Overview
Country, North Africa.
Area: 177,117 sq mi (458,730 sq km). Population (2005 est.):
31,478,000. Capital: Rabat. Arabized Berbers (Amazigh) are the country’s
largest ethnolinguistic group; there are French, Spanish, and Bedouin
minorities. Languages: Arabic (official), Berber, French. Religion:
Islam (official; mostly Sunni). Currency: dirham. Morocco is a
mountainous country with an average elevation of 2,600 ft (800 m) above
sea level. A mountain chain known as the Rif runs along the northern
coast; the Atlas Mountains rise in the country’s centre and include
Mount Toubkal (13,665 ft [4,165 m]), Morocco’s highest peak. The area is
a zone of severe seismic activity, and earthquakes are frequent. Fertile
lowlands support agriculture; major crops include barley, wheat, and
sugar beets. Morocco is one of the world’s largest suppliers of
phosphate. Its industrial centre is Casablanca, the largest city. It is
a constitutional monarchy with two legislative houses; its chief of
state and head of government is the king, assisted by the prime
minister. The Berbers entered Morocco near the end of the 2nd millennium
bc. Phoenicians established trading posts along the Mediterranean coast
during the 12th century bc, and Carthage had settlements along the
Atlantic coast in the 5th century bc. After the fall of Carthage, the
region’s leaders became loyal allies of Rome, and in ad 42 it was
annexed by the Romans as part of the province of Mauretania. It was
invaded by Muslims in the 7th century. The Almoravid dynasty conquered
it and the Muslim areas of Spain in the mid-11th century; the Almohad
dynasty overthrew the Almoravids in the 12th century and in turn were
conquered by the Marīnid dynasty in the 13th century. After the fall of
the Marīnids in the mid-15th century, the Saʿdī dynasty ruled for a
century, beginning c. 1550. Attacks by Barbary Coast pirates compelled
Europeans to enter the area; the French fought Morocco over the boundary
with Algeria, Europeans obtained trading rights in 1856, and the Spanish
seized part of Moroccan territory in 1859. Morocco was a French
protectorate from 1912 until its independence in 1956. In the 1970s it
reasserted claim to the Spanish Sahara (see Western Sahara), and in 1976
Spanish troops withdrew from the region, leaving behind the
Algerian-supported Saharan guerrillas of the Polisario movement.
Relations with Mauritania and Algeria deteriorated, and fighting over
the region continued. Attempts at mediation have been made by the
international community.
Profile
Official name Al-Mamlakah al-Maghribīyah (Kingdom of Morocco)
Form of government constitutional monarchy with two legislative houses
(House of Councillors [2701]; House of Representatives [325])
Chief of state and head of government King assisted by Prime Minister
Capital Rabat
Official language Arabic
Official religion Islam
Monetary unit Moroccan dirham (DH)
Population estimate (2008) 31,606,000
Total area (sq mi) 177,117
Total area (sq km) 458,730
1All seats indirectly elected: 162 by regional councils.
Main
mountainous country of western North Africa that lies directly across
the Strait of Gibraltar from Spain.
The traditional domain of indigenous nomadic peoples—now collectively
known as Berbers, but more correctly referred to as Imazighen (singular,
Amazigh)—Morocco has been subject to extensive migration and has long
been the location of sedentary, urban communities that were originally
settled by peoples from outside the region. Controlled by Carthage from
an early date, the region was later the westernmost province of the
Roman Empire. Following the Arab conquest of the late 7th century ce,
the broader area of North Africa came to be known as the Maghrib
(Arabic: “the West”), and the majority of its people accepted Islam.
Subsequent Moroccan kingdoms enjoyed political influence that extended
beyond the coastal regions, and in the 11th century the first native
Amazigh dynasty of North Africa, the Almoravids, gained control of an
empire stretching from Andalusian (southern) Spain to parts of
sub-Saharan Africa. Attempts by Europeans to establish permanent
footholds in Morocco beginning in the late 15th century were largely
repulsed, but the country later became the subject of Great Power
politics in the 19th century. Morocco was made a French protectorate in
1912 but regained independence in 1956. Today it is the only monarchy in
North Africa.
Although the country is rapidly modernizing and enjoys a rising
standard of living, it retains much of its ancient architecture and even
more of its traditional customs. Morocco’s largest city and major
Atlantic Ocean port is Casablanca, an industrial and commercial centre.
The capital, Rabat, lies a short distance to the north on the Atlantic
coast. Other port cities include Tangier, on the Strait of Gibraltar,
Agadir, on the Atlantic, and Al-Hoceïma, on the Mediterranean Sea. The
city of Fès is said to have some of the finest souks, or open-air
markets, in all North Africa. Scenic and fertile, Morocco well merits
the praise of a native son, the medieval traveler Ibn Baṭṭūṭah, who
wrote “it is the best of countries, for in it fruits are plentiful, and
running water and nourishing food are never exhausted.”
Land
Morocco borders Algeria to the east and southeast, Western Sahara
to the south, the Atlantic Ocean to the west, and the Mediterranean Sea
to the north. It is the only African country with coastal exposure to
both the Atlantic Ocean and the Mediterranean Sea. Its area—excluding
the territory of Western Sahara, which Morocco controls—is slightly
larger than the U.S. state of California. Two small Spanish enclaves,
Ceuta and Melilla, are situated on the country’s northern coast.
Relief
Most of Morocco lies at high elevations, averaging about 2,600 feet
(800 metres) above sea level. Two chains of mountains divide eastern
from Atlantic Morocco: the Rif Mountains in the north form a buffer
along the Mediterranean coastline, whereas the Atlas Mountains create a
barrier across the centre. The two parts of the country are connected by
the narrow Taza Gap in the northeast as well as by roads that follow
older traditional routes. The Atlas and Rif ranges were formed during
the Paleogene and Neogene periods (between about 65 to 2.6 million years
ago) by the folding and uplifting of sediment that had accumulated in
the Tethys Sea, which, at that time, bordered the northern coast of
Africa.
The Rif Mountains are geologically part of the cordilleras (mountain
chains) reaching southward from the Iberian Peninsula of Europe, from
which Africa was separated only after the Neogene Period (i.e., during
the past 2.6 million years). The crescent-shaped range rises abruptly
from a narrow Mediterranean coastal plain. Most of the limestone peaks
in the Rif Mountains surpass 4,900 feet (1,500 metres) and rise to 8,058
feet (2,456 metres) at Mount Tidirhine.
The Atlas Mountains comprise three distinct chains. The High Atlas
(Haut Atlas), 460 miles (740 km) long, begins as small hills at the edge
of the Atlantic, rises rapidly to more than 6,500 feet (2,000 metres),
and reaches 13,665 feet (4,165 metres) at Mount Toubkal, Morocco’s
highest point. The Middle Atlas (Moyen Atlas) trends away from the High
Atlas in a northerly direction, rising to 10,958 feet (3,340 metres) at
its crest. The Anti-Atlas extends southwestward from the High Atlas to
the Atlantic.
East of the Rif and Atlas ranges is the Moulouya basin, a semiarid
lowland created by the eroding force of the Moulouya River. Farther east
are the High Plateaus (Hauts Plateaux) of eastern Morocco, which lie
roughly between 3,900 and 4,250 feet (1,200 and 1,300 metres) in
elevation and are extensions of landforms in neighbouring Algeria. The
arid regions to the south and southeast of the Atlas constitute the
northwestern limit of the Sahara, whereas a narrow transitional band at
the base of the mountains is called the pre-Sahara.
Atlantic Morocco consists of plains formed of relatively fine
sediments and plateaus of coarser deposits. The Sebou River basin, which
lies in the northwest between the Rif Mountains and a line running
roughly from Rabat to Fès, is a large alluvial plain. Its agricultural
heart is known as the Gharb plain. South of the Rabat-Fès line, between
the Atlas and the Atlantic Ocean, are a series of high plains known
collectively as the Moroccan Plateau. These include the Saïs Plain near
Fès and Meknès, the Tadla Plain to the northeast of Marrakech, the Haouz
Plain west of Marrakech, and the broad Chaouïa, Doukkala, and Abda
plains south of Casablanca. Between the High Atlas and Anti-Atlas ranges
is the Sous River valley. Morocco’s coastline is regular and has few
natural harbours. Before modern ports were constructed, sandbars and
rocky reefs offshore made navigation difficult.
Drainage
Morocco’s mountains capture significant amounts of rain and snow on
their windward slopes from storms coming in off the North Atlantic and
give rise to numerous perennial watercourses. Indeed, the country has
the most extensive stream network in North Africa. Most streams arise
either on the western slopes of the Atlas Mountains or on the southern
slopes of the Rif Mountains and flow westward to the Atlantic Ocean. The
Sebou is some 280 miles (450 km) long and has the largest volume of any
Moroccan river. With its tributaries, the Sebou accounts for almost half
of Morocco’s surface water resources. The Oum el-Rbia is Morocco’s
longest river, approximately 345 miles (555 km) in length. The Moulouya
is the only major river flowing to the Mediterranean Sea; it originates
on the eastern slopes of the Middle Atlas and flows about 320 miles (515
km) to its mouth, which lies near the Algerian frontier. The northern
slopes of the Rif are drained by several short streams that also empty
into the Mediterranean. Several minor streams originate on the dry
eastern slopes of the High Atlas and flow into the Sahara: the Guir, the
Rheris, the Ziz, the Dadès, and the Drâa. Although their volume is
small, they have cut deep gorges. Since the 1930s Morocco’s streams have
progressively been dammed for irrigation, hydroelectricity, and flood
control.
