'Berber Jews' are the Berber
Jewish communities inhabiting the region of the
Maghreb in
North Africa. The region coincides with the
Atlas Mountains in what today is
Morocco,
Algeria and
Tunisia.
Between 1950 and 1960 most immigrated to
Israel. Some 2,000 of them, all elderly, still speak
Judeo-Berber.
[1] Their garb and culture was similar to neighbouring other
Berbers.
History
A small
pre-Islamic presence of Jews in that region is historically attested, and these Jewish settlers are said to have mingled with the indigenous
Berber population, the acceptance by the Berbers of
Judaism as a religion, and its embrace by many including many powerful tribes.
At the time of the
Arab conquests in northwestern Africa, there were, according to the one Arab historian: Ibn Khaldoun, some Berber tribes professed
Judaism. Supposedly,
Dihya who aroused the Berbers in the
Aures (Chaoui territory), in the eastern spurs of the
Atlas in modern day
Algeria, to a last although fruitless resistance to the
Arab general
Hasan ibn Nu'man.
In post-colonial North-Africa, Judaism, as well as Christianity and other local historical belief-systems were banned, and their practitioners persecuted by the newly formed pro-Baathist regimes. The persecution continues until today under various decrees such as the latest in Algeria referred to as "Law against proselytism against Islam" which is the official State Religion since 1976. Numerous state and Islamist militias sponsored or allowed by the regime have engaged in hate speech, and calls to fight the revival of various local Christian Churches whose support by Western Churches(mostly American Evangelists) is seen and accused as foreign manipulation.
Origin
It would be very difficult to decide whether these Jewish Berber tribes were originally of Jewish descent and had become assimilated with the Berbers in language, habits, mode of life — in short, in everything except religion — or whether they were native Berbers who in the course of centuries had been converted by Jewish settlers. It is the second option which is considered as more likely by most researchers (such as André Goldenberg or Simon Levy).
The question on the origins of the Berber Jews is also further complicated by the likelihood of
intermarriage. However this may have been, they at any rate shared much with their non-Jewish brethren in the Berber territory, and, like them, fought against the
Arab conquerors.
See also
★
Jewish ethnic divisions
★
Mizrahi Jews
★
History of the Jews in Morocco
★
History of the Jews in Algeria
★
History of the Jews in Tunisia
★
History of the Jews of Bilad el-Sudan
★
Berbers
★
Berber beliefs
★
Berbers and Islam
External Links
★
THE AMAZIGHS JEWS