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Bel Hadj El Maafi

Bel Hadj El Maafi (in Arabic: بَلْحَاجّ ٱلْمْعَفِي), sometimes called Bel Hadj Ben Maafi (October 25, 1900-February 22, 1999), was a French-Algerian imam, marabout, resistance fighter and mufti born in the oasis of Lichana, near Biskra. He practiced in the city of Lyon from 1923 until his death.

Bel Hadj El Maafi
Bel Hadj el Maafi (in white) in 1947, in front of the Montluc prison, during a commemoration of the French Resistance
BornOctober 25, 1900
Lichana, near Biskra, Algeria
DiedFebruary 22, 1999
NationalityFrench-Algerian
Occupation(s)Imam, mufti
Known forResistance activities during World War II, collaboration with French authorities during Algerian War

As a privileged intermediary between the French authorities and Algerians in Lyon, he engaged in the Resistance and saved numerous Jews during World War II.

Before and during the Algerian War, El Maafi chose to collaborate with the French authorities and remained opposed to Algerian independence. His ties with the French authorities made him a target, and as part of the Café Wars between the National Liberation Front (FLN) and the Algerian National Movement (MNA), he was targeted in an attack by the FLN from which he survived.

Despite the different political currents during the Algerian War, Bel Hadj El Maafi remained highly appreciated by the Muslim community in Lyon until his death. This was mainly due to his longevity and his visits to prisoners, the sick, and Muslim soldiers. However, he left a mixed impression among some former FLN militants.

He was the first imam in Lyon and the first Muslim cleric to have a mosque in the city.

Youth and Interwar Period edit

Bel Hadj El Maafi was born on October 25, 1900, in the oasis of Lichana,[1] ten kilometers from the city of Biskra, in French Algeria.[2][3][4] He came from a family of imams, his father Maafi was also an imam,[1] and his brother, who shared the same name, was a military chaplain who was Mort pour la France on April 28, 1918,[5] in Verona, Italy, during World War I at the age of 21.[3] His mother's name was Salam Khadouje.[1]

After studying the Quran, he moved to metropolitan France in 1923.[6] He was sent to Lyon by the Rahmaniyya Sufi brotherhood to which he belonged, and which was the largest brotherhood in Algeria at that time.[7] More precisely, it was the leader of the zawiya of Tolga, Hadj Ben Ali Ben Othman,[8] who sent him to Metropolitan France.[9] He was a sufi marabout, meaning a sufi religious leader of Northern Africa.[10][11]

Upon his arrival, his knowledge of the French language was very poor, but he gradually learned.[3] In 1923, he became a military chaplain for a regiment of tirailleurs.[6]

From the 1930s onwards, El Maafi collaborated with the French authorities. He became the assistant secretary of the Committee for the Protection of North African Workers and also served as an auxiliary for the North African Services of the Rhône Prefecture. One of his tasks was to monitor the Algerian community and identify individuals involved in the independence movement.[2][12] In this capacity, he assisted Julien Azario, a civil servant in the prefecture who was a French resistance member and recognized as Righteous Among the Nations, in his surveillance work.[13]

In 1933, with the assistance of Lyon's mayor, Édouard Herriot, and the prefect of Rhône, Achille Villey-Desmeserets, he requested the opening of the first Muslim place of worship in Lyon.[12] However, this request was denied by the Minister of Interior, Camille Chautemps, who stated :[12][14]

"These so-called mokkadems seek, under the cover of religious proselytism, purely temporal advantages, notably gifts of money extorted from their Muslim coreligionists."

In addition to these connections, during the interwar period, El Maafi served as a military chaplain. He also visited Muslim inmates on death row from 1931 onwards,[6] including Sada Abdelkader, who was sentenced to death for shooting two police officers during his arrest.[15][16][17] El Maafi was actively involved in providing spiritual support to the sick, often visiting hospitals.[4]

French Resistance edit

 
Testimony of Bel Hadj El Maafi about Djaafar Khemdoudi

During the occupation of France, El Maafi joined the resistance and appeared to have various roles. Firstly, he provided information to the French internal resistance about Muslim resistance fighters to prevent infiltrators and collaborators from penetrating the resistance. In this capacity, he is believed to have recruited Djaafar Khemdoudi to join the resistance, as expressed in a letter to the military governor of Lyon in 1946.[6][18] He affected sympathy, with Julien Azario, towards the collaborationist authorities, but resisted in secret. Thus, he sacrificed a sheep at the Maison des Africans in Saint Antoine street on December 8, 1943, the day of Eid al-Adha,[19] in the presence of Alexandre Angeli, collaborationist prefect of the Rhône, Julien Azario and the head of the Lyon's Milice.[8] He also participated in such a ceremony in 1942.[20]

