the formidable Rose Button - the woman behind the Dar Zerhoune Donkey Project - experienced "a surge of delight, pride and awe and knowing that I had been part of a day that changed lives. I now know there is never a greater feeling than the gift of learning to people who are keen, and do not normally have the opportunity." Rose reports from Moulay Idriss

A month ago a donkey owner brought a donkey to my door and needed help. The donkey had a deep cut on its neck and they had used traditional methods to stop the bleeding. We called the American Fondouk for the next steps of wound care and each day I would treat the donkey on the street to clean the wound and allow it to heal successfully. It was during these sessions that I realised the benefit of teaching the donkey owners wound care and taking care of their donkeys and so the Dar Zerhoune Donkey Project Educational Day was planned.

Thanks to generous donations we were able to bring 15 of our donkey owners, including children, from the town of Moulay Idriss, to Fes, to spend the day learning, observing and experiencing the work at the American Fondouk, a working hospital providing free veterinary care for the hard working donkeys, mules, and horses of Morocco. The American Fondouk believe that treating working animals offers a significant contribution towards safeguarding the livelihoods of the poorest and most vulnerable members of the community, both in the towns and in the countryside. And offering education in horse care and nutrition is also critical to improving the welfare not only of these animals but also the welfare of the owners and their families who depend on them.


The Dar Zerhoune Donkey Project started in July this year with the original intention of providing veterinary care once a month to take care of the donkey’s of Moulay Idriss, a country town 25km from Meknes and 5km from the roman ruins of Volubilis, that relies on donkeys for all activities each day. The project has captured the attention of guests, friends and family of Dar Zerhoune and from whose donations we are able to host our educational day. The donkey owners have taken ownership of the project, and donkey care, even bringing donkeys to the door of Dar Zerhoune for after care. This is what triggered the idea of an educational day – to give the owners a chance to learn about the best donkey care and share this with each other. Often they use traditional methods of using faraan (bakery )ash on cuts and oil on wounds when this can easily be replaced with cost effective use of salty water and honey.

At the American Fondouk the owners had demonstrations of feeding, wound care, foot-care and general donkey maintenance. Along with demonstration the use of the diagnostic machines, like the Xray.


The best words to describe the day are from the attendees themselves.

Youseff aged 8 ‘I learnt how to clean the wound and know now to clean with salt water and if it is a big wound you can put honey on it’.

Donkey man Safi Ali ‘I enjoyed meeting everyone at the fondouk, thank you for organising it. He learned about how to mix the food for the animals and how to tie the animals from the head and not the legs.’

Another donkey man:  ‘I want to say thank you (to the fondouk) for the reception and the way you are taking care of the animals and the first time I have seen how they treat wounds, and all the machines used for diagnostics’.

Aziz – ‘I now knows what to do if something happens to my donkey. I also learned to always put water with the food instead of just once a day’.

Reda aged 12 – ‘I learnt that I shouldn’t tie a donkey from its leg and should treat them with love and not hit them.'

Dr Hicham El Koutbi ‘I was surprised that Rose insisted on bringing the donkey owners to the American Fondouk and surprised that the owners were so very interested.’

Dr Gigi Kay, the director of the American Fondouk said ‘ it was lovely to see so many owners learning how to improve and being so keen to learn so much more about how to care for their animals’. And her goal is to provide an excellent standard of clinical care to the donkeys, mules, and horses of vulnerable owners. At the same time she aims to provide a facility for young veterinarians and students to engage in a busy equine hospital so that they in turn can go on to provide excellence in clinical care for many years to come.’

Plan-it Fez generously sponsored the transportation for the day and commented ‘Delighted to have sponsored an educational Donkey Day bringing the donkey owners from Moulay Idriss to meet the vets at the American Fondouk donkey, mule and horse hospital in Fez. Enabling learning is a privilege and a joy’


Thank you to all our guests, friends and family of Dar Zerhoune who kindly donated to support our project. Please see http://www.darzerhoune.com/donkeys for more information and contact Rose on info@darzerhoune.com if you would like to donate to the project and support the donkeys of Moulay Idriss.

