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Wellsprings

Marrakechמרקש

Morocco

# Marrakech Under the Almohad dynasty, which ruled Morocco with an iron grip devoted to strict Islamic orthodoxy, Marrakech sprawled across the arid plains of central Morocco—a jeweled oasis ringed by snow-capped Atlas Mountains, its terracotta walls glowing rose-gold at sunset. The city's Jewish community, though restricted and taxed heavily as dhimmis (protected but subordinate minorities), numbered in the thousands and formed a vital mercantile class, controlling much of the trade in spices, leather, and cloth that flowed through the medina's labyrinthine souks. Despite their precarious legal status, Moroccan Jews cultivated rich traditions of Hebrew learning and mysticism, with Marrakech serving as a notable center for both Talmudic study and Kabbalah. The city's mellah—the Jewish quarter—pulsed with its own life: kosher butchers and bakers, synagogues where Shabbat prayers echoed in Judeo-Arabic, and scholarly circles where the tensions between faith and survival in an uncertain world kindled serious Torah interpretation. The very geography of Marrakech reinforced its insularity: surrounded by desert and mountains, cut off from European shores, it became a crucible where Moroccan Jewish identity deepened, distinct from both Ashkenazi traditions and the intellectual world of medieval Spain just across the sea.

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