The Maghrib in The New Century
The Maghrib in The New Century
The Maghrib in The New Century
Chapter in:
Bruce Maddy-Weitzman
recent decades has been a multifaceted phenomenon. As is the case with all ethno-
national projects, the elaboration and dissemination of modern Berber identity has
search for a useable past and, once found, enshrining it in new narratives, rituals and
goes without saying that the greater the success of the process of "remembering,
recovering and inventing" Berber history,3 the greater the influence it will have on
different levels. In its more popular form, the promotion of Berber history and
African history to include the Berbers often poses real challenges to the "official"
history propagated by contemporary North African states and the larger Arab-Islamic
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milieu of which Berbers are a part. Related, but distinct from the work of historians
are acts of commemoration, namely, the creation, elaboration and vigilant protection
of "memory sites" (lieux de memoire) which enable groups to buttress their identities
against the constant push and pull of historical currents that threaten to sweep them
away.6 Musicians, poets and writers have not only taken a preeminent role in this
regard, but some, such as Mouloud Mammeri and Matoub Lounes, have themselves
become a kind of "memory site" themselves, as either cultural icons, martyrs to the
cause, or both.
recorded history in North Africa, the Berbers are depicted as semi-savage outsiders
requiring a civilizing hand. They have been especially burdened by the legacy of
Islamic history, which provided them with an Eastern and Arab "origin myth" that
legitimized their inclusion in the umma, albeit as a primitive community requiring the
Islamic faith to justify their mission and assumption of power.7 Part of this istislam
language, the language through which God's word was transmitted and subsequently
interpreted by the doctors of the holy law. Ironically, it was a non-Berber, the premier
Maghribi historian Ibn Khaldun, writing nearly 700 years after the Islamic conquest
of North Africa, who made the Berbers a "great nation" like others in the umma, even
as he used them to demonstrate historical laws of the rise and decline of societies.
Up until recently, the essentially oral culture of the Berbers and the dearth of
The steady political, social and cultural marginalization of Berber communities over
the last 500 years made memory work even more difficult. Smith's description of the
difficulties confronting demotic and peripheral ethnies seems apt for the Berbers:
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cultures, has also had a salutary effect. The quest for cultural authenticity, perceived
says, if "the secret of identity is memory, the ethnic past must be salvaged and re-
Moroccan historical experience, beginning with the arrival of Islam, through the
establishment of the Idrisid dynasty in 788 A.D. by Idris I, a descendant of the family
of Ali, the Prophet Muhammad's son-in-law. Although Berbers are subsumed in this
history, they at least carry some implicit standing: the Idrisis are known to have
married Berber women, and Moroccan dynasties between the 11th-14th centuries were
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Algeria's Berberity has been consigned to Algeria's distant past, or ignored entirely.
Moreover, the 20th century Algerian salafi historian Tawfiq al-Madani regarded the
Berbers as a "noble savage" in a pristine state, a cultural blank page. It was the
Islamic conquest, he wrote, which brought about the "perfection" of the Maghribi
people, through a fusion of Arabs and Berbers into one community.11 Only recently
has this official salafi reading of Algerian history begun to be questioned, e.g. with
Mediterranean civilization.12
having a pre-Islamic past, and one in which they were active agents and not merely
voiceless, nameless foot soldiers and illiterate tribesmen and peasants. Illustrated
books for children tell the stories of ancient Amazigh heroes, such as Juba, Massinissa
and the Berber queen Dhiya/the Kahina. The Kahina holds particularly mythical status
among Amazigh memory workers as the heroic leader of Berber resistance to Islamic
invaders (for a recent, and contested use of the Kahina in Algeria, see below).13
consistently sought to redefine Maghribi collective memory, and hence its identity, by
emphasizes, dates back to the Romans, Greeks, Carthaginians, and even at times
Pharoanic Egypt. The native Amazigh-speaking population was part and parcel of
this history, according to Chafik, and produced numerous historical figures, such as