Soils
A dark clay-marl soil known as tirs, which is found on the Chaouïa,
Doukkala, and Abda plains, produces good yields of wheat and barley when
precipitation is sufficient and can retain enough moisture to support
summer pasture. Hamri, a light reddish siliceous soil found throughout
the Saïs Plain surrounding Meknès and Fès, supports productive vineyards
and can also produce good cereal yields, though it has poor moisture
retention. Dhess is the main soil type of the Sebou basin. A silt-rich
alluvial soil, it provides the foundation for much of Morocco’s modern
irrigated agriculture. Other major soil types, less suitable for
agriculture, are rmel, a sandy soil found in the Mamora Forest region
east of Rabat and along much of the northern coast, and haroucha, a
rocky soil found throughout Morocco’s semiarid regions.
Climate
Most of Morocco north of the Western Sahara, particularly along the
coasts, experiences a typical Mediterranean climate, with mild wet
winters and hot dry summers. The rainy season generally extends from
October to April. Torrential downpours occasionally produce devastating
floods, but overall several factors act to reduce the country’s
rainfall. Morocco is on the southern margins of the mid-latitude tract
of frontal storm systems that regularly traverse the North Atlantic. As
a result, rainfall levels are relatively low and gradually decrease from
north to south. High-pressure ridges, moreover, periodically develop
offshore during the rainy season, shifting storms to the north. Drought
results when these ridges persist for extended periods. The cold Canary
Current off the western shores also induces atmospheric stability and
further decreases the potential for precipitation.
In the broad coastal lowlands, average annual precipitation
diminishes progressively from about 32 inches (800 mm) on the northern
Gharb plain to less than 8 inches (200 mm) in the Sous valley. Farther
south, beyond the Anti-Atlas, semiarid conditions quickly fade into
desert. Elevation strongly influences this prevailing pattern, however,
with significantly greater amounts of precipitation occurring in the
mountains. The central Rif, for example, receives more than 80 inches
(2,030 mm) of precipitation annually, and even the High Atlas, much
farther south, receives some 30 inches (760 mm). Snow is common at
approximately 6,500 feet (2,000 metres), and the snowpack lingers in the
highest elevations until late spring or early summer. Morocco’s
mountains create a significant rain shadow, directly east of the
mountains, where in the lee of the prevailing winds, desert conditions
begin abruptly.
In the lowlands near the coast, summer heat is reduced by cool
onshore breezes. Average daily summer temperatures in the coastal cities
range from 64 to 82 °F (18 to 28 °C). In the interior, however, daily
highs frequently exceed 95 °F (35 °C). In late spring or summer, the
sharqī (chergui)—a hot, dusty wind from the Sahara—can sweep over the
mountains into the lowlands, even penetrating the coastal cities.
Temperatures rise dramatically, often reaching 105 °F (41 °C). If crops
have not been harvested, damage can be extensive from the desiccating
effects of the sharqī. In winter, the marine influence again moderates
temperatures in the coastal regions. Average daily winter temperatures
range from 46 to 63 °F (8 to 17 °C). Away from the coast, temperatures
drop significantly, occasionally dipping below the freezing point.
Plant and animal life
Outside the desert areas, the vegetation of Morocco resembles that
of the Iberian Peninsula. Extensive forests are still found in the more
humid mountainous areas, with cork oak, evergreen oak, and deciduous oak
on the lower slopes and fir and cedar at higher elevations, particularly
in the Middle Atlas. In drier mountain areas open forests of thuja,
juniper, and Aleppo (Pinus halepensis) and maritime pine are common.
East of Rabat is the extensive cork oak Mamora Forest. Eucalyptus,
originally from Australia, was introduced by French authorities during
the colonial period for reforestation. Since independence, the Moroccan
government has established several large plantations of this tree
surrounding the Mamora Forest. In the rugged highlands south of
Essaouira, vast open forests of argan (Argania spinoza) are found.
Unique to southwestern Morocco, this tree has a hard fruit that produces
a prized cooking oil.
In Morocco, as is common throughout the western Mediterranean region,
centuries of human activity have considerably altered the natural
vegetation. On many lower mountain slopes, cutting, grazing, and burning
the original vegetation have produced an often dense cover of maquis, or
scrub growth, characterized by various associations of wild olive,
mastic tree, kermes oak (Quercus coccinea), arbutus, heather, myrtle,
artemisia, cytisus (Medicago arborea), broom, and rosemary. In the arid
interior plains, the dwarf palm, jujube tree, esparto grass, and Barbary
fig (introduced from the Americas by way of Spain in the 16th century)
cover vast areas. There is little natural vegetation in the desert areas
east of the mountains, although the date palm, introduced to Morocco at
a very early period, is extensively cultivated in the desert oases.
Large game has been progressively eliminated in Morocco since Roman
times, when lions and elephants were still abundant. Both have long
since disappeared. Gazelles are still seen occasionally in the south, as
are mouflons (wild sheep) and fennecs (a type of fox) in the Atlas
region. With government protection, the Barbary macaque now flourishes
in the forests of the Middle Atlas. However, the richest fauna in
Morocco today is the bird life. Large migratory birds that sojourn in
Morocco include the stork, which picturesquely builds its nests on city
ramparts and mosque rooftops, and the flamingo, pelican, and cattle
egret.
People
Ethnic groups
Morocco is composed mainly of Arabs and Imazighen or an admixture of
the two. Sizable numbers of Imazighen live mainly in the country’s
mountainous regions—long areas of refuge for them where they can
preserve their language and culture.
Some segments of the population are descendants of refugees from
Spain who fled from the Reconquista, the Christian reconquest of the
Iberian Peninsula in the 15th century.
Trade and slavery brought a significant population of sub-Saharan
Africans to Morocco; their descendants now live chiefly in the southern
oases and in the larger cities. Jews constituted a fairly large minority
until recently, when, in the aftermath of the foundation of Israel and
the start of the Arab-Israeli conflict, many Jews felt compelled to
leave the country—most emigrated to Israel, Europe, and South and North
America.
Languages
Arabic, the national and official language of Morocco, is spoken by
two-thirds of the population, and Modern Standard Arabic is taught in
schools. The Amazigh language, known as Tamazight, spoken by roughly
one-third of the people, has been preserved in Amazigh enclaves. Many
Imazighen also speak Arabic, and Tamazight is taught in schools.
French is an important secondary language, and Spanish is widely
spoken. English is increasingly used as well.
Tamazight-speaking inhabitants are divided into three ethnolinguistic
groups: the Rif people (also called Riffi, or Riffians) of the Rif
Mountains, the people of the Middle Atlas, and the people of the High
Atlas and the Sous valley. While there are differences among these
dialects, they are mutually comprehensible.
Religion
Islam is the official state religion, and the vast majority of
Moroccans are Sunni Muslims of the Mālikī rite. The royal house, the
ʿAlawite dynasty, has ruled since the 17th century basing its claim to
legitimacy on descent from the Prophet Muhammad. The royal family is
revered by Moroccan Muslims because of its prophetic lineage. As in many
Islamic countries, Sufism claims adherents, and forms of popular
religion—including the veneration of saints and the visitation of
tombs—are widely practiced. Moroccan law mandates freedom of religion,
but few non-Muslims reside in the country. The country has no indigenous
Christian population to speak of, and its Jewish community has dwindled
to a few thousand.
Settlement patterns
Traditional regions
Settlement patterns in Morocco correspond loosely to the three major
environmental zones: the coastal plains and plateaus, the highland areas
of the Rif and Atlas mountains, and the desert east and south of the
Atlas.
The coastal plains and plateaus contain three-fourths of the
country’s population and include most of its cities and virtually all of
its modern commercial agriculture. It has been the home of settled
farmers and seminomadic tribes for centuries. The main form of
agriculture is rain-fed cereal production, with wheat and barley as the
main winter crops. This is supplemented by stock raising and summer
gardens producing pulses (legumes) and fresh vegetables.
The highland areas of the Rif and the Atlas contain about a fifth of
the population and serve as centres of Amazigh culture. Traditional
villages are built for defense and are commonly perched on hillsides or
hilltops. Dwellings, often multistoried, are tightly clustered and are
built of stone, adobe, or tamped earth. Level land is rare, and terraces
are constructed to create arable fields along the nearby valley walls.
The main subsistence crops are barley as a winter crop and corn (maize)
and fresh vegetables as summer crops. Many villages specialize in cash
cropping of nuts or fruits—such as olives, almonds, walnuts, figs,
apples, cherries, apricots, or plums—that are well-adapted to a local
microclimate. Raising of sheep or goats often supplements village
agriculture. Some groups practice transhumance, migrating with their
flocks or herds to summer pastures at higher elevations or winter
pastures at lower elevations and living in dark-coloured tents
(khaymahs) woven of goat hair.
