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The Sultan's Jew - Morocco and the Sephardi World (Hardcover)
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The Sultan's Jew - Morocco and the Sephardi World (Hardcover)
Series: Stanford Studies in Jewish History and Culture
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This pathbreaking study uses the extraordinary life of Meir Macnin,
a prosperous Jewish merchant, as a lens for examining the Jewish
community of Morocco and its relationship to the Sephardi world in
the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Macnin, a
member of one of the most prominent Jewish families in Marrakesh,
became the most important merchant for the sultans who ruled
Morocco, and was their chief intermediary between Morocco and
Europe. He lived in London for about twenty years, and then
shuttled between Morocco and England for fifteen years until his
death in 1835.
This book challenges accepted views of Muslim-Jewish relations by
emphasizing the ambivalence in the relationship. It shows how elite
Jews maneuvered themselves into important positions in the Moroccan
state by linking themselves to politically powerful Muslims and by
establishing key positions in networks of trade. The elite Jews of
Morocco were also part of a wider Sephardi world that transcended
national boundaries. However, Macnin remained more connected to
Morocco, where Jews were, according to Islamic law, proteges of the
ruler and still subject to specific legal disabilities. The
early-nineteenth-century sultan Mawlay Sulayman confined Jews in a
number of Moroccan cities to newly created Jewish quarters as part
of a policy of defining boundaries between Muslims and Jews. Yet
Macnin remained closely tied to royal power, and in 1822 he became
the principal intermediary between Morocco and the European powers
for Mawlay Sulayman's successor, Mawlay 'Abd al-Rahman.
At the beginning of the period covered in this book, Meir Macnin
belonged to a wide, transnational Sephardi world, and moved easily
between Morocco and Europe. By the end of his life, however, this
Sephardi diaspora had virtually come to an end. Emancipation in
Western Europe and the growing identification of European Jews with
the nations in which they lived meant that their affinity to their
Sephardi heritage no longer transcended their national attachments.
The gap between Moroccan and European Jewry grew, and a new kind of
division--between "Western" and "Oriental" Jews--now existed within
the Jewish world.
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