Terentius (a Carthage-born playwright in Greek and Latin during the second century
B.C.), Tertullianus (an important Christian writer from Carthage in the late first
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Numidian village in the second half of the third century A.D), and St. Augustine.14
For Chafik and other Amazigh activists, language is the defining feature of culture
and history (notwithstanding the fact that Amazigh heroes during the Roman and
Byzantine period had Latinized names).As such, Amazigh history can be traced even
further into the past, many hundreds of years before the "barbaroi" began appearing in
by Amazigh memory workers as the moment of entry of the Amazigh people into
calendar with the year of Sheshonk's ascent as its starting point. Accordingly, the year
2005 A.D. is equivalent to 2955. Both dates are used on the masthead of the Rabat-
Amazigh was not the end of history. It did not subordinate their identity per se, nor
bring it to a most perfect state. In fact, it was the Amazigh people itself, Chafik
Africa and Spain. To that end, Tariq Bin Ziyad, the fabled Berber commander of the
Muslim forces that first crossed into Iberia in 711 A.D., very much belongs in the
Berber culture which bears his name.16 Conversely, and not surprisingly, the
destruction wrought in Andalusia in the 12th century by the troops of the religiously
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is laid out starkly, and at times polemically, in the "Berber Manifesto, which he
authored in 2001 and which was signed by over 200 Berber intellectuals. While
manifesto also places them in a broader historical context, albeit one not commonly
found in the history books. Most people, it says, recognize that the imposition of
colonialism in 1912 was made possible by the sorry state to which Morocco had sunk.
The reason for this was the triumph of the makhzenian18 political tradition of
This tradition is said to have been inherited from the Ummayad and Abbasid empires,
the Prophet and the first four Caliphs. Coincidentally or not, this latter spirit, as
defined by the Manifesto, was in line with Amazigh political traditions, which were
heritage," was steered for centuries by 'influential people,' those who could 'make or
break,' who preached hatred towards anything Amazigh, while reducing the historical
generation of their offspring." Their desire to preserve their privileges led them to
blindly adhere to political traditions based upon dogmatic and tightly closed religious
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thinking. The clash between these two world-views resulted in violence and disorder,
Chafik's emphasis on the purity of the Prophet and his immediate successors,
the rashidun (the "rightly guided" caliphs) is a familiar theme, common to Islamic
reform currents dating back to the late 19th century. In that sense, Chafik's approach is
a consensual one, which seeks to incorporate Moroccan Islam into Amazigh identity.
Islam than that of reformers of earlier generations, in line with modern times. Still
even this view is not universally accepted in the Amazigh activist community, which
contains many militant secularists, among them the editor and publisher of Le Monde
Amazigh, which demonstratively does not include the Hijra calendar date on its
(IRCAM) is not universally viewed with favor among the Amazigh community.19
On occasion, Chafik's writings have also been criticized for being essentialist
and a-historical, and hence unhelpful to the Amazigh cause. The Moroccan scholar
Rachid Idrissi takes Chafik to task for ignoring history, e.g., for stating without proof
that ancient Berber kings sought to unify all of the Berber tribes under one central
power, or for trying to forcibly bridge Morocco's pre-Islamic and Islamic eras (for
example, by holding up both the Kahina and the 20th century Riffian leader Abd al-
Krim as Berber heroes and models; for more on the latter, see below). Chafik's
declaration that the conquering Arabs were the enemies of the Berbers, like all other
conquerors of North Africa from ancient times to modern, and that it was due to them
that the Berbers did not write down their own history was simply inaccurate,
according to Idrisi. Such a view, he said, ignored the fact that "the Berbers mixed
with the Arabs like pure water with wine" (quoting the famous Berber Muslim
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intellectual of the early 20th century, Mokhtar Soussi).20 The Berbers, said Idrissi,
began to have a collective memory when they learned to write in Arabic, as part of the
Islamic umma.
welcomed the French Protectorate, and were the main beneficiaries of its rule.