Furthermore, although he never openly discussed it, he is said to have saved numerous Sephardic Moroccan Jews,[21] particularly the community in the town of Saint-Fons, according to a report from the Renseignement généraux in 1950. The report stated that :[6]

"he often took advantage of his role as an interpreter for the North African Brigade to obtain false identity cards for Moroccan Jews, especially those from the commune of Saint-Fons."

This rescue of Jews in Saint-Fons is likely to be related to the actions of Djaafar Khemdoudi in the same town, where he saved Jewish children.[22] He acted also in connection with Jacob Kaplan, Chief Rabbi of France, and Pierre Gerlier, Cardinal and Archbishop of Lyon.[23]

El Maafi also established networks with the religious resistance against Nazism, clandestinely burying the dead from the resistance and bombings alongside Brother Benoît, a fellow resistance member, with whom he maintained a friendly relationship after the war. They both participated in demonstrations organized by former resistance fighters.[6][18] He also had friendly relations with Pastor Roland de Pury and Father Chaillet, two other resistance fighters.[24]

After the War edit

Resistance as an unifying force and the break of the Algerian War edit

As the Second World War came to an end, El Maafi continued to participate in meetings of former resistance fighters and demonstrate alongside them.[6] He represented Algerian resistance fighters and prisoners from Montluc prison during official ceremonies and actively spoke out about the Holocaust starting from 1945 to 1950. El Maafi represented an idea of national unity around the resistance, and that was the message he sought to convey in his speeches.[6] He sought to establish closer ties with the Jewish communities in metropolitan France, many of whom came from North Africa and lived in the same areas as Muslims.[6] In 1948, he took part, with the Chief Rabbi of Lyon, Salomon Poliakof and the Archbishop of Lyon, Pierre Gerlier, in a pilgrimage to the mass grave of the Bron massacre,[25] where 109 prisoners, including 72 Jews, were executed by the Nazis.[26] On October 10, 1948, El Maafi attended the inauguration of a monument in Lyon in honor of the Jews of Lyon who had died during the Holocaust.[27]

On February 17, 1949, he was made a Knight of the Ordre du Mérite social, for his action within the social works of Lyon.[28]

Bel Hadj El Maafi was caught off guard by the Algerian War. He was fully integrated into the society of former resistance fighters but found himself in a complicated situation facing growing Algerian nationalism and anti-colonialism among his fellow Algerians and coreligionists. He chose to maintain an anti-independence stance, and the Renseignements généraux testified that :[6]

"During the events in Algeria, Bel Hadj El Maafi consistently expressed pro-French sentiments."

Due to his connections with France, the Rhône prefecture and the Algerian National Movement, he became a target of an assassination attempt, which he survived on April 23, 1957, in the midst of the Café War. The perpetrator of the attack, Amar Akbache, one of the leaders of the FLN of Lyon,[29] refused to see him before being executed, considering him a collaborator with the colonial power.[6]

He continued to participate in public actions; in 1959, he intervened during a trial to make a Muslim swear his innocence on the Quran, while the man was accused of theft by one of his co-religionists. The individual was then released, for lack of evidence, the judge trusting his profession of faith.[30]

Later years and death edit

He continued to participate in the commemorations of the Second World War and the Shoah as well as to direct his mosque, the first in Lyon, which he had obtained in the meantime,[3] and which was located in a small room lent by Catholic nuns, in the Croix-Rousse district, 11 Montée Lieutenant-Allouche.[31][32] Until his death, he received dozens of co-religionists there daily, for prayers, burials and other religious practices.[9]

On January 6, 1972, he signed a joint text against racism with Alexandre Renard, archbishop of Lyon and cardinal, pastor Yves Dargigue, president of the Reformed Church of Lyon and Jean Kling, chief rabbi of Lyon, where he declared[33] :

All men, created in the image of God, are brothers and must be respected in their difference. Every believer must ask himself about the real, concrete, immediate scope of this teaching and be fully aware of his responsibility before God and before the world.