Text & photos: Rose Button

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Friday, December 04, 2015

Moroccans Celebrating Christmas? - Opinion

In the West the  celebration of Christmas has become mired in confusion and commercialism and that "spirit of Christmas" has reached Morocco. While many are embracing some aspects, for other Moroccans the festival is an anathema  

Christmas time for a young Moroccan in Fez

"We don't need Christmas in Morocco," one Moroccan Riad owner told The View from Fez, 'In fact a lot of my guests say they are coming to Morocco to escape what they call the "Christmas madness". One European woman said that there were Christmas commercials on TV way back in the beginning of November!"

Ask many tourists arriving in Morocco at the moment and they will tell you that they wanted to get away from the commercial hype and secular "celebrations" of Christmas. In England, USA, Australia and in many European countries, the Christmas season gets under way weeks before the actual date and its biggest impact is on the national economies and personal credit cards.

For devout Christians, Christmas can be observed in simple ways, but each year it becomes more and more secular and divorced from its roots. Sadly, it is this style of Christmas that has arrived in Morocco. And, it will be no surprise that Christmas is embraced far more strongly by the younger generations. At the same time many young Moroccans are forgetting elements of their own culture.


At Christmas, Americans and British people express their love to their soul-mates, while we Moroccans underestimate the value of love in our human relations - Omar Bihmidine
In many respects Morocco is following the same path as the early Americans version of the festival  F.W. Woolworth the supermarket king quickly saw the commercial possibilities in importing Christmas ornaments from Germany where, he reported, they were “made by the very poorest class.”

Tinsel, toys, candleholders, candles, candies, garlands and wooden ornaments found ready markets. Louis Prang, a German immigrant and the inventor of a chromolithography process, presided over a workforce of hundreds of young women in Massachusetts who hand-coloured Christmas cards - elegant new greetings intended to be sent cheaply to family and friends everywhere. Department stores, novel emporia that tantalised Americans with goods in every size and quality, became cathedrals of commerce, important suppliers of the gifts necessary to take home for family and friends.

Tinsel, toys, candleholders, candles, candies, garlands on sale in Morocco

By the late 19th century, Christmas ruled over two intertwined domains: the private and public. The lights, sounds and sentiment that symbolised and celebrated home and family had moved outward into public streets and stores. There are now street decorations in some parts of Morocco.

A Marrakech mall
The media has always loved Christmas with its countless business opportunities. When Godey’s Lady’s Book, the most widely read magazine in the nation at the time, published an image of a family gathered around a small tree set atop a table, the idea of a Christmas tree soared in popularity. Woodsmen started heading into the forests each December to cut evergreens to sell on street corners.

Since the celebration focuses on the secular aspects of Jesus (PBUH), some conservative Muslims frown upon the act of celebrating Christmas, arguing that is a sort of “bid3a”, a fad that has not been taught by Prophet Mohamed (PBUH).

Most modern Moroccans do not have this attitude. Yet opinions vary widely. Some say that Christmas is an occasion for them to greet their Christian friends. Others see it as a way of showing tolerance, while others are less than impressed with the commercialisation and also reject it on cultural and religious grounds, saying that Christmas does not represent Moroccan Islamic culture and celebrating it is synonymous with blindly adopting others’ lifestyles and cultural aspects.

Writing for Morocco World News a couple of years ago, Omar Bihmidine, an English teacher from Sidi Ifni, made an interesting observation. "Moroccans wonder why they do not celebrate this well-deserved holiday, given that it builds more friendship and consolidates ties. One of the much-cherished characteristics of Christmas is that people celebrating it exchanging wishes, gifts, and keepsakes. In response to conservative Muslims, some Moroccans explain that romance which Moroccan culture nowadays lacks is a seminal feature of Christmas. At Christmas, Americans and British people express their love to their soul-mates, while we Moroccans underestimate the value of love in our human relations." 