Together, they were aligned against the "rebellious Berbers," who were militarily
time came for national rebellion against the French, it was the Imazighen who
willingly provided it with the necessary manpower. At the same time, the Manifesto
studiously avoids any mention of the most powerful Berber leader during the
willful act. A positive reference to Glawi, whose power rivaled the Sultan's, would
situate contemporary Berber discourse on the side of the French colonial power and
would run counter to the Manifesto's overall critique of the that narrative. Given
Glawi's prominent role in Moroccan history during those tumultuous decades, one can
perhaps expect that at some point, both dispassionate historians and Amazigh activists
more militant than those affiliated with the Manifesto will take up the subject.21
Nor did the Manifesto make any mention of the Rif rebellion of Muhammad
bin Abd al-Krim al-Khattabi against Spain and France between 1921-1926. This
neglect may have something to do with the relatively dim views of bin Abd al-Krim
held by the Moroccan political class during the Protectorate years, from whom the
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recognizing him as a mujahid ("holy warrior") battling for freedom against the
imperialist powers, they could hardly be happy with the exiled bin Abd al-Krim's
towards him apparently derived from concern over doing anything that would
diminish the status of the Sultan and the urban Arabic-speaking classes. It was, after
all, the latter who formed the political backbone of the subsequent nationalist
movement, and who had been largely passive, and even supportive of the Protectorate
Unlike Glawi, however, Abd al-Krim has become a preferred, even revered
charisma, military prowess, education both traditional and modern, and a political
agenda which led him to seek to unify the historically feuding tribes of the Rif into a
1921, a defeat which resonated widely throughout the Middle East and beyond. This
determined to combat the accusations that Berbers too often collaborated with
colonial rule, and that their assertion of Berber identity is linked to older colonialist
At first glance, appropriating bin Abd al-Krim may not seem like an entirely
been a promoter of Islamic reform,23 in line with wider Islamic currents, at the
expense of popular religious practice which Berber activists often recognize as central
to their specific heritage. Nor did bin Abd al-Krim emphasize an explicitly
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Amazigh/Berber identity is his efforts to mobilize fellow Rifians against the foreigner.
modern type of leader, leading a not-untypical and ultimately futile nativist revolt
As with all historical personalities, bin Abd al-Krim's actual behavior and
views do not completely fit the requirements of an idealized Berber hero. But
contemporary Amazigh activists have not been deterred by these caveats. They
concentrate on portraying bin Abd al-Krim as a leader who heroically led his people
against the occupier, unlike the urban Arab class which sat on its hands during the
Rifian revolt rather than lend a hand against the colonial oppressor. The recovery of
the history of bin Abd al-Krim and his short-lived "Rifian Republic" is hence an
Amazigh activists initiated a campaign to return Abd al-Krim's remains from Cairo,
complex in his Ajdir redoubt.24 In August 1999, the newly crowned King Muhammad
Aware of the Rif's problematic status, economically, socially and historically vis-à-vis
the Moroccan central authorities, and seeking to bolster his own legitimacy in a region
which his father, as Crown Prince, had bombed and repressed in 1958-59,
Muhammad made a high-profile visit to the region, something his father had always
avoided. Moreover, his gestures to the Rifian Berbers were not limited to pledges for
material improvement but also included a promise that the Ajdir ruins would be
rehabilitated and a visit with bin Abd al-Krim's son, who came especially from Cairo
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the Rifian war, namely the Spanish military's systematic use of poison gas against
Rifian fighters and civilians, with the assistance of French and German
manufacturers. It is only in recent years that this matter has come to light, thanks in
part to the work of a number of Spanish scholars, and the British historian Sebastian
Spain's actions. Le Monde Amazigh, which has played a prominent role in recent
years in promoting and disseminating the Abd al-Krim story through articles and
conferences, has highlighted this shocking and sorry episode in a number of issues.
