The Guardian (USA)

Moroccan Islamist groups reject normalisin­g ties with Israel

- Staff and agencies

Morocco’s main Islamist groups rejected the government’s plan to normalise ties with Israel, following a deal brokered by the United States.

The religious branch of the coruling PJD party, the Unity and Reform Movement (MUR), said in a statement on Saturday the move was “deplorable” and denounced “all attempts at normalisat­ion and the Zionist infiltrati­on”.

The Islamist PJD party was more nuanced, endorsing King Mohammed VI’s actions support for the Palestinia­n cause while reiteratin­g the party’s “firm position against the Zionist occupation”.

Unlike its government coalition partners who backed the deal, it took the PJD two days to react after disagreeme­nts emerged between the party’s senior leadership, according to a source close to the matter.

Morocco this week became the fourth Arab nation since August to announce a US-brokered deal to normalise relations with Israel, following the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Sudan.

A core element of the deal brokered by Donald Trump was US recognitio­n of Morocco’s claim to sovereignt­y over the Western Sahara. A decadesold territoria­l dispute has pitted Morocco against the Algeria-backed Polisario Front, which seeks to establish an independen­t state.

“The United States made an important proclamati­on that stresses Morocco’s sovereignt­y over its southern provinces and opens new horizons for strengthen­ing Morocco’s position in internatio­nal circles. It also further isolates the adversarie­s of our territoria­l integrity,” the Islamist party said in a statement.

King Mohammed VI has the last say over major diplomatic decisions.

On Friday, Morocco’s outlawed Adl Wal Ihssane, one of the largest opposition groups in the country, said normalisat­ion deals a “stab from the back to the Palestinia­n cause”.

Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said liaison offices would be reopened in Tel Aviv and Rabat, which Morocco closed in 2000 at the start of the second Palestinia­n uprising, and full diplomatic relations would be establishe­d “as rapidly as possible”.

Jewish history and culture in Morocco will also soon be part of the school curriculum - a “first” in the region and in the North African country, where Islam is the state religion.

The decision “has the impact of a tsunami,” said Serge Berdugo, secretary-general of the Council of Jewish Communitie­s of Morocco.

It “is a first in the Arab world”, he said from Casablanca.

The decision to add Jewish history and culture to lessons was discreetly launched before the diplomatic deal was announced.

Morocco’s Jewish community has been present since antiquity and grew over the centuries, particular­ly with the arrival of Jews expelled from Spain by the Catholic kings after 1492.

At the end of the 1940s, Jewish Moroccans numbered about 250,000 – some 10 percent of the population.

Many left after the creation of the state of Israel in 1948, and the community now numbers around 3,000, still the largest in North Africa.

 ??  ?? Morocco’s King Mohammed VI during a visit in January 2020 in Essaouira to the Bayt Dakira museum, which celebrates the city’s Jewish and Muslim communitie­s. Jewish history and culture in Morocco will now be part of the school curriculum. Photograph: Moroccan Royal Palace/AFP/Getty Images
Morocco’s King Mohammed VI during a visit in January 2020 in Essaouira to the Bayt Dakira museum, which celebrates the city’s Jewish and Muslim communitie­s. Jewish history and culture in Morocco will now be part of the school curriculum. Photograph: Moroccan Royal Palace/AFP/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States