The pre-Saharan and Saharan areas south of the Atlas contain a tiny
proportion of Morocco’s population. Some settlements are made up of
ḥarātīn, the descendants of sub-Saharan Africans, and many groups speak
one of the Tamazight dialects.Virtually all settlement is in oases, most
of which are created artificially either by diverting water from streams
or by importing water from mountains—often over some distance—via
underground tunnels (qanāts). Dates are the main crop, grown as both a
subsistence and a cash crop. Alfalfa, corn, wheat, barley, vegetables,
and other crops are grown in the date-palm understory. Much settlement
in this region is in highly distinctive, fortified adobe villages known
as ksour (Arabic: quṣūr, “castles”). Nomadic camel herding was once an
important economic activity in the Saharan zone, but government
policies, desert warfare, multiyear droughts, and other extenuating
factors have caused this way of life to disappear almost completely.
Urban settlement
More than half the Moroccan population now lives in urban areas.
Most Moroccan cities retain at least some of their traditional character
and charm. During the period of the French protectorate, colonial
authorities did not tamper with the traditional urban centres, or
medinas (madīnahs), which were usually surrounded by walls. Rather than
modifying these traditional centres to accommodate new infrastructure
for administration and economic development, they established villes
nouvelles (“new towns”) alongside them. In addition, they shifted the
focus of political and economic life from the interior of Morocco—where
it had long revolved around the imperial cities of Fès, Meknès, and
Marrakech—to the Atlantic coast. Under the protectorate, Casablanca was
transformed from a small coastal village into a bustling metropolis.
Rabat became the capital and centre of administration. By the 1930s,
bidonvilles (literally, “tin can cities”), or shantytowns, were
beginning to develop around major urban areas and have since become
extensive.
Demographic trends
Morocco’s population is growing at a slightly faster rate than that
of countries outside Africa, but it is well below the average for those
in the Middle East and North Africa. Nonetheless, Morocco has a large
population for its size that is highly concentrated in the most
habitable areas. About one-third of the population is under age 15. For
some time the opportunity to emigrate to western European countries
offered a partial solution to Morocco’s population pressure, and by the
early 1980s some 600,000 Moroccan workers and merchants had established
themselves in western Europe. Morocco’s population problem was only
marginally relieved by migration to the labour markets in the Persian
Gulf region during the oil boom that began in the late 20th century.
Economy
As is true in many former African colonies, the Moroccan economy
remains heavily dependent on the export of raw materials. Also of
growing importance to the economy are modern sectors, particularly
tourism and telecommunications. Altogether, the modern portion accounts
for more than two-thirds of gross domestic product (GDP), even though it
employs only about one-third of the country’s workforce.
Since the mid-1980s the Moroccan government has undertaken a vigorous
program of privatization and economic reform, encouraged by major
international lenders such as the World Bank and the International
Monetary Fund. Measures have included selling state-owned enterprises,
devaluing the currency, and changing pricing policies to encourage local
production. In 1999 the Moroccan government set up a loan fund to
stimulate growth and competition among small businesses. Morocco’s sandy
beaches, sunshine, diverse environments, and rich cultural heritage give
it outstanding potential for tourism, which the government has been
actively developing.
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
Morocco is endowed with numerous exploitable resources. With
approximately 33,000 square miles (85,000 square km) of arable land
(one-seventh of which can be irrigated) and its generally temperate
Mediterranean climate, Morocco’s agricultural potential is matched by
few other Arab or African countries. It is one of the few Arab countries
that has the potential to achieve self-sufficiency in food production.
In a normal year Morocco produces two-thirds of the grains (chiefly
wheat, barley, and corn [maize]) needed for domestic consumption. The
country exports citrus fruits and early vegetables to the European
market; its wine industry is developed, and production of commercial
crops (cotton, sugarcane, sugar beets, and sunflowers) is expanding.
Newer crops such as tea, tobacco, and soybeans have passed the
experimental stage, the fertile Gharb plain being favourable for their
cultivation. The country is actively developing its irrigation potential
that ultimately will irrigate more than 2.5 million acres (1 million
hectares).
Nevertheless, the danger of drought is ever present. Especially at
risk are the cereal-growing lowlands, which are subject to considerable
variation in annual precipitation. On average, drought occurs in Morocco
every third year, creating a volatility in agricultural production that
is the main constraint on expansion in the sector.
Livestock raising, particularly sheep and cattle, is widespread.
Morocco fills its own meat requirements and is also attempting to become
self-sufficient in dairy products.
Morocco’s forests, which cover about one-tenth of its total land area
(excluding Western Sahara), have substantial commercial value. Morocco
satisfies much of its timber needs by harvesting the high-elevation
forests in the Middle and High Atlas. Its eucalyptus plantations enable
it to be self-sufficient in charcoal, which is used extensively for
cooking fuel. Eucalyptus also provides the raw material needed for the
country’s paper and cellulose industries. Paper pulp is a valuable
export as is cork from the country’s plentiful cork oak forests.
The fishing grounds in the Canary Current off Morocco’s west coast
are exceptionally rich in sardines, bonito, and tuna, but the country
lacks the modern fleets and processing facilities to benefit fully from
these marine resources. An important part of a major trade agreement
Morocco concluded with the European Union (EU) in 1996 concerned fishing
rights, by which the EU pays Morocco an annual fee to allow vessels
(mainly Spanish) to fish Moroccan waters.
Resources and power
With its acquisition of Western Sahara, Morocco came to possess some
two-thirds of the world’s reserves of phosphates, used for the
manufacture of fertilizers and other products. Low world prices for
phosphates, however, have hindered production. Other minerals include
iron ore and coal, mined for Morocco’s domestic use, and barite,
manganese, lead, and zinc, which are exported in small quantities.
A major weakness in Morocco’s resource inventory is its shortage of
domestic energy sources. Oil exploration has been disappointing,
although the country possesses some natural gas reserves that have been
exploited. Its hydroelectric potential is considerable and now being
tapped. Morocco must cover the bulk of its growing energy needs through
imports, principally crude petroleum, which is refined domestically.
Thermal power plants produce much of the country’s electricity.
Manufacturing
Manufacturing accounts for about one-sixth of GDP and is steadily
growing in importance in the economy. Two particularly important
components of the country’s industrial makeup are processing raw
materials for export and manufacturing consumer goods for the domestic
market. Many operations date to the colonial period. Until the early
1980s, government involvement was dominant and the major focus was on
import substitution. Since then the emphasis has shifted to privatizing
state operations and attracting new private investment, including
foreign sources. Processing phosphate ore into fertilizers and
phosphoric acid for export is a major economic activity. Food processing
for export (canning fish, fresh vegetables, and fruit) as well as for
domestic needs (flour milling and sugar refining) is also important, and
the manufacture of textiles and clothes using domestically produced
cotton and wool is a major source of foreign exchange. Morocco’s iron
and steel manufacturing industry is small but provides a significant
share of the country’s domestic needs.
Finance
Morocco’s central bank, the Bank al-Maghrib, plays a preeminent role
in the country’s banking system. It issues the Moroccan dirham,
maintains Morocco’s foreign currency reserves, controls the credit
supply, oversees the government’s specialized lending organizations, and
regulates the commercial banking industry. Privatization has stimulated
activity on the Casablanca Stock Exchange (Bourse de Casablanca—founded
in 1929—is one of the oldest exchanges in Africa), notably trade in
shares of large former state-owned operations.
Trade
Government attempts to increase exports and control imports have had
some success, and a chronic annual trade deficit has begun to narrow. By
the 1990s Morocco had also significantly lowered its foreign debt. The
three leading exports are agricultural produce (citrus fruits and market
vegetables), semiprocessed goods and consumer goods (including
textiles), and phosphates and phosphate products. Major imports are
semimanufactures and industrial equipment, crude oil, and food
commodities. Morocco’s largest trading partner is the EU. Because
Morocco’s trade with Europe has been so significant, an important
development of the 1990s was negotiating a formal association with the
EU, including an agreement to create, over time, a Euro-Mediterranean
free trade zone. Other trade accords have also been negotiated to
mitigate the dependence on Europe, including an agreement with North
American Free Trade Agreement countries and bilateral arrangements with
other countries in the Middle East and North Africa. In 2004 a Free
Trade Agreement was signed with the United States.
Services
Services, including government and military expenditures, account
for about one-fourth of Morocco’s GDP. Government spending alone,
despite an ongoing effort on the part of the government to sell much of
its assets to private concerns, accounts for fully half of the service
economy. Since the mid-1980s tourism and associated services have been
an increasingly significant sector of the Moroccan economy and by the
late 1990s had become the country’s largest source of foreign currency.
During that time the Moroccan government committed significant
resources—by way of loans and tax exemptions—to the development of the
tourist industry and associated services. The government also made
direct capital investments in the development of the service sector, but
since the early 1990s it has begun to divest itself of these properties.
Several million visitors enter Morocco yearly, most of them from Europe.
Tourists also arrive from Algeria, the United States, and East Asia,
mainly Japan.
Labour and taxation
Roughly one-third of the population is employed in agriculture,
another one-third make their living in mining, manufacturing, and
construction, and the remainder are occupied in the trade, finance, and
service sectors. Not included in these estimates is a large informal
economy of street vendors, domestic workers, and other underemployed and
poorly paid individuals. High unemployment is a problem; the official
figure is roughly one-fifth of the workforce, but unofficial estimates
are much higher, and—in a pattern typical of most Middle Eastern and
North African countries—unemployment among university graduates holding
nontechnical degrees is especially high. Several trade unions exist in
the country; the largest of these, with nearly 700,000 members, is
L’Union Marocaine du Travail, which is affiliated with the International
Confederation of Free Trade Unions.