The battle against marginalization and official indifference extends to the present:
survivors of poison gas attacks and their offspring are said to suffer from numerous
health problems, including inordinately high rates of cancer. But up until now,
Moroccan authorities have ignored Amazigh demands and been unwilling to raise the
matter of possible acknowledgement and compensation for elderly survivors with the
response, one speaker at a conference held in the Rifian city of Tetouan in the spring
of 2004 proposed a number of concrete measures, including suing the German and
French companies which participated in the manufacture of the toxic gases used by
Praising bin Abd al-Krim's anti-colonial exploits is only part of the Amazigh
movement's efforts to debunk the stigma of collaboration with the colonial rulers,
which gained currency especially after the issuing of the so-called "Berber dahir"
Berber customary law at the expense of Qur'anic law served as a crucial catalyst in the
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formation of the nationalist movement. In recent years, some Berber activists have
taken another look at the episode. Muhammad Mounib blamed the nationalists for the
false "Berber" appellation of the dahir, for it implicitly implicated the Berbers in the
French project to divide them from the Arabs.28 Chafik found another way to debunk
the myth of Berber collaboration with the Protectorate, emphasizing the importance of
transcribing and studying Amazigh poetry as the reservoir of the memory of resistance
colonizers, such as the one of Bougafer in the Middle Atlas in 1933, are connected by
between official indifference to the Rif and the subsequent founding of the state and
movement. The failure of the state to officially commemorate the battle of Anoual or
Istiqlal.31 The murder of the Rifian Liberation Army leader Abbas M'sa{ay}adi in
1956, apparently on the order of the Istiqlal's Mehdi Ben Barka, has become another
subject of discussion in recent years,32 as has the authorities' forcible repression of the
1958-59 rebellion. Ironically, one of the eighteen demands submitted to the King in
November 1958 by a Rifian committee (which included bin Abd al-Krim's son) was
for the rapid Arabization of the educational system throughout the country. The
context of this demand was the use of French in the ex-Spanish zone, to which the Rif
belonged, which put the local population at a disadvantage relative to the central
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of the Amazigh movement, owing to the overt threat it posed to Tamazight and to the
As with the Rifian demands for indemnity for the victims of Spain's poison
gas attacks, re-opening the wounds of 1958 is not just a matter of concern to
the 1958 Walmas events" was established, demanding not only the revelation of the
truth but also indemnity for the survivors of the repression of the mostly Berber Army
of Liberation members, from the Walmas tribal grouping, by the "militia" of the
Istiqlal party. As is usually the case, the royal family's role in the events was
downplayed.34
The first Amazigh intellectual to speak out publicly against the falsification of
of the Berbers, those who represent the "real culture of the country," was the recently
deceased Ali Sidqi Azayko (d. 2004). Characterizing the historical origins of
including the Arabs, and publishing his views in Arabic, no less (adding fuel to the
fire), he was convicted in 1982 of "disturbing the security of the state" and imprisoned
for one year. 35 Beginning in the 1990s, however, the Moroccan authorities began
treating such expressions more benignly. By 2001, the Berber Manifesto could
political tone. It hammered away at the denial of Morocco's "Amazighness," and the
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Little by little, stated the Manifesto, it became clear after independence that
none of the extant political forces, whether pro-monarchy or not, were going to give
the Amazigh their due, and include them in the definition of a modern Morocco.
demands for a reordering of national priorities, the signatories of the manifesto were
determined "to combat the cultural hegemony" that has been programmed in order to
original].36
While the broad dichotomy laid out in the Manifesto between the "good"
Berbers and the "bad" Istiqlal/Makhzen may be generally accepted by the Amazigh
including ex-Liberation Army members, joined the Union National des Forces
Populaires (UNFP) in 1959, which was formed by Ben Barka as a breakaway from
the Istiqlal. They did so, according to veteran activist Muhammad al-Kassimi, in
order to stop the injustice caused to authentic "resisters" by the appointment to high
French army, as did tens of thousands Berber goums (tribal irregulars), and was to
become the King's right-hand man until his ultimate demise in 1972) and "feudalists",
a reference to the Berber rural notables who made common cause with the monarchy
through the Mouvement Populaire.37 The State's crackdown on the tribes of the
UNFP's secret military wing led by Sidi Muhammad Umed which, according to
Kassimi, had won a measure of sympathy among the civilian population. The
punishment inflicted on his family, friends and the region in general is now being
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spoken of openly, along with demands for indemnities. Meanwhile, Umed fled to
Algeria, where he had previously resided for 12 years, died during the 1980s, and was
buried there with honors. To complicate the picture further, the UNFP itself may have
been involved in the unsuccessful coup d'etat against King Hassan II the previous
year, through Lt.-Col. Muhammad Amokrane. This of course was the event which
brought Oufkir, held up by Kassimi as the "collaborator" par excellence during the
1950s, to ruin.38 The very fact that Le Monde Amazigh published the interview with
Kassimi, where he was being treated in an army hospital at the state's expense for
It also signals that at least some within the Amazigh movement are opposed to
Recovering and remembering rural and tribal history is very much part of the
Amazigh culture movement's agenda. Here the primary factor in determining identity
is not language, per se, but land, around which society is organized. In Morocco, the
Amazigh communal land rights and traditions. For example, Le Monde Amazigh
belonging to the Zayan tribes in the Khenifra region, pointing to similarities between
current policies and those used by the Protectorate authorities, who had bought out
one of the leading caids, Mouha U Hamou Zayani. Previously, he had joined with
Arab tribes in their fight against the French during their "pacification" campaign.