A number of Muslim scholars decree that Muslims must not go astray by imitating Christians with regard to their celebrations. Hence, many Moroccans do not celebrate it, particularly because of the secular nature of the celebration and its allusion to the Nativity of Jesus. Some other Moroccans, the intelligentsia in particular, believe that as long as Americans wish Moroccans Happy Eid or Ramadan, it is incumbent to give our own sincere greetings and wish them “Merry Christmas” in return.

In Islam, Muslims are supposedly not allowed to wish “Merry Christmas.” But, some Moroccan Muslims believe that as a way of evincing our understanding of others’ cultures, there is no harm in sharing with Americans or the British their happiness. What is totally disapproved among Moroccans is blind emulation by today’s Moroccan youth who celebrate Christmas without having the slightest idea of what it is about. It is also a pity that some Moroccan youth are more enthusiastic about Western celebrations than about their own.

In fact, Moroccans are still divided over celebrating Christmas. Frowning upon the adoption of others’ lifestyles while forgetting one’s own is their common denominator. At this point, I believe that Moroccans have properly extended their arms to others’ culture, especially as most Christians will not say no to uttering and reciprocating with a “Merry Christmas”. Moroccan Muslims, instead of offering you a gift, think it would simply suffice to wish you all a “Happy Christmas.”



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Wednesday, December 02, 2015

Boost in Brazilian Tourist Numbers in Morocco


By the end of 2015 Morocco will have welcomed 27,000 Brazilian tourists. According to the head of a Moroccan National Tourist Office (ONMT) delegation, Abdellatif Achachi, the figure should reach 100,000 by 2019

"Morocco welcomed nearly 22,000 Brazilian tourists in 2014 and expects that figure to reach 27,000 tourists in late 2015 and increasing to 100,000 tourists by 2019," Abdellatif Achachi said during the delegations participation in the Moroccan week that ended on Sunday in Sao Paulo.  Back in 2013 there was an 80% jump in Brazilian tourists visiting the Kingdom.

Abdellatif Achachi

The Moroccan Week was held at the heart of the prestigious "National Conjunto" and was judged to have been a great success with Achachi noted that the ONMT achieved his goal of making Morocco known to the highest number of Brazilians.

"We have achieved our goal of showing Moroccan culture to some 600,000 Brazilians who visited during the week," he said, noting that the number of Brazilian tourists who visited Morocco saw a 5% increase in August.

As to the strategy for the year 2016, Achachi noted that the ONMT is on track in terms of promotion of Morocco as a destination to Brazilian Tours Operators, stressing the need to launch a specific communication campaign at the request of the Brazilian market for cultural tourism product.

Under the theme "Morocco: the awakening of the senses", week included traditional Moroccan music, a Moroccan photography exhibition by Brazilian photographer Thais Ghussn , the Moroccan week which was attended by the Ambassador of Morocco in Brazil, Larbi Moukhariq, ended with a parade of traditional costumes by designer Jihan Archtal.

According to the news website Air Journal, Royal Air Maroc (RAM), in addition to its Sao Paulo service, will launch a service to Rio de Janeiro from May 2, 2016, operated by Boeing 767-300ER aircraft seating 10 passengers in business class and 235 in economy.

Passengers who wish to travel to Rio de Janeiro can choose from three flights a week on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Return flights to Casablanca are scheduled on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

The new service to Rio de Janeiro will begin before the Summer Olympics' to be held in Brazil

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Air Arabia - New Service Between Fez and Toulouse


This spring the  low cost airline, Air Arabia Morocco, will launch a new route between Fez and Toulouse


The service is scheduled to commence on March 29th, 2016.  The Moroccan subsidiary of the airline based in Sharjah will offer two flights each week between Fez-Saïss and the airport of Toulouse-Blagnac. The flights will be flown by 168 seat Airbus A320s. Departures are scheduled Tuesday and Saturday leaving Fez at 1.30pm to arrive at 4.40 pm. Return flights depart from France at 11.35 and arrive at 12:40. Air Arabia Morocco will have no competition on this route.