Tax revenues provide the largest part of the general budget. Taxes
are levied on individuals, corporations, goods and services, and tobacco
and petroleum products.
Transportation and telecommunications
Morocco’s road network effectively integrates the country’s diverse
regions. Established during the colonial period, the network has been
well maintained and gradually expanded since. The railway system
connects the principal urban centres of the north, and new rail links,
together with improved roads, are being established to El-Aaiún
(Laâyoune) in Western Sahara. Morocco has some two dozen ports along its
lengthy coastline. Casablanca alone accounts for about half of all port
tonnage handled, although port facilities in Tangier are of increasing
significance. Other major ports include Safi, Mohammedia, Agadir, Nador,
Kenitra, and El Jorf Lasfar. About a dozen airports capable of
accommodating large aircraft service the country; the principal
international airport is located near Casablanca. The state-owned Royal
Air Maroc (RAM) airline provides regular service to Europe, North
America, the Middle East, and western Africa.
In the late 1980s and early ’90s the government undertook a major
expansion and modernization of the telecommunications system. This
nearly quadrupled the number of internal telephone lines and greatly
improved international communications. In 1996 the state-owned
telecommunications industry was opened up to privatization by a new law
that allowed private investment in the retail sector, while the state
retained control of fixed assets. In 1998 the government created Maroc
Telecom (Ittiṣālāt al-Maghrib), which provides telephone, cellular, and
Internet service for the country. Satellite dishes are found on the
roofs of houses in even the poorest neighbourhoods, suggesting that
Moroccans at every social and economic level have access to the global
telecommunications network. The Internet has made steady inroads in
Morocco; major institutions have direct access to it, while private
individuals can connect via telecommunications “boutiques,” a version of
the cyber cafés found in many Western countries, and through home
computers.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
According to the constitution promulgated in 1996, political power
in Morocco is to be shared between the hereditary monarch and an elected
bicameral Parliament, consisting of a House of Councillors (Majlis
al-Mustashārīn; upper chamber) and House of Representatives (Majlis
al-Nawāb; lower chamber). A prime minister heads the cabinet, which
constitutes the executive.
Despite the existence of a constitution, legislature, and a number of
active political parties, however, the king continues to wield ultimate
political authority: he promulgates legislation, appoints and dismisses
ministers—including the prime minister—and can dissolve parliament at
any time and rule by decree. The overwhelming authority of the monarch
in political life has been a subject of intense debate and criticism,
and since the mid-1990s, political reforms to strengthen representative
institutions, enhance the authority of the parliament and cabinet,
increase political participation, and limit the king’s ability to
manipulate political affairs have been enacted under pressure both from
internal opposition groups and from groups outside the country.
Local government
At the local level, Morocco is subdivided into multiple levels of
government, all directly under the Ministry of the Interior. At the top
are 16 regions, which are further divided into several dozen provinces
and urban prefectures, each ruled by a governor appointed by the king.
Beneath this second-order subdivision are rural qaḍawāt (districts) and
municipalities, governed by chefs de cercle. The fourth level comprises
rural communes and autonomous urban centres, governed respectively by
qāʾids (caids) and pashas. Lower-order officials are appointed either by
the Ministry of the Interior or by the governors. Each level has
popularly elected bodies whose primary function is to help determine
local matters and priorities, such as initiating development projects
and deciding budget expenditures. At the end of the 1990s, government
policy was moving toward allowing greater decision making at the local
level.
Justice
In theory, the Qurʾān is still the source of law. It is, in effect,
exercised by the qāḍīs (Muslim religious judges) and is limited to
matters relating to the personal status of Muslims. Rabbinical justice
applies to Jews. All other matters, whether they concern Muslims, Jews,
or others, are in the hands of secular courts that apply a
French-inspired legal code. The highest legal authority is the Supreme
Court, which supervises a legal system consisting of courts of appeal,
regional tribunals, magistrates’ courts, and, at the lowest level,
courts of first instance. All judges receive appointments from the king
and are supervised by the Ministry of Justice. The legal system,
however, has not been immune to pressures for reform. Moroccan women, in
particular, have sought reforms in the Mudawwanah, or code of personal
status and family law, in an effort to change inequities in inheritance,
divorce, and other matters that have traditionally favoured men. In 2004
parliament issued a new, more liberal, personal status code.
Political process
Members of the new 270-member House of Councillors are chosen for
nine-year terms by local councils, trade unions, and professional
associations. All 325 members of the House of Representatives are
directly elected to five-year terms by popular vote. The constitution
prohibits a one-party system, and many parties exist. Legislative
elections held in 1997 marked a significant change in Moroccan politics:
a Democratic Bloc comprising a coalition of socialist, nationalist, and
left-wing parties won a plurality of seats, producing the first
government by a former opposition group in years and introducing a new
element of dynamism into a stagnated political system. The National
Entente, comprising three parties formerly in the government, became the
largest opposition party.
The Ministry of the Interior retains considerable power, as do the
security forces. Islamist groups have remained active on the political
front, presenting an ongoing challenge to the regime. Some of the more
moderate factions were politically co-opted when their representatives
were elected to the 1997 parliament, but extremist groups have retained
a significant power base within the universities and among unemployed
young people and have occasionally resorted to violence.
Although all citizens are franchised and have equal rights with
respect to education, employment, private property, and the right to
strike, in reality differences abound, especially with regard to women.
There are few women involved in the legislative or ministerial levels of
government. King Muḥammad VI has attempted to rectify this situation,
however, by appointing women as department heads and as royal
counselors.
Security
Military service lasts for 18 months in Morocco, and the country’s
reserve obligation lasts until age 50. The country’s military consists
of the Royal Armed Forces—this includes the army (the largest branch)
and a small navy and air force—the National Police Force, the Royal
Gendarmerie (mainly responsible for rural security), and the Auxiliary
Forces. Internal security is generally effective, and acts of political
violence are rare (one exception, a terrorist bombing in May 2003 in
Casablanca, killed scores). The UN maintains a small observer force in
Western Sahara, where a large number of Morocco’s troops are stationed.
The Saharawi group Polisario maintains an active militia of an estimated
5,000 fighters in Western Sahara and has engaged in intermittent warfare
with Moroccan forces since the 1980s.
Health and welfare
Morocco has a relatively favourable ratio of physicians and other
trained medical personnel to population. The government has emphasized
preventive medicine by increasing the number of dispensaries and health
centres. More than half of the rural population, however, still lacks
access to these facilities. In addition, only a small portion of the
rural population and not all of the urban population have access to safe
drinking water. Infant mortality rates remain high, and at least
one-third of the population experiences malnutrition. Diseases such as
hepatitis remain prevalent, and disorders such as schistosomiasis are
becoming more frequent with the expansion of irrigation.
Housing
Housing in Morocco ranges from the traditional to the ultramodern.
In rural areas, some Moroccans still reside in ksour and agricultural
villages. Living conditions in these places remain severe. Despite
efforts by the government and some private groups to renovate and
modernize the traditional medinas, access to public utilities in
numerous city centres likewise remains limited. For many years the
government tried to discourage the development of bidonvilles and other
spontaneous settlements. More recently, however, it has provided these
communities with electricity, piped water, and other facilities and
encouraged residents to improve their structures. The government, along
with private developers, has also promoted the construction of new
housing units throughout the country, but these are largely inhabited by
the middle class. “Clandestine” or illegal housing of a more permanent
nature has grown up on the urban periphery. The government is seeking
ways to regularize this type of housing by bringing it up to an
acceptable standard and by providing it with basic services, albeit
after construction has occurred.
Education
Morocco allocates approximately one-fifth of its budget to
education. Much of this is spent on building schools to accommodate the
rapidly growing population. Education is mandatory for children between
the ages of 7 and 13 years. In urban areas the majority of children in
this age group attend school, though on a national scale the level of
participation drops significantly. About three-fourths of school-age
males attend school, but only about half of school-age girls; these
proportions drop markedly in rural areas. Slightly more than half of the
children go on to secondary education, including trade and technical
schools. Of these, few seek higher education. Poor school attendance,
particularly in rural areas, has meant a low rate of literacy, which is
about two-fifths of the population.
Morocco has more than four dozen universities, institutes of higher
learning, and polytechnics dispersed at urban centres throughout the
country. Its leading institutions include Muḥammad V University in
Rabat, the country’s largest university, with branches in Casablanca and
Fès; the Hassan II Agriculture and Veterinary Institute in Rabat, which
conducts leading social science research in addition to its agricultural
specialties; and Al-Akhawayn University in Ifrane, the first private
English-language university in North Africa, inaugurated in 1995 with
contributions from Saudi Arabia and the United States.
Cultural life
Cultural milieu
The area that is now Morocco has long been a crossroads between
Europe, sub-Saharan Africa, and the Middle East, and diverse cultural
and ethnic groups have migrated through the region and left their mark
on it. Beginning in the 8th century, indigenous Amazigh culture was met
with waves of Arab conquerors and travelers who brought with them the
Islamic faith and the powerful influence of Arabic language and culture.
The arrival of numerous Jewish and Muslim refugees from the Spanish
Reconquista beginning in the 16th century left Moroccan culture with a
lasting Andalusian quality, and starting in the 19th century, the
influence of French culture began to grow—alongside French political
power—in all parts of North Africa. French culture—along with the
persistence of the French language—has continued to exert a strong
influence on Morocco. Some Moroccans have also renewed their interest in
Amazigh culture, and civic associations have been formed to encourage
the study of Tamazight literature and oral traditions.
