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Theme Changer

 Topic: Tamazight-speakers in Morocco: still trying

 (Read 1545 times)
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  • Tamazight-speakers in Morocco: still trying
     OP - February 18, 2017, 09:57 PM

    Morocco is fascinating. I think a Berber Islam is asserting itself, maybe other ethnic islams are around the world?

    If Islam is worldwide it doesn't have to be Arab based.

    https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2017/02/207505/moroccos-high-religious-committee-says-apostates-should-not-be-killed/


    the Tamazight community (narrowly berber-speaking, as opposed to the Amazigh people) in Morocco still has problems, especially when the women must go to court where they don't speak any form of Arabic or even French:
    https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2017/02/208681/crackdown-on-amazigh-people-is-ongoing-ilyass-el-omari/

    But at least they're talking about it.

    I would love to go back to Algeria, but unfortunately it is still ruled by Bouteflika and not by the king of Morocco. Bouteflika only thinks he's king.
  • Tamazight-speakers in Morocco: still trying
     Reply #1 - February 18, 2017, 10:54 PM

    Is your reason for not going back about the safety of travelling there? I did wonder about going to Algeria after visiting Tunisia a few years ago.
  • Tamazight-speakers in Morocco: still trying
     Reply #2 - February 19, 2017, 09:51 PM

    Safety is an issue but I think it's more angst over what language to (re)learn. We were in Algiers with road-trips to Tuareg and Kabylie territory. Do I brush up my French, relearn Dardja (this would be really hard, I haven't heard any since I was four), go pidgin classical-Arabic/ French (LOL, good luck with that), pick a tamazight dialect...?
  • Tamazight-speakers in Morocco: still trying
     Reply #3 - February 19, 2017, 10:04 PM

    In Tunisia I wished by French was better, so I guess that would be my choice. Travelling with classical Arabic sounds a bit like trying to get by with Latin in Italy or Spain. I think the university in Tunis does intensive summer courses on Tunisian Arabic - I'm not sure how close that is to Algerian Arabic.
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