Air Arabia already serves Toulouse from Casablanca (opposite Royal Air Morocco), while in Fez they will offer a route to Montpellier-Méditerranée (Monday, Wednesday and Friday in spring 2016).

The new link is "the result of a clear demand from our customers, be it a business traveler or economy," says Adel Ali, CEO of Air Arabia group. "Launching this line, we pursue a qualitative and competitive development that meets the needs of our passengers in Morocco and France." Besides the two lines of Air Arabia Morocco, Toulouse is connected to Marrakech by the RAM, EasyJet and Jetairfly, and Agadir with EasyJet and Jetairfly.

Air Arabia Morocco had already announced a Marrakech - Pau service which will be launched on April 1st 2016. Its summer flight program will also include frequency improvements to Lyon, Montpellier and Brussels, and the link between Marrakech and Frankfurt opened in late October. In total, it will offer 28 destinations from Casablanca, Fez, Marrakech, Nador and Tangier, served with its fleet of four A320s.


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Tuesday, December 01, 2015

Morocco ~ a World Leader in Combating Terrorism

Recently the British Foreign Office (BFO) released a ranking showing Morocco as among the safest countries worldwide. The ranking, which was updated in early November, places Morocco on the same level of safety as countries such as the United States, Norway, and Denmark

The ranking surprised many observers and raised questions about how and why Morocco, despite lacking the financial and logistical resources of its European counterparts, was in such a position.

The most succinct explanation to date has been published  published by Samir Bennis, co-founder of and editor-in-chief of Morocco World News

Facts speak for themselves

According to a recent study published by Spain’s Real Instituto Elcano, while the number of terrorist attacks in the Maghreb region increased dramatically between 2011 and 2014, Morocco remains the exception with only one terrorist attack during this period, which occurred in Marrakech in April of 2011.

Similarly, according to the Global Terrorism Database, published by the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START) at the University of Maryland, terrorist attacks in the Maghreb region multiplied by 47 times between 2011 and 2014, increasing from 15 to 1,105. Of these attacks, only one targeted Morocco. These statistics show that the North African country was not as affected as its immediate neighbours by the spike in terrorist attacks against civilians and government institutions.

This Moroccan exception led British newspaper, The Times, to name Morocco as the “last safe haven in North Africa.” In an article published last July, the Times stated “Morocco, a tourist destination for Europeans, remained immune against the convulsions experienced by other countries in the region.”

Moreover, the British Foreign Office released a ranking where Morocco is among the safest countries worldwide. The ranking, which was updated in early November, places Morocco on the same level of safety as countries such as the United States, Norway, and Denmark. The same ranking also shows that Morocco has lower risks of terrorist attacks than France or Spain.

What makes Morocco effective in the fight against terror?

Unlike its neighbours in the Maghreb and Europe, Morocco’s strategy for fighting terror does not rely only on strengthening internal security. Morocco has effectively combined three core elements to thwart terrorist acts against its citizens.

Security apparatus that stops attacks before they happen

The first element is to reinforce its security apparatus and provide it with the necessary means that enable it to foil terrorist attacks before they occur. In light of the terrorist threat posed by Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQMI) in North Africa and in Sub-Sahara Africa, Morocco tightened its control over its borders with Algeria. This measure was accompanied by the reinforcement of Morocco’s military presence in its southern borders in the Sahara.


On the other hand, one of the most important measures taken by Morocco in recent years was the creation of the new security mechanism “Hadar”, which incorporates elements of the Royal Armed Forces, Royal Gendarmerie, the Police, and Auxiliary Force. By putting Moroccan security forces on high alert and making them proactive, and share information, the plan aims to protect Moroccan citizens and foreign visitors and prevent terrorists from targeting Morocco’s security and stability. This approach of multi-agency cooperation allowed Moroccan security forces to arrest a large number of terrorist cells that planned to carry out attacks against civilians and government institutions.