Daily life and social customs
Social life for most Moroccans still centres on home and family. The
sidewalk café is a favourite gathering place for men, and watching a
football (soccer) match on television in the local café is a popular
form of entertainment. Big cities such as Casablanca boast a variety of
diversions, including cinemas, restaurants, and shopping in modern
boutiques or in the souk, the open-air market in which vendors sell a
wide array of local arts and crafts items alongside foods and imported
commodities. Morocco’s extensive coastline has numerous fine beaches,
some of them private and off-limits but many of them open to the public
and within easy reach of the city. On weekends families often spend the
day at the shore, swimming, picnicking, and playing sports.
Moroccan cuisine has gained a following among connoisseurs worldwide,
and the country’s rich agricultural regions provide ample products for
Moroccan kitchens. Meat staples include fish, lamb, and fowl—including
pigeon, which is considered a delicacy when baked in pastry, the
b’stillah, a national favourite. Tomatoes, peppers, onions, and
eggplants are among the numerous vegetables typically used in dishes,
and fruits of all varieties are enjoyed. Bread is, as in all countries
of the Middle East and North Africa, a deep cultural symbol as well as a
daily staple. The premier Moroccan food, however, is couscous, a
semolina-based pasta served with a meat stew. Kabobs of various types
are common, as are salads and soups. Harira, a thick and hearty lamb
soup, is served to break the fast at Ramadan and is a national
speciality. The national drink is mint tea. Morocco is a wine-producing
country, but production had begun to decline by the early 21st century
under religious pressure that viewed alcohol consumption as
inappropriate.
Moroccans observe a number of secular and religious holidays. Islamic
holidays include the two ʿīds, ʿĪd al-Fiṭr and ʿĪd al-Aḍḥā, and the
Prophet’s birthday; national holidays include Independence Day and the
king’s birthday.
The arts
The production of Moroccan literature has continued to grow and
diversify. To the traditional genres—poetry, essays, and
historiography—have been added forms inspired by Middle Eastern and
Western literary models. French is often used in publishing research in
the social and natural sciences, and in the fields of literature and
literary studies, works are published in both Arabic and French.
Moroccan writers, such as Mohammed Choukri, Driss Chraïbi, Abdallah
Laroui, Abdelfattah Kilito, and Fatima Mernissi, publish their works in
both French and English. Expatriate writers such as Pierre Loti, William
S. Burroughs, and Paul Bowles have drawn attention to Moroccan writers
as well as to the country itself.
Since independence a veritable blossoming has taken place in painting
and sculpture, popular music, amateur theatre, and filmmaking. The
Moroccan National Theatre (founded 1956) offers regular productions of
Moroccan and French dramatic works. Art and music festivals take place
throughout the country during the summer months, among them the World
Sacred Music Festival at Fès.
Moroccan music, influenced by Arab, Amazigh, African, and Spanish
traditions, makes use of a number of traditional instruments, such as
the flute (nāy), shawm (ghaita), zither (qanūn), and various short
necked lutes (including the ʿūd and gimbrī). These are often backed by
explosive percussion on the darbūkka (terra-cotta drum). Among the most
popular traditional Moroccan artists internationally are the Master
Musicians of Jajouka, an all-male guild trained from childhood, and
Hassan Hakmoun, a master of gnāwa trance music, a popular spiritual
style that traces its roots to sub-Saharan Africa. Younger Moroccans
enjoy raï, a style of plain-speaking Algerian music that incorporates
traditional sounds with those of Western rock, Jamaican reggae, and
Egyptian and Moroccan popular music.
Cultural institutions
Morocco has a number of fine museums situated throughout the
country. The Batha Museum, located in Fès and housed in a former
19th-century royal residence, specializes in historical Moroccan art and
has an excellent collection of native ceramics. The Oudaïa Museum
(founded 1915; also known as the Museum of Moroccan Art) is located near
Rabat’s Oudaïa Casbah. Originally constructed as a private residence in
the 17th century, the museum has collections of premodern Moroccan arts
and crafts, as does the Dar El-Jamaï Museum (1920), which is located in
Meknès. Rabat’s Archaeological Museum (1931) has a comprehensive
collection covering the entirety of Morocco’s history. Morocco is also
home to a number of learned societies, research institutes, and
archives.
Sports and recreation
Spectator sports in Morocco traditionally centred on the art of
horsemanship until European sports—football (soccer), polo, swimming,
and tennis—were introduced at the end of the 19th century. Football is
the country’s premier sport, popular among the urban youth in
particular, and in 1970 Morocco became the first African country to play
in World Cup competition. At the 1984 Olympic Games, two Moroccans won
gold medals in track and field events, one of whom—Nawal El Moutawakel
in the 400 metre hurdles—was the first woman from an Arab or Islamic
country to win an Olympic gold medal. Tennis and golf have also become
popular. Several Moroccan professional players have competed in
international competition, and the country fielded its first Davis Cup
team in 1999.
Media and publishing
Morocco’s government-owned radio and television network,
Radiodiffusion Télévision Marocaine (RTM), broadcasts throughout the
country. Radio broadcasts are in Arabic, French, Tamazight, Spanish, and
English, while television is broadcast in Arabic, Tamazight, and French.
In addition, a private television network is headquartered in Casablanca
and a private radio network in Tangier.
There are about a dozen daily newspapers in Morocco, published in
Rabat, Casablanca, and Tangier and written in both French and Arabic.
Most are organs of political parties, whereas the remainder are owned by
or sympathetic to the government. In addition, a rich variety of
periodicals represent various professions, trades, intellectual
interests, and avocations. The high rate of illiteracy, however, keeps
readership low and makes television the primary medium for disseminating
news and information.
Abdallah Laroui
Will D. Swearingen
Susan Gilson Miller
History
This discussion focuses on Morocco since the 16th century. For a
more detailed treatment of earlier periods and of the country in its
regional context, see North Africa.
Situated in the northwest corner of Africa and, on a clear day,
visible from the Spanish coast, Morocco has resisted outside invasion
while serving as a meeting point for European, Eastern, and African
civilizations throughout history. Its early inhabitants were
Tamazight-speaking nomads; many of these became followers of
Christianity and Judaism, which were introduced during a brief period of
Roman rule. In the late 7th century, Arab invaders from the East brought
Islam, which local Imazighen gradually assimilated. Sunni Islam
triumphed over various sectarian tendencies in the 12th and 13th
centuries under the doctrinally rigorous Almohad dynasty. The Christian
reconquest of Spain in the later Middle Ages brought waves of Muslim and
Jewish exiles from Spain to Morocco, injecting a Hispanic flavour into
Moroccan urban life. Apart from some isolated coastal enclaves, however,
Europeans failed to establish a permanent foothold in the area. In the
16th century, Ottoman invaders from Algeria attempted to add Morocco to
their empire, thus threatening the country’s independence. They, too,
were thwarted, leaving Morocco virtually the only Arab country never to
experience Ottoman rule. In 1578, three kings fought and died near Ksar
el-Kebir (Alcazarquivir), including the Portuguese monarch Sebastian.
This decisive battle, known as the Battle of the Three Kings, was
claimed as a Moroccan victory and put an end to European incursions onto
Moroccan soil for three centuries. The 17th century saw the rise of the
ʿAlawite dynasty of sharifs, who still rule Morocco today. This dynasty
fostered trade and cultural relations with sub-Saharan Africa, Europe,
and the Arab lands, though religious tensions between Islam and
Christendom often threatened the peace.
By the late 17th century, Morocco’s cultural and political identity
as an Islamic monarchy was firmly established. The figure of the strong
sultan was personified by Mawlāy Ismāʿīl (1672–1727), who used a slave
army, known as the ʿAbīd al-Bukhārī, to subdue all parts of the country
and establish centralized rule. Subsequent monarchs often used their
prestige as religious leaders to contain internal conflicts caused by
competition among tribes. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries,
when Europe was preoccupied with revolution and continental war, Morocco
withdrew into a period of isolation. On the eve of the modern era,
despite their geographic proximity, Moroccans and Europeans knew little
about each other.
Decline of traditional government (1830–1912)
During the French invasion of Algeria in 1830, the sultan of
Morocco, Mawlāy ʿAbd al-Raḥmān (1822–59), briefly sent troops to occupy
Tlemcen but withdrew them after French protests. The Algerian leader
Abdelkader in 1844 took refuge from the French in Morocco. A Moroccan
army was sent to the Algerian frontier; the French bombarded Tangier on
August 4, 1844, and Essaouira (Mogador) on August 15. Meanwhile, on
August 14, the Moroccan army had been totally defeated at Isly, near the
frontier town of Oujda. The sultan then promised to intern or expel
Abdelkader if he should again enter Moroccan territory. Two years later,
when he was again driven into Morocco, the Algerian leader was attacked
by Moroccan troops and was forced to surrender to the French.
Immediately after ʿAbd al-Raḥmān’s death in 1859, a dispute with
Spain over the boundaries of the Spanish enclave at Ceuta led Madrid to
declare war. Spain captured Tétouan in the following year. Peace had to
be bought with an indemnity of $20 million, the enlargement of Ceuta’s
frontiers, and the promise to cede to Spain another enclave—Ifni.