However, in return for his agreement not to fight the French any further, Mouha U
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social and cultural life. For example, a traditional spring holiday gathering of the
pledges of mutual solidarity and a sharing of the lands, according to Berber customary
law, vanished with the transfer of the lands to Mouha U Hamou. The administrative
means for doing so were, and remain Royal dahirs, which do not recognize customary
The question of the relationship between customary law and Islamic law has
practices, and thus officially place them on an equal footing with the Shari{ay}a. It is
generally held that Berber customary law (izerf) is not diametrically opposed to the
Shari{ay}a and takes it into account. However, Injaz Abdallah Habibi, in writing
about the Zayan tribes, openly questions whether this is the case, indicating a desire to
diminish the religious aspects of Berber identity. His emphasis on the positive aspects
namely the essentially democratic nature of village society and, by extension, Berber
culture as a whole (as articulated in the Berber Manifesto). The upland village is
presented as the repository of deep-rooted Berber traditions, with the traditional art,
handicrafts and household management by women who stood at the center of daily
life.41 Such treatment at times spills over into an idealization of traditional life,
("village") by writers and publicists keen on promoting and preserving Jewish identity
and culture, even as its base was being eroded, and then violently eradicated.
Another writer even went so far as to describe village society's organizing concept of
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the attributes of love, altruism, love of the land and the Other, and hence being not in
contradiction with the requirements of modernity but rather are in harmony with it.42
This may seem contrived; however, it may also fit the category of reinterpreting one's
Ali Azayko, for his part, recommended studying Morocco's past via the
Amazigh collective memory. In addition, one may learn something even from the
actual tattoo often engraved on the Berbers' skin. Use of the tattoo metaphor is
especially poignant, given the fact that in contemporary Morocco, the tattoo is often
are made to surreptitiously remove it, often resulting in scarring of the skin.43
{A} Kabyle or Amazigh? Identity and Memory Work among Algeria's Berbers
both the pre-Islamic and Arab-Islamic periods, as well as the challenges posed by the
efforts to base its rule on a policy of dividing Berbers from Arabs, underpinned by a
well constructed set of origin and character myths,44 proved a difficult legacy for
Berbers in both Morocco and Algeria, who were at pains to demonstrate their patriotic
the Berber culture movement accuse it of promoting colonialism in a new guise. But
unlike in earlier decades, Berber insistence on their anti-colonialist credential does not
deter them from sharply criticizing Arab nationalism, the dominant ideology of all
modern states in North Africa. More and more, Arab nationalism appears in Berber
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Atlantic Ocean to the Persian Gulf, Berberists emphasize the existence of a single
stretching from the Canary Islands to the Siwa oasis in western Egypt. Efforts to de-
sacralize the Arabic language include labeling the Arabic script "Aramean".45
Concurrently, a modified version of the ancient Tifinagh script, preserved for usage by
identity, and its usage actively promoted. In the realm of commemorative efforts,
(CERD), demanding that France add to its list of officially sanctioned holidays the
At the same time, the particular historical experiences and social realities of
the Berberophone communities have shaped their memory work, resulting in a type of
"Berberism in one country," carrying at least a potential tension with the pan-Berberist
view. Nowhere is this more evident than with the Kabylians, who make up 2/3rds of
role in laying the foundation for the modern Berber culture movement, embodied over
the last four decades by the France-based intellectual production of such bodies as the
Paris-VIII, and the Centre de Recherche Berbère at INALCO in Paris. However, the
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same factors which placed them in the vanguard of "pan-Berberism" also resulted in a
group, the Chaouia (from the Aures Mountains), has historically been less isolated
from its Arab surroundings and slower to develop a modern Amazigh identity.
expressed through new kinds of cultural expressions such as the poetry of resistance
of colonization, were already making their appearance at the end of the 19th century.