According to the Director of the Central Bureau of Judicial Investigation (BCIJ), Abdelhak Khiame, Moroccan intelligence services broke-up 132 terrorist cells between 2002 and March 2015. During the same period, 276 terrorist plots were foiled and 2,720 suspected terrorists were arrested. In addition, 27 terrorist cells were broken-up between 2013 and June 2015.

The vigilance of the Moroccan intelligence services is reinforced by tough measures enforced by the Interior Ministry regarding the possession of firearms. This policy applies even to police officers, who are required to report when a bullet has been used and when and why a bullet is missing.

Additionally, what distinguishes Morocco in the fight against terrorism is the fact that it does not make technology the main focus of its strategy. Morocco makes full use of the human factor and of a large network of informants and undercover agents it has throughout the territory. Moroccans are aware that one of the central pillars of Morocco’s strategy are the Muqaddamin, or municipal sheriffs, who act like the eyes and ears of the Ministry of Interior. These Muqaddamin rely on a heavy network of informants who provide them with detailed information about suspicious activities that take place in every single neighbourhood.

It is very telling that, following the Charlie Hebdo attacks last January, former French officials, such as former President Nicolas Sarkozy, former Prime Minister, Jean Pierre Raffarin, and former Interior Minister, the late Charle Pasqua, called on the Elysée to restore its strained relations with Morocco and reestablish judicial and security cooperation between the two countries.

Fighting poverty at its source

Being cognisant of the need to fight extreme poverty, social exclusion, and to provide youth in marginalised neighbourhoods with better prospects to have a brighter future and be lifted out of poverty, Morocco’s king launched the National Initiative for Human Development in 2005.

This represents the second element of Morocco’s counterterrorism strategy. According to a report released by the Word Bank in 2015, four million Moroccans have benefited from the INDH since it was launched. This program has enabled Morocco to have the world’s fourth largest social safety net. This initiative was accompanied by an unprecedented number of projects across the country whose aim is to foster job creation and create a certain balance between the different regions of the kingdom.

Additionally, the Moroccan government engaged in a policy of heavy public investments in infrastructure and the social sector with the ultimate goal of fighting poverty. According to a study published on the Carnegie Middle East Center in 2010, Morocco succeeded to lift 1.7 million people out of poverty during the period 2000-2010. The same study shows that poverty rates in the country decreased by more than 40 per cent during the same period.

In a statement to Maghreb Arab Press in October 2014, World Bank country director in the Maghreb, Simon Gray, said that Morocco succeeded in reducing extreme poverty from 2 per cent in 2011 to 0.28 percent in 2011, and relative poverty from 15.3 to 6.2 per cent.

Control over the religious sector and promotion of the true values of Islam

Perhaps what helps explain why Morocco has been, to some extent, immune from terrorist attacks is the third element of its approach. Following the terrorist attacks that hit Casablanca on May 16, 2003, Moroccan authorities proceeded to arrest and imprison many people suspected of being directly or indirectly linked to the attacks.

This tough security measure was accompanied with a “soft power” approach, which may prove useful over the long run. Following the attack, the Moroccan government realised that one of the important steps in the fight against terrorism was to regain control of its mosques.

What happened in Casablanca in May 2003 was a wake-up call for Moroccan authorities, who realised that hundreds of mosques across the country operated independent of government supervision. During the 1980s and 1990s, practices and lectures that contrasted with Morocco’s brand of Islam permeated scores of mosques, especially in remote areas and poor neighbourhoods.

The Casablanca attacks were in part the result of the extremist ideology preached in those mosques. As a result, the government decided to control and monitor mosques all over the kingdom in a way that left no room for radical groups to exploit the places of worship to spread their propaganda.


Ever since, every new mosque, built by the state or a philanthropist, falls under the control of the Ministry of Islamic Affairs, which has the exclusive prerogative to appoint imams and the staff who run them.

