C O N F I D E N T I A L RABAT 000615
SIPDIS
SIPDIS
STATE FOR NEA/MAG, DRL
E.O. 12958: DECL: 04/05/2011
TAGS: PGOV, PHUM, PINR, SCUL, MO
SUBJECT: THE AMAZIGH (BERBERS), PART III: ASSOCIATIONS IN
THE ANTI-ATLAS
REF: A. RABAT 00540
B. RABAT 00567
Classified By: Political Counselor Timothy Lenderking, reasons 1.4 (b)
and (d)
1. (C) Summary: This cable is the third in a series of
cables from a combined outreach and reporting trip by Poloff
and PAO to the anti-Atlas (south side of the Atlas Mountains)
from March 10-17. The area discussed is part of the
Meknes-Tafilalt region (reftels) and, like the Erfoud area,
it is experiencing a water shortage (reftel B). The economy
is partially based on remittances from those who have
emigrated to Spain and France, or those working in Casablanca
and Rabat. Missionoffs met with five associations. One, the
Boughafer Association, located in Al-Nif, advocates
recognition of the importance of Amazigh identity in all of
Morocco. End Summary.
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To Al-Nif
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2. (SBU) The road west from Erfoud to Al-Nif goes through
sparsely foliated, black foothills lacking water resources.
While this area was once famous for date palm trees, it too
has experienced extreme drought (reftel B). Multi-storeyed,
concrete houses and shops are built adjacent to the two-lane
road in Al-Nif -- the dryness of the area is evident
everywhere with a film of dust covering the buildings and
roads. Al-Nif is the center of an area with approximately
50,000 people. There are two doctors for the entire
population; neither of the doctors is Amazigh. There is only
one ambulance to serve the population and the closest
hospital is in Erfoud, approximately two hours away.
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Associations in Al-Nif
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3. (C) Greeting Missionoffs at the "Dar al-Shebab" (Men's
Club) in Al-Nif (Arabic for "violence") were male
representatives of five area associations: Tassourt, Errag,
Toughza, Achbarou, and Bougafer. These five associations
represented Al-Nif and the surrounding area, comprised of
even more remote villages. Introducing Al-Nif and the
surrounding area, the association representatives said that
their primary interest was economic development and
secondarily providing cultural and sports activities. (Note:
The theme of human/economic development and the preservation
of cultural identity is consistent in Morocco. Most
associations/organizations, governmental or nongovernmental,
articulate their mission using this theme. End Note.) The
cultural activities identified were music and dancing. Some
of the participants in this initial meeting were adamant that
Missionoffs understand that the area is in the "anti-Atlas"
and on the edge of the Sahara; they described themselves as a
"wall against desertification." Members of the associations
discussed the high incidence of glaucoma in the region, lack
of adequate medical facilities and what some identified as
the central health services not caring about the population.
4. (C) All of the association representatives pointed to
the emigration of the young male population as the most
significant problem. Young men do not see opportunities in
the area and leave for Rabat, Casablanca, Spain and France.
Eighty-five percent of the male population not in the Al-Nif
area sends money back to their relatives, according to the
association representatives. While these remittances assist
the family members remaining in the area, there is no
economic growth, according to the representatives.
5. (C) The village housing in the Al-Nif area is now
multi-storeyed concrete buildings. In the past,
multi-storeyed mud and stone constructed buildings followed
the contours of the land, creating a "stepped" settlement
image. Older members of the villages readily admitted their
dislike of the modern constructions. The younger male
association members said that constructing houses in the
older fashion was no longer possible because skilled workmen
were not available and that concrete housing is thus cheaper
and quicker to construct. The Errag (Amazigh for
"stony-Sahara") Association, like the others, lamented the
lack of water and said they were mostly concerned about the
children and women. The Achbarou (Amazigh for "saddle")
Association members said the village population is
approximately 1,400 and that 200 people live in France. The
main source of income for the association is from those
living in France; financing is currently being used to
construct a cultural center.
6. (C) Perhaps the most interesting association is the
Boughafer Association, located in Al-Nif. Boughafer is the
name of a mountain, approximately 30 kilometers from Al-Nif.
In the 1930s, the regional Amazigh tribal leaders waged a
battle with the French forces; they kept the French at bay
for six months. Articles on this battle, along with more
distant Amazigh historical events, including multiple
pictures of Queen Chaichaou, decorate the association's
office and are uppermost in the association members' minds,
spicing their conversations. In some ways, this association
was the most "militant" of those visited throughout the
anti-Atlas trip. Members were adamant about the importance
of the Amazigh language and culture, and many did not feel
that the central government in Rabat respected Amazigh
contributions to Morocco. One young member of the
association, who recently graduated from university, has a
grant from the Royal Institute for Amazigh Culture (RIAC) to
preserve Amazigh oral history. Several of the members
present thought that the Tamaynout organization was
preferable to the RIAC.
7. (C) One of the members of the Boughafer Association,
Abdelaziz Berdahem, returned from Norway in December after
completing a masters degree at the University of Tromso
entitled: "Indigenous Identity Awareness: The Case of
Imazighen in the Moroccan Arab State -- Free in our name but
invisible in our land?" Since the March trip, Poloff has met
with Berdahem as he attempts to find employment in Rabat.
Fluent in Amazigh, Arabic, French, and English, and with a
masters degree, he is finding it difficult to secure a
position. Like many others, he returned to his home after
being abroad, thinking he could immediately have an impact on
change in Al-Nif. While he did help to resolve a dispute
over land between two separate tribes in Al-Nif, he has found
himself frustrated by the lack of opportunities in his home
village, and, in his own words, finds himself "between
different worlds."
8. (C) In discussions with Berdahem, what is evident is his
commitment to his Amazigh culture and his confusion as to why
Amazighs are not recognized more in Morocco. He recounted
some of the problems with the Boughafer Association as having
to do with control and power issues. When he left for
Norway, a number of other young men in the association also
left Al-Nif either for work or more education. Several of
these men were teachers in the public schools and had been
the founders of the association. The GOM replaced the
teachers with non-Amazigh Islamists (Berdahem's term). These
men tried to take over the Boughafer Association and change
it into an "Islamist organization," according to Berdahem.
He and others in the association "have made sure," he said,
that the organization did not change from being a cultural
organization.
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Comment
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9. (C) While the people with whom Missionoffs met were
eager to elucidate the development and cultural activities in
which they were involved, they also pointed out that they are
disadvantaged because of the lack of water and the emigration
from the area. For the most part, the people projected a
sense of disappointment and expressed the feeling that they
are neglected by the central government. Having pride in
their Amazigh heritage did not extend, as it did in the
Erfoud area, to "selling" that heritage, rather the shape of
their pride seems to have taken on a more active political
sense. Living in a remote area, which once prospered with
date palm farms, appears to make the association
representatives eager to develop the area; yet, the
representatives projected a sense of doom about the region as
they emphasized neglect by GOM authorities and the number of
young males leaving the area.
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Visit Embassy Rabat's Classified Website;
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Riley