The new sultan, Sīdī Muḥammad, attempted with little success to
modernize the Moroccan army. Upon his death in 1873, his son Mawlāy
Hassan I struggled to preserve independence. Hassan I died in 1894, and
his chamberlain, Bā Aḥmad (Aḥmad ibn Mūsā), ruled in the name of the
young sultan ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz until 1901, when the latter began his direct
rule.
ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz surrounded himself with European companions and adopted
their customs, while scandalizing his own subjects, particularly the
religious leaders. His attempt to introduce a modern system of land
taxation resulted in complete confusion because of a lack of qualified
officials. Popular discontent and tribal rebellion became even more
common, while a pretender, Bū Ḥmāra (Abū Ḥamārah), established a rival
court near Melilla. European powers seized the occasion to extend their
own influence. In 1904 Britain gave France a free hand in Morocco in
exchange for French noninterference with British plans in Egypt. Spanish
agreement was secured by a French promise that northern Morocco should
be treated as a sphere of Spanish influence. Italian interests were
satisfied by France’s decision not to hinder Italian designs on Libya.
Once these various interests were settled, the Western powers met with
Moroccan representatives at Algeciras, Spain, in 1906, to discuss the
country’s future.
The Algeciras Conference confirmed the integrity of the sultan’s
domains but sanctioned French and Spanish policing Moroccan ports and
collecting the customs dues. In 1907–08 the sultan’s brother, Mawlāy
ʿAbd al-Ḥāfiẓ, led a rebellion against him from Marrakech, denouncing
ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz for his collaboration with the Europeans. ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz
subsequently fled to distant Tangier. ʿAbd al-Ḥāfiẓ then made an
abortive attack on French troops, which had occupied Casablanca in 1907,
before proceeding to Fès, where he was duly proclaimed sultan and
recognized by the European powers (1909).
The new sultan proved unable to control the country. Disorder
increased until, besieged by tribesmen in Fès, he was forced to ask the
French to rescue him. When they had done so, he had no choice but to
sign the Treaty of Fez (March 30, 1912), by which Morocco became a
French protectorate. In return, the French guaranteed that the status of
the sultan and his successors would be maintained. Provision was also
made to meet the Spanish claim for a special position in the north of
the country; Tangier, long the seat of the diplomatic missions, retained
a separate administration.
The French protectorate (1912–56)
In establishing their protectorate over much of Morocco, the
French had behind them the experience of the conquest of Algeria and of
their protectorate over Tunisia; they took the latter as the model for
their Moroccan policy. There were, however, important differences.
First, the protectorate was established only two years before the
outbreak of World War I, which brought with it a new attitude toward
colonial rule. Second, Morocco had a thousand-year tradition of
independence; though it had been strongly influenced by the civilization
of Muslim Spain, it had never been subject to Ottoman rule. These
circumstances and the proximity of Morocco to Spain created a special
relationship between the two countries.
Morocco was also unique among the North African countries in
possessing a coast on the Atlantic, in the rights that various nations
derived from the Act of Algeciras, and in the privileges that their
diplomatic missions had acquired in Tangier. Thus, the northern tenth of
the country, with both Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts, together with
the desert province of Tarfaya in the southwest adjoining the Spanish
Sahara, were excluded from the French-controlled area and treated as a
Spanish protectorate. In the French zone, the fiction of the sultan’s
sovereignty was maintained, but the French-appointed resident general
held the real authority and was subject only to the approval of the
government in Paris. The sultan worked through newly created departments
staffed by French officials. The negligible role that the Moroccan
government (makhzan) actually played can be seen by the fact that
Muḥammad al-Muqrī, the grand vizier when the protectorate was installed,
held the same post when Morocco recovered its independence 44 years
later; he was by then more than 100 years old. As in Tunisia, country
districts were administered by contrôleurs civils, except in certain
areas such as Fès, where it was felt that officers of the rank of
general should supervise the administration. In the south certain
Amazigh chiefs (qāʾids), of whom the best known was Thami al-Glaoui,
were given a great deal of independence.
The pre-World War II period
The first resident general, General (later Marshal)
Louis-Hubert-Gonzalve Lyautey, was a soldier of wide experience in
Indochina, Madagascar, and Algeria. He was of aristocratic outlook and
possessed a deep appreciation of Moroccan civilization. The character he
gave to the administration exerted an influence throughout the period of
the protectorate.
His idea was to leave the Moroccan elite intact and rule through a
policy of cooptation. He placed ʿAbd al-Ḥāfiẓ’s more amenable brother,
Mawlāy Yūsuf, on the throne. This sultan succeeded in cooperating with
the French without losing the respect of the Moroccan people. A new
administrative capital was created on the Atlantic coast at Rabat, and a
commercial port subsequently was developed at Casablanca. By the end of
the protectorate in 1956, Casablanca was a flourishing city, with nearly
a million inhabitants and a substantial industrial establishment.
Lyautey’s plan to build new European cities separate from the old
Moroccan towns left the traditional medinas intact. Remarkably, World
War I did little to interrupt this rhythm of innovation. Though the
French government had proposed retiring to the coast, Lyautey managed to
retain control of all the French-occupied territory.
After the war Morocco faced two major problems. The first was
pacifying the outlying areas in the Atlas Mountains, over which the
sultan’s government often had had no real control; this was finally
completed in 1934. The second problem was the spread of the uprising of
Abd el-Krim from the Spanish to the French zone (see below World War II
and independence: The Spanish Zone), which was quelled by French and
Spanish troops in 1926. That same year, Marshal Lyautey was succeeded by
a civilian resident general. This marked a change to a more conventional
colonial-style administration, accompanied by official colonization, the
growth of the European population, and the increasing impact of European
thought on the younger generation of Moroccans, some of whom had by then
received a French education.
As early as 1920 Lyautey had submitted a report saying that “a young
generation is growing up which is full of life and needs activity. . . .
Lacking the outlets which our administration offers only sparingly and
in subordinate positions they will find an alternative way out.” Only
six years after Lyautey’s report, young Moroccans both in Rabat, the new
administrative capital, and in Fès, the centre of traditional
Arab-Islamic learning and culture, were meeting independently of one
another to discuss demands for reforms within the terms of the
protectorate treaty. They asked for more schools, a new judicial system,
and the abolition of the regime of the Amazigh qāʾids in the south; for
study missions in France and the Middle East; and for the cessation of
official colonization—objectives that would be fully secured only when
the protectorate ended in 1956.
On the death of Mawlāy Yūsuf (1927) the French chose as his successor
his younger son, Sīdī Muḥammad (Muḥammad V). Selected in part for his
retiring disposition, this sultan eventually revealed considerable
diplomatic skill and determination. Also significant was the French
attempt to use the purported differences between Arabs and Imazighen to
undercut any growing sense of national unity. This led the French to
issue the Berber Decree in 1930, which was a crude effort to divide
Imazighen and Arabs. The result was just the opposite of French
intentions; it provoked a Moroccan nationalist reaction and forced the
administration to modify its proposals. In 1933 the nationalists
initiated a new national day called the Fête du Trône (Throne Day) to
mark the anniversary of the sultan’s accession. When he visited Fès the
following year, the sultan received a tumultuous welcome, accompanied by
anti-French demonstrations that caused the authorities to terminate his
visit abruptly. Shortly after this episode political parties were
organized that sought greater Moroccan self-rule. These events coincided
with the completion of the French occupation of southern Morocco, which
paved the way for the Spanish occupation of Ifni. In 1937 rioting
occurred in Meknès, where French settlers were suspected of diverting
part of the town water supply to irrigate their own lands at the expense
of the Muslim cultivators. In the ensuing repression, Muḥammad ʿAllāl
al-Fāsī, a prominent nationalist leader, was banished to Gabon in French
Equatorial Africa, where he spent the following nine years.
World War II and independence
The French Zone
At the outbreak of World War II in 1939, the sultan issued a call
for cooperation with the French, and a large Moroccan contingent (mainly
Amazigh) served with distinction in France. The collapse of the French
in 1940 followed by the installation of the Vichy regime produced an
entirely new situation. The sultan signified his independence by
refusing to approve anti-Jewish legislation. When Anglo-American troop
landings took place in 1942, he refused to comply with the suggestion of
the resident general, Auguste Noguès, that he retire to the interior. In
1943 the sultan was influenced by his meeting with U.S. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt, who had come to Morocco for the Casablanca
Conference and was unsympathetic to continued French presence there. The
majority of the people were equally affected by the arrival of U.S. and
British troops, who exposed Moroccans to the outside world to an
unprecedented degree. In addition, Allied and Axis radio propaganda,
which called for Moroccan independence, strongly attracted Arab
listeners. Amid these circumstances, the nationalist movement took the
new title of Ḥizb al-Istiqlāl (Independence Party). In January 1944 the
party submitted to the sultan and the Allied (including the French)
authorities a memorandum asking for independence under a constitutional
regime. The nationalist leaders, including Aḥmad Balafrej, secretary
general of the Istiqlāl, were unjustly accused and arrested for
collaborating with the Nazis. This caused rioting in Fès and elsewhere
in which some 30 or more demonstrators were killed. As a result, the
sultan, who in 1947 persuaded a new and reform-minded resident general,
Eirik Labonne, to ask the French government to grant him permission to
make an official state visit to Tangier, passing through the Spanish
Zone on the way. The journey became a triumphal procession. When the
sultan made his speech in Tangier, after his stirring reception in
northern Morocco, he emphasized his country’s links with the Arab world
of the East, omitting the expected flattering reference to the French
protectorate.