"Maghribian" community, only the immediate Kabylian identity and the wider
Islamic one.47 Jean Amrouche's Les Chants Berbères de Kabylie (1939), would be
followed by many others in the music and poetry fields (e.g. Mouloud Féraoun, Taos
modern Kabylian identity. On the more explicitly political level, young radical
sharpened matters further. According to the analysis of Melha Benbrahim, the texts
and Jugurtha, and the heroic resister to the Arab conquest, the Kahina; the fierce
Kabylian resistance to the French forces (1857, 1871); references to the Djurdura and
the montagne/adrar as a symbol of resistance; the honor of the group; and their
fidelity to their ancestors and symbolic heritage. Young Kabylian intellectuals, states
Salem Chaker, were thus situated at the intersection of radical nationalism of the
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Interest in the "Berberist crisis" is part of the wider interest among Kabylian
activists in reopening for scrutiny the events of Algeria's war of independence and its
dimension of the Algerian revolution's internal blood lettings and political purges,
e.g., the assassination of Abane Ramadane and Belkacem Krim, and the failure of
specificity, and any diversity, for that matter, in favor of a stridently uniform and uni-
the cultural flourishing and simmering proto-political opposition among the Kabylian
community during the 1970s. Politically, Ait Ahmed organized his supporters in
1963 under the banner of the Forces des Front Socialistes (FFS). It would be joined
The problematic nature of the Algerian state and its failure to adequately
Benjamin Stora: "The effect of the 'Berber spring' was to produce, for the first time
universe, where society and state, private and public mingled together in a single
means."52
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In terms of memory work, the anniversary of the Berber spring has become a
central commemorative event for Amazigh cultural associations in Algeria and the
Diaspora.53 Since 2001, it has been joined by Le Printemps Noir ("Black Spring"), the
bloody events sparked by the death of a young Kabylian in police custody that
resulted in the deaths of over 100 persons, a veritable civil revolt against the
authorities and the creation of a new body outside of existing political parties, the
aarouch (lit., tribes), which led an ongoing struggle to change the nature of Kabylian-
state relations, and by extension the nature of the Algerian state itself. The extent to
remains to be determined.54
The two "Springs" of 1980 and 2001 serve as bookends, of a sort, to the
breakdown of the post-independence FLN Algerian state and the descent into horrific
violence during the 1990s between the authorities and Islamist opposition forces.
These tumultuous times resulted in the creation of Kabylian "martyrs", from the
numerous intellectuals and artists slain during the violence of the 1990s,55 to Guermah
Massinissa, the youth whose killing touched off the "Black Spring" in 2001. Singer
and poet Lounes Matoub is perhaps the most prominent of them all. His murder in
Algeria's national anthem, with the refrain of "Betrayal, Betrayal." The cover of the
CD, drawn by Ali Dilem, one of Algeria's leading caricaturists, contains images of
dripping blood, the Amazigh flag, and a sign saying "Algeriassic Park." It serves as
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broadcasting from Paris, for example. Matoub's death, and those of others, quickly
came to serve as a reference point for increased Kabylian militancy. Given the
identity, it was fitting that a veteran singer/poet/activist, Ferhat Mehenni, has taken
lead in recent years in promoting autonomy for Kabylie, a radical idea indeed.56
Whatever the course that events would take, it was clear that the fears of Mouloud
Mammeri, the Kabylian cultural icon of the previous generation, of another "absurd
While Kabylia has been at the center of the Algerian Amazigh movement's
memory work in the Aures region, the site of the fabled Berber resistance to the
invading Arab-Muslim forces at the end of the 7th century, has recently reached a new
level. In February 2003, L'Association Aures El-Kahina erected a large statue of the
heroic Berber queen in the center of the town of Baghaï, in the wilaya of Khenchela.
The statue was designed by a graduate of the École Nationale des Beaux-Arts d'Alger.