This measure was coupled with the determination to promote Morocco’s practice of Islam and counter the radical views on Islam spread by some satellite channels based in the Gulf. The most important measure taken in this regard was the decision made by the Moroccan King to launch Mohammed VI TV channel and Mohammed VI radio station in October 2004.

The goal behind the creation of the TV and the radio station was to ensure the spiritual security of Moroccans, provide them with a better understanding of the precepts and the noble values of Islam, highlight Morocco’s religious tradition based on moderation, tolerance, and balance, while combatting the temptations of extremism.

According to the different rankings released by the Centre Interprofessionnel de mesure d’audience Radio (CIRAD), Mohammed VI radio stations is the most listened to station in Morocco.

Additionally, Morocco proceeded to rehabilitate a number of key figures who were accused of playing an ideological role in the Casablanca bombings. In this regard, King Mohammed VI decided to pardon scores of Islamists imprisoned in connection with the attacks. The most prominent of these are former jihadists Hassan El Kettani, Omar El Haddouchi, and Mohammed Fizazi, who were sentenced to 30 years. The three of them benefited from a royal pardon in 2011.

In a highly symbolical move that proved the rehabilitation of these former jihadists and the success of the Moroccan approach, Fizazi led a Friday prayer in a Tangier mosque in the presence of King Mohammed VI on March 28, 2014. Furthermore, a number of former jihadists were even integrated last May in the Social and Democratic Movement (Mouvement Democratique et Social), led by Abdessamad Archane.

King Mohammed VI greets Mohamed Fizazi at the Tarik Ibn Ziad Mosque

On the other hand, Morocco launched a large-scale program to turn mosques into venues of teaching the Moroccan brand of Islam, which is based on Maliki jurisprudence. This strategy was accompanied by the launch in June 2014 of a religious support program, which aims to train imams across Morocco and countries facing the threat of violent extremism. The goal of this program is also to teach future imams and preachers the values of an open and tolerant Islam as it has always been practiced in Morocco, and protect the sanctity of Islam against the deviant ideology advocated by extremist groups.

“Their task is to help and guide imams in mosques to preserve the fundamentals of Islam in Morocco, based on the Malikite rite, contrary to takfirism, which is constantly invading the minds of our young people,” Islamic Affairs Minister Ahmed Toufiq said at the opening of the program.

This strategy not only helped Morocco in its quest to fight extremism, but also increased its religious and spiritual influence on the African continent. As part of this strategy, King Mohammed VI established the Mohammed VI Institute for the Training of Imams in March 2015 and the Mohammed VI Foundation for African ‘Ulemas’ in June 2015.

In addition, King Mohammed VI promulgated a new decree last summer to revive the role of al-Qarawiyyin in Fez, the oldest educational institution in the world, in promoting the tolerant and noble values of Islam.

It is still too early to determine whether this approach has borne fruit. However, the interest it has created in Africa and Europe shows that Morocco’s experience training imams is regarded as a possible counterweight to the jihadist and takfirist ideology. Since this program was launched in 2014, several European and African countries such as Mali, Senegal, Nigeria, Guinea, Kenya, Libya, Tunisia, Spain, France, and Belgium have requested Rabat’s help in instructing their imams.

It is true that all the factors cited above did not help prevent the fact that Moroccans represent one of the largest group of foreign fighters in the ranks of ISIS with over 1,500 people. However, it can be argued that this number could have been higher if Morocco did not adopt its multifaceted approach aimed at warding off the terrorist threat.

The holistic approach Morocco has adopted since 2003 to combat violent extremism should stand as an example to follow by any African, Arab, or European country that faces the threat of terrorism. No matter how sophisticated of technology it uses to curb this scourge, it will prove its limits if it does not seek to counterweight the message spread by terrorist organisations and address the social and economic root causes that propel young people into their hands. The French experience should push world leaders to rethink their counterterrorism strategies and recognise that there are lessons to be learned from the Moroccan experience.


The article was first published by Morocco World News and is republished on The View From 
Fez with permission.

You can follow Samir on Twitter @Samir Bennis

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