Labonne was subsequently replaced by General (later Marshal) Alphonse
Juin, who was of Algerian settler origin. Juin, long experienced in
North African affairs, expressed sympathy for the patriotic nationalist
sentiments of young Moroccans and promised to comply with their wish for
the creation of elected municipalities in the large cities. At the same
time, he roused opposition by proposing to introduce French citizens as
members of these bodies. The sultan used his one remaining prerogative
and refused to countersign the resident general’s decrees, without which
they had no legal validity. A state visit to France in October 1950 and
a flattering reception there did nothing to modify the sultan’s views,
and on his return to Morocco he received a wildly enthusiastic welcome.
In December General Juin dismissed a nationalist member from a budget
proposal meeting of the Council of Government; consequently, the 10
remaining nationalist members walked out in protest. Juin then
contemplated the possibility of using the Amazigh feudal notables, such
as Thami al-Glaoui, to counter the nationalists. At a palace reception
later in the month al-Glaoui in fact confronted the sultan, calling him
not the sultan of the Moroccans but of the Istiqlāl and blaming him for
leading the country to catastrophe.
With Sīdī Muḥammad still refusing to cooperate, Juin surrounded the
palace, under the guard of French troops supposedly placed there to
protect the sultan from his own people, with local tribesmen. Faced with
this threat, Sīdī Muḥammad was forced to disown “a certain political
party,” without specifically naming it, though he still withheld his
signature from many decrees, including one that admitted French citizens
to become municipal councillors. Juin’s action was widely criticized in
France, which led to his replacement by General Augustin Guillaume in
August 1951. On the anniversary of his accession (November 18), the
sultan declared his hopes for an agreement “guaranteeing full
sovereignty to Morocco” but (as he added in a subsequent letter
addressed to the president of the French Republic) “with the
continuation of Franco-Moroccan cooperation.” This troubled situation
continued until December 1952, when trade unions in Casablanca organized
a protest meeting in response to the alleged French terrorist
assassination of the Tunisian union leader Ferhat Hached. Subsequently,
a clash with the police resulted in the arrest of hundreds of
nationalists, who were held for two years without trial.
In April 1953 ʿAbd al-Ḥayy al-Kattānī, a noted religious scholar and
the head of the Kattāniyyah religious brotherhood, and a number of
Amazigh notables led by al-Glaoui (along with the connivance of several
French officials and settlers) began to work for the deposition of the
sultan. The government in Paris, preoccupied with internal affairs,
finally demanded that the sultan transfer his legislative powers to a
council, consisting of Moroccan ministers and French directors, and
append his signature to all blocked legislation. Although the sultan
yielded, it was insufficient for his enemies. In August al-Glaoui
delivered the equivalent of an ultimatum to the French government, who
deported the sultan and his family and appointed in his place the more
subservient Mawlāy Ben ʿArafa. These actions failed to remedy the
situation, as Sīdī Muḥammad immediately became a national hero. The
authorities in the Spanish Zone, who had not been consulted about the
measure, did nothing to conceal their disapproval. The Spanish Zone thus
became a refuge for Moroccan nationalists.
In November 1954 the French position was further complicated by the
outbreak of the Algerian war for independence, and the following June
the Paris government decided on a complete change of policy and
appointed Gilbert Grandval as resident general. His efforts at
conciliation, obstructed by tacit opposition among many officials and
the outspoken hostility of the majority of French settlers, failed. A
conference of Moroccan representatives was then summoned to meet in
France, where it was agreed that the substitute sultan be replaced with
a crown council. Sīdī Muḥammad approved this proposal, but it took weeks
to persuade Mawlāy Ben ʿArafa to withdraw to Tangier. Meanwhile, a
guerrilla liberation army began to operate against French posts near the
Spanish Zone.
In October al-Glaoui declared publicly that only the restoration of
Muḥammad V could restore harmony. The French government agreed to allow
the sultan to form a constitutional government for Morocco, and Sīdī
Muḥammad returned to Rabat in November; on March 2, 1956, independence
was proclaimed. The sultan formed a government that included
representation from various elements of the indigenous population, while
the governmental departments formerly headed by French officials became
ministries headed by Moroccans.
The Spanish Zone
The Spanish protectorate over northern Morocco extended from
Larache (El-Araish) on the Atlantic to 30 miles (48 km) beyond Melilla
(already a Spanish possession) on the Mediterranean. The mountainous
Tamazight-speaking area had often escaped the sultan’s control. Spain
also received a strip of desert land in the southwest, known as Tarfaya,
adjoining Spanish Sahara. In 1934, when the French occupied southern
Morocco, the Spanish took Ifni.
Spain appointed a khalīfah, or viceroy, chosen from the Moroccan
royal family as nominal head of state and provided him with a puppet
Moroccan government. This enabled Spain to conduct affairs independently
of the French Zone while nominally preserving Moroccan unity. Tangier,
though it had a Spanish-speaking population of 40,000, received a
special international administration under a mandūb, or a representative
of the sultan. Although the mandūb was, in theory, appointed by the
sultan, in reality he was chosen by the French. In 1940, after the
defeat of France, Spanish troops occupied Tangier, but they withdrew in
1945 after the Allied victory.
The Spanish Zone surrounded the ports of Ceuta and Melilla, which
Spain had held for centuries, and included the iron mines of the Rif
Mountains. The Spanish selected Tétouan for their capital. As in the
French Zone, European-staffed departments were created, while the rural
districts were administered by interventores, corresponding to the
French contrôleurs civils. The first area to be occupied was on the
plain, facing the Atlantic, that included the towns of Larache, Ksar
el-Kebir, and Asilah. That area was the stronghold of the former
Moroccan governor Aḥmad al-Raisūnī (Raisūlī), who was half patriot and
half brigand. The Spanish government found it difficult to tolerate his
independence; in March 1913 al-Raisūnī retired into a refuge in the
mountains, where he remained until his capture 12 years later by another
Moroccan leader, Abd el-Krim.
Abd el-Krim was an Amazigh and a good Arabic scholar who had a
knowledge of both the Arabic and Spanish languages and ways of life.
Imprisoned after World War I for his subversive activities, he later
went to Ajdir in the Rif Mountains to plan an uprising. In July 1921 Abd
el-Krim destroyed a Spanish force sent against him and subsequently
established the Republic of the Rif. It took a combined French and
Spanish force numbering more than 250,000 troops before he was defeated.
In May 1926 he surrendered to the French and was exiled.
The remainder of the period of the Spanish protectorate was
relatively calm. Thus, in 1936, General Francisco Franco was able to
launch his attack on the Spanish Republic from Morocco and to enroll a
large number of Moroccan volunteers, who served him loyally in the
Spanish Civil War. Though the Spanish had fewer resources than the
French, their subsequent regime was in some respects more liberal and
less subject to ethnic discrimination. The language of instruction in
the schools was Arabic rather than Spanish, and Moroccan students were
encouraged to go to Egypt for a Muslim education. There was no attempt
to set Amazigh against Arab as in the French Zone, but this might have
been the result of the introduction of Muslim law by Abd el-Krim
himself. After the Republic of the Rif was suppressed, there was little
cooperation between the two protecting powers. Their disagreement
reached a new intensity in 1953 when the French deposed and deported the
sultan. The Spanish high commissioner, who had not been consulted,
refused to recognize this action and continued to regard Muḥammad V as
the sovereign in the Spanish Zone. Nationalists forced to leave the
French area used the Spanish Zone as a refuge.
In 1956, however, the Spanish authorities were taken by surprise when
the French decided to grant independence to Morocco. A corresponding
agreement with the Spanish was nevertheless reached on April 7, 1956,
and was marked by a visit of the sultan to Spain. The Spanish
protectorate was thus brought to an end without the troubles that marked
the termination of French control. With the end of the Spanish
protectorate and the withdrawal of the Spanish high commissioner, the
Moroccan khalīfah, and other officials from Tétouan, the city again
became a quiet, provincial capital. The introduction of the Moroccan
franc to replace the peseta as currency, however, caused a great rise in
the cost of living in the former Spanish area, along with difficulties
brought on by the introduction of French-speaking Moroccan officials. In
1958–59 these changes generated disorders in the Rif region. Tangier,
too, lost much of the superficial brilliance it had developed as a
separate zone. As in the former French Zone, many European and Jewish
inhabitants left. The southern protectorate area of Tarfaya was handed
back to Morocco in 1958, while the Spanish unconditionally gave up Ifni
in 1970, hoping to gain recognition of their rights to Melilla and
Ceuta.
Ceuta, on the Strait of Gibraltar, and Melilla, farther east on the
Mediterranean coast, continue to be Spanish presidios on Moroccan soil,
both with overwhelmingly Spanish populations. In October 1978 the United
States turned over to Morocco a military base, its last in Africa, at
Kenitra.
Independent Morocco
The French protectorate had successfully developed
communications, added modern quarters to the cities, and created a
flourishing agriculture and a modern industry based on a colonial model.