Of course, such a public commemorative act could not be done in Algeria (except
perhaps in Kabylia) without the consent of the authorities. In fact, the ceremony was
attended by the President of the Republic himself, Abdel Aziz Bouteflika. (Still, one
shouldn't take this too far: his presence at the unveiling of the Kahina statue was
ignored entirely by the national press.) The president's presence was clearly intended
as a gesture to the Amazigh community with whom the state has been at loggerheads
for so many years (albeit primarily in Kabylia, not in the Aures); it also indicated a
reading of it.
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displaying the picture of the new Kahina statue has added superimposed images of the
Amazigh flag on both sides of the Kahina statue's pedestal.59 Activists bemoan the
degradation and official neglect of the archaeological site which is considered to have
been the mountainous redoubt of the Kahina. Some academics have urged that
UNESCO be approached to include it on its list of protected World Heritage sites, and
that the Ministry of Culture take the lead in promoting its value, as it was inhabited
additional site whose endangered status poses a threat to their collective memory,
59 meter diameter cylindrical pedestal in the wilaya of Batna. The structure is among
the oldest material evidence of the Massyle Amazigh dynasty, which under the
subsequent rule of Massinissa is considered to have sought to unify the Maghrib into a
single entity. A suggestion to name the Batna airport after Imadghacen (Imedhassen)
was rudely rejected, prompting the following rejoinder from the disappointed former
governor of Batna who had been removed by Bouteflika allegedly following the
pressure of the "local mafia": "Just as you have negated our origins at this moment,
social boundaries between "Arabs" and "Berbers" are generally fluid and negotiable,62
belying the all-too-common tendency among pundits and policy-makers, past and
social, cultural and political developments in Morocco over the past 30 years, it would
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proceeds apace. The same is true regarding neighboring Algeria. In his insightful
McDougall warned against the possibility that the development of a Berber counter-
narrative to the Algerian state's dominant narrative held the danger of hardening social
would in effect substitute one essential "authenticity" for another.63 Indeed, one can
At this point in time, Berber memory work, and the Berber/Amazigh culture
movement to which it belongs, is clearly a genie which has been let out of a bottle
whose cork has been discarded. Its future course, permutations, and points of
emphasis will depend in no small measure on the policies of the Algerian and
Moroccan states towards the phenomenon. Will their dominant national narratives be
sufficiently modified to include Amazigh elements? Can one imagine, for example,
that daily newspapers will include the Amazigh year on their masthead, alongside the
year according to the Muslim and Gregorian calendar? (Perhaps this is not so far-
fetched: after all, the Moroccan palace's mouthpiece, Le Matin du Sahara, includes
the date according to the Jewish calendar on its masthead!) Alternatively, will space
efforts be legitimized or repressed? And what may be the impact on the Amazigh
movement's memory work on varying state policies? One may only say that the
ever-increasing enterprise, which will surely impact upon, and interact with parallel
whole.
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This study was supported by The Israel Science Foundation (grant No. 525/04-21/5).
Special thanks to Samir Bin Layashi for his assistance in researching this article.
Endnotes
1 For convenience's sake, the terms "Berber" and "Amazigh" will be used
5 Jugurtha was the King of a united Numidia between 156-104 BC, and
depicting the Berbers as eternally rebellious; in fact, there was much more to
Amrocuhe's 1946 article, which described the duality of Berber culture in response to
the Other, and recommended the shedding of (female) cultural characteristics which
prevented the Berbers from becoming agents in history. Brett, Michael, and Elisabeth
Legend of the Kahina, A North African Heroine, 7-9. Portsmouth, NH, 2001. Brett
and Fentress, 120-132; Brett, Michael. “Ibn Khaldun and the Arabisation of North
119
120
8 Smith, 64.
9 Ibid, 146.
10 Shatzmiller, Maya. The Berbers and the Islamic State: The Marinid
80-81.
12 Ibid, 82.
13 The murkiness of the actual historical record has helped spawn a veritable
Kahina industry among just about every myth-seeking group which ever had anything
2000.
un Maghrib d'abord Maghrébin, 16-17 (in Arabic section). Rabat: Centre Tarik Ibn
Zyad, 2000.
Anderson, Benedict. Imagined Communities, 199-201. London, NY: Verso, 1991, 2nd
edition.