Most of these activities, however, were managed by Europeans. In the
constitutional field there had been virtually no development. Though the
government was in practice under French supervision, in theory the
powers of the sultan were unrestrained. By French insistence, the first
cabinet was composed of ministers representing the various groups of
Moroccan society, including one from Morocco’s Jewish minority. Mubarak
Bekkai, an army officer who was not affiliated with any party, was
selected as prime minister. The sultan (who officially adopted the title
of king in August 1957) selected the ministers personally and retained
control of the army and the police; he did, however, nominate a
Consultative Assembly of 60 members. His eldest son, Mawlāy Hassan,
became chief of staff, and by degrees successfully integrated the
irregular liberation forces into the military even after they had
supported an uprising against the Spanish in Ifni and against the French
in Mauritania.
In general, the changeover to Moroccan control, assisted by French
advisers, took place smoothly. Because of the continuing war in Algeria,
which Morocco tacitly supported, relations with France were strained;
close ties were maintained, however, because Morocco still depended on
French technology and financial aid.
A major political change occurred in 1959 when the Istiqlāl split
into two sections. The main portion remained under the leadership of
Muḥammad ʿAllāl al-Fāsī, while a smaller section, headed by Mehdi Ben
Barka, ʿAbd Allāh Ibrāhīm, ʿAbd al-Raḥīm Bouabid, and others, formed the
National Union of Popular Forces (Union Nationale des Forces Populaires,
or UNFP). Of these groupings the original Istiqlāl represented the more
traditional elements, while the UNFP, formed from the younger
intelligentsia, favoured socialism with republican leanings. Muḥammad V
made use of these dissensions to assume the position of an arbiter above
party strife. He nevertheless continued preparations for the creation of
a parliament until his unexpected death in 1961, when his son succeeded
him as Hassan II.
In 1963, when parliamentary elections were finally held, the two
halves of the former Istiqlāl formed an opposition, while a party
supporting the king was created out of miscellaneous elements and came
to be known as the Front for the Defense of Constitutional Institutions.
This included a new, predominantly Amazigh, rural group opposed to the
Istiqlāl. The ensuing near deadlock caused the king to dissolve
Parliament after only one year, and, with himself or his nominee as
prime minister, a form of personal government was resumed. In 1970 a new
constitution was promulgated that provided for a one-house legislature;
yet this document did not survive an abortive coup by army elements
against the monarchy in July 1971. The following year Hassan announced
another constitution, but its implementation was largely suspended
following another attempted military coup in August. The second coup was
apparently led by Minister of Defense General Muḥammad Oufkir; he had
earlier been implicated in the kidnapping (1965) and disappearance in
Paris of the exiled Moroccan UNFP leader Mehdi Ben Barka, who had been
regarded as a likely candidate for the presidency of a Moroccan
republic. Oufkir subsequently died at the royal palace, supposedly by
his own hand, while hundreds of suspects, including members of his
family, were imprisoned. Elections held in 1977, which were widely
regarded as fraudulent, brought a landslide victory to the king’s
supporters. King Hassan’s forceful policies to absorb Spanish (Western)
Sahara gave him increased popularity in the mid-1970s. This, in addition
to his method of mixing efforts to co-opt the political opposition with
periods of political repression, served to maintain royal control.
By the early 1980s, however, several bad harvests, a sluggish
economy, and the continued financial drain of the war in Western Sahara
increased domestic strains, of which violent riots in Casablanca in June
1981 were symptomatic. The need for political reform became even more
pressing when international lending agencies and human rights
organizations turned their attention to Morocco’s troubled internal
state of affairs.
The threat of an Algerian-style insurrection fueled by a radical
Islamic opposition worried the political leadership throughout the 1990s
and into the early 21st century. The government has continued to closely
watch the most militant groups. Along with the disaffected urban youth
who occasionally took to the streets, the Islamist sympathizers have
tested the limits of a new political tolerance. Thus, the 1990s were
marked by greater liberalization and a sense of personal freedom,
although direct criticism of the king and the royal family were still
prohibited. Amnesties for political prisoners long held in remote
regions of the country signaled a new attention to human rights, while
much publicized curbs on the power of the police and security forces
suggested closer adherence to the rule of law.
Foreign policy
The foreign policy of independent Morocco has often differed from
that of its Arab neighbours. Throughout the Cold War, Morocco generally
sided with the western European powers and the United States rather than
with the Eastern bloc, whereas other Arab states usually chose neutral
or even pro-Soviet positions. King Hassan helped to prepare the way for
the Camp David Accords (1978) between Israel and Egypt by opening up a
political dialogue with Israel in the 1970s, well in advance of other
Arab leaders, and by continually pressing both Palestinians and Israelis
to seek a compromise solution. Morocco closely supported the United
States in the Gulf War (1991) and its pursuit of peace in the Middle
East. Unlike other Arab states, Morocco has maintained ties with its
former Jewish citizens who now reside in Israel, Europe, and North and
South America.
Morocco’s relations with neighbouring North African states have not
always been smooth, especially those with Libya and its leader Colonel
Muammar al-Qaddafi. Shunning the Libyan leader’s volatile political
style, Hassan nevertheless tried, in the 1990s, to reintegrate Libya
into the Maghribī fold. Events in Western Sahara disrupted relations
with Algeria beginning in the early 1970s, because Algeria generally
opposed Morocco’s policies there.
Western Sahara
From the mid-1970s King Hassan actively campaigned to assert
Morocco’s claim to Spanish Sahara, initially using this nationalist
issue also to rally much-needed domestic support. In November 1975,
after a UN mission had reported that the majority of Saharans wanted
independence and had recommended self-determination for the region,
Hassan responded with the “Green March,” in which some 200,000
volunteers were sent unarmed across the border to claim Spanish Sahara.
To avoid a confrontation, Spain signed an agreement relinquishing its
claim to the territory. The region, renamed Western Sahara, was to be
administered jointly by Morocco and Mauritania. By early 1976 the last
Spanish troops had departed, leaving Morocco to struggle with a growing
Saharan guerrilla group named the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Saguia el Hamra and Río de Oro (Polisario), actively supported by
Algeria and later by Libya.
Hassan offered to hold a referendum in the area in 1981, but it was
rejected by the Polisario leadership as being too much on Moroccan
terms. Fighting continued, and Morocco was able to secure some
two-thirds of the territory within defensive walls by 1986. In the
meantime, the territory’s government-in-exile, the Saharan Arab
Democratic Republic, won recognition from an increasing number of
foreign governments. Improving ties between Morocco and Algeria
beginning in 1987–88, along with a UN-sponsored peace proposal accepted
by Morocco in 1988, augured a solution to the problem, but military
action by the Polisario the following year prompted King Hassan to
cancel further talks.
In 1991 a UN Security Council resolution promised the most definitive
solution to Morocco’s claim to Western Sahara in 15 years. The
resolution called for a referendum on the future of the territory to
decide whether it should be annexed to Morocco or become an independent
state. However, both Morocco and the Polisario front were unable to
agree on the makeup of the voter lists for the referendum, fearful of
entering into an electoral process they might lose. Although agreement
on other issues such as political detainees and prisoners of war was
reached through UN mediation, stalemate over the code of conduct of the
referendum has continued, leaving the issue unresolved.
Hassan’s last years
By the end of the 1990s, King Hassan II had the distinction of
being the Arab world’s longest-surviving monarch. He actively promoted a
program of liberalization in Morocco and managed to recast an image of
an old-style autocrat, reshaping himself and his country to reflect more
progressive values. New political freedoms and constitutional reforms
enacted in the 1990s culminated in the election of the first opposition
government in Morocco in more than 30 years. In 1997 opposition parties
won the largest bloc of seats in the lower house, and in March 1998
Abderrahmane Youssoufi (ʿAbd al-Raḥmān Yūsufī), a leader of the
Socialist Union of Popular Forces, was appointed as prime minister.
Under pressure from human rights organizations, Hassan also directed a
vigorous cleanup campaign that led to the ousting and even execution of
corrupt officials as well as the release of more than a thousand
political detainees, some of whom had been held for nearly 25 years.
Despite these major political reforms, the king retained ultimate
political authority, including the right to dismiss the government, veto
laws, and rule by emergency decree.
Hassan also guarded his status as religious head of state and
carefully nurtured those aspects of his public image that garnered
widespread support in the countryside and among the urban poor. Using
public donations, he oversaw the completion in August 1993 of a huge
$600 million mosque built on the shoreline at Casablanca, which features
a retractable roof and a powerful green laser beam aimed at Mecca from
atop its towering minaret. Paradoxically, his main political foes were
also found in the religious arena, among the Islamic militants, whom he
tried to hold within strict limits. But even at this point of
contention, he showed some flexibility: In 1994 a number of political
prisoners with ties to religious groups critical of the monarchy were
pardoned by Hassan, and in December 1995 Abdessalam Yassine (ʿAbd
al-Salām Yāsīn), the leader of the outlawed Islamic organization The
Justice and Charity Group (Jamāʿat al-ʿAdl wa al-Iḥsān), was released
after spending six years under house arrest.
When Hassan died in July 1999, his son, Muḥammad VI, took up the
reins of government and immediately faced a political maelstrom.
Controversy raged in Morocco over government proposals to afford women
broader access to public life—including greater access to education and
more thorough representation within the government and civil service—and
to provide them with more equity within society, such as greater rights
in marriage, inheritance, and divorce. A liberal program of this type,
in Morocco’s conservative and religious society, fueled dissent among
Islamic groups, and a number of organizations—ranging from Muslim
fundamentalist groups to members of international human rights
organizations—gathered in large demonstrations in Casablanca and Rabat
to support or oppose the government’s program.
Nevill Barbour
L. Carl Brown
Susan Gilson Miller