120
121
19 Silverstein, Paul A., and David Crawford. "Amazigh Activists and the
(Summer/Fall 2003): 116 -27. His critique is of Chafik's book, Mafhum al-Tarikh
Amazigh scholars, owing to his intellectual weight. However, although his Berber
origins are considered to be a factor in fashioning his identity, his concern with the
21 Yekutieli, Orit. "The Never-Ending Story: Thami al-Glawi and the History
Matba{ay} al-Najah al-Jadida, 2000. Ghallab himself was a member of the Cairo-
based committee for Moroccan national liberation, headed by Abd al-Krim, in the late
1940s. Ghallab and the other committee members, he says, were more "realistic" in
23 Pennell, C.R. A Country with a Government and a Flag: The Rif War in
121
122
the Maghrib in the Islamic Period, 378-82. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1987.
Press, 2002.
2004), article originally published in Nador, February 18, 2004. "Before the
Hiroshima and Nagasaki Bombs, the Rif Resistance was Confronted with the Use of
use of poison gas in the Rif war. Le Monde Amazigh, 44 (April, 2004).
Aux Fins De Reparations, Pour Les Prejudices Subis Suite a L'Utilisation D'Armes
28 Tafsut, no. 35 (October 2002), 5; Hart, David M. 'The Berber Dahir of 1930
in Colonial Morocco: Then and Now (1930-1960)." The Journal of North African
sample, see Peyron, Michael. "Amazigh Poetry of the Resistance Period (Central
122
123
32 See the extensive discussions of the subject in Le Monde Amazigh, 16, 17-
33 Hart, David M. "The Tribe in Morocco: Two Case Studies." In Arabs and
Berbers, edited by Ernest Gellner and Charles Micaud, 47. London: Duckworth, 1973.
which had landed him in jail. His death was ignored by the mainstream Moroccan
passing. www.mondeberbere.com, on the other hand, placed his picture in the center
of its homepage.
36 <http://www.mondeberbere.com/societe/manifest.htm/>
la Fondation Nationale des Sciences Politiques, 1985, (2nd edition). The Mouvement
Populaire and its offshoot, the Mouvement National Populaire, have proved to be
durable political framework for organizing and channeling the interests of pro-
one of the UNFP's former personages, Muhammad Fqih Basri, alleging that the
leadership had been a party of Oufkir's plans. For the resulting uproar, see Bruce
2000, edited by idem, 417. Tel Aviv: The Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern
123
124
State Administrative Control: An Example from the Zayan Tribes in the Khenifra
41 For a sensitive and loving account of one educated Kabylian's return to his
native village and the aesthetics of his mother's housekeeping, see Seffal, Rabah.
2004).
Rabat: Centre Tarik Ibn Zyad, 2002. The tattoo metaphor and its contemporary
meaning among some Amazigh youth was remarked upon to me by Samir Bin
Layashi.
7,4 (Winter 2002): 1-22. Burke III, Edmund. "The Image of the Moroccan State in
45 The historical basis for such a statement is the decisive influence of the
Nabatean Aramaic script on the subsequent Arabic script. Naveh, Joseph. Early
46 <http://www.congres-mondial-amazigh.org/article.php3?id_article=289>.
124
125
L'Harmattan, 1998.
Algeria's Minister of Culture, who declared in 1962 that "the Berber...is an invention
77-90. Ouerdane, Amar. "La 'Crise Berberiste de 1949, Un Confit a Plusieurs Faces."
Minorities and the State in the Arab World, edited by Ofra Bengio and Gabriel Ben-
to Site of Convergence." The Journal of North African Studies 9,3 (Autumn 2004):
60-82.
125
126
54 For a through discussion of the issue, see "Algeria: Unrest and Impasse in
Kabylia." International Crisis Group, Middle East/North Africa Report, 15, June 10,
2003. >http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=1415&l=1<
55 Djebar, Assia. Algerian White. NY: Seven Stories Press, 2000. The book
does not just focus on the untimely deaths of intellectuals during the 1990s, nor is it a
tract of Kabylian militancy, per se. Nonetheless, the author's literary narrative of
events sheds much light on the intertwining between Berber/Kabylian specificity and
2004
57 McDougall, 84.
<http://aureschaouia.free.fr/>
59 <http://aureschaouia.free.fr/>.
mémoire." <http://aureschaouia.free.fr/>
63 McDougall, 70.
126