On December 27, 1976, after the death of thirteen disabled children and their instructor a few days earlier, who drowned in Lyon,[34] including some Muslims, he intervened during the multi-confessional service to say a few words in their memory, alongside Francisque Collomb, mayor of Lyon, Alexandre Renard, and Pierre Doueil, prefect of the Rhône.[35]

On June 11, 1978, he was appointed Officer of the Ordre national du mérite in recognition of his services as a hospital chaplain by the Mayor of Lyon, Louis Pradel. He was later awarded the rank of Knight of the Légion d'Honneur in 1984 and Commander of the Ordre national du mérite in 1989.[6]

He met Pope Paul VI in Lyon in 1986.[2][36]

He passed away on February 22, 1999, at the age of 99. According to Le Monde, he was highly esteemed by the Muslim community for his numerous visits to the families of the sick, prisoners, and Muslim soldiers.[2] However, his memory was mixed among some former FLN militants.[6]

Decorations edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c N., E. E.; Lafitte, Jacques; Taylor, Stephen (1954). "Who's Who in France: Paris". Books Abroad. 28 (4): 452. doi:10.2307/40093595. JSTOR 40093595. from the original on 2023-06-22. Retrieved 2023-05-27.
  2. ^ a b c d "L'imam Ben Maafi". Le Monde.fr (in French). 1999-02-26. from the original on 2023-05-04. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
  3. ^ a b c d Jouanneau, Solenne,. (2018). Les Imams en France. Agone. ISBN 978-2-7489-1160-2. OCLC 1153447129. from the original on 2023-12-28. Retrieved 2023-05-04.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ a b "Ordre national du mérite / Bel Hadj El Maafi". www.legifrance.gouv.fr. from the original on 2023-05-04. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
  5. ^ "Faire une recherche - Mémoire des hommes". www.memoiredeshommes.sga.defense.gouv.fr. from the original on 2023-06-03. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m André, Marc (2022). Une prison pour mémoire Montluc, de 1944 à nos jours. Lyon: ENS Éditions. ISBN 979-10-362-0575-0. OCLC 1363109813. from the original on 2023-12-28. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
  7. ^ Horizons Maghrébins - Le droit à la mémoire. PERSEE Program. doi:10.3406/horma. from the original on 2023-12-28. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
  8. ^ a b Videlier, Philippe (2003). L'Algérie à Lyon: une mémoire centenaire nouvelle inédite. Lyon: Bibliothèque municipale de Lyon. ISBN 978-2-900297-17-9.
  9. ^ a b Binzīn, Rašīd; Delorme, Christian (1998). Nous avons tant de choses à nous dire: pour un vrai dialogue entre chrétiens et musulmans. Spiritualités (Edition au format de poche ed.). Paris: A. Michel. p. 80. ISBN 978-2-226-10532-5.
  10. ^ Roncoli, Carla; Ingram, Keith; Kirshen, Paul (May 2002). "Reading the Rains: Local Knowledge and Rainfall Forecasting in Burkina Faso". Society & Natural Resources. 15 (5): 409–427. Bibcode:2002SNatR..15..409R. doi:10.1080/08941920252866774. ISSN 0894-1920. S2CID 154758380. from the original on 2023-12-28. Retrieved 2023-12-28.
  11. ^ Trumbull, George R. (2007-08-01). ""Au Coin des Rues Diderot et Moïse": Religious Politics and the Ethnography of Sufism in Colonial Algeria, 1871-1906". French Historical Studies. 30 (3): 451–483. doi:10.1215/00161071-2007-005. ISSN 0016-1071. from the original on 2023-12-28. Retrieved 2023-12-28.
  12. ^ a b c MacMaster, Neil (1997). Colonial migrants and racism : Algerians in France, 1900-62. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0-333-64466-2. OCLC 35174905. from the original on 2023-12-28. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
  13. ^ "Dosssiers". Comité Français pour Yad Vashem (in French). from the original on 2023-05-04. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
  14. ^ Massard-Guilbaud, Geneviève (1995). Des Algériens à Lyon : de la Grande Guerre au Front populaire. Paris: CIEMI. ISBN 2-7384-3256-5. OCLC 33197336. from the original on 2023-12-28. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
  15. ^ "Le Petit Dauphinois : ["puis" journal politique, agricole, industriel et commercial... "puis" républicain "puis" le grand quotidien des Alpes françaises]". Gallica. 1939-01-25. from the original on 2023-11-16. Retrieved 2023-11-16.
  16. ^ "Le Grand écho du Nord de la France". Gallica. 1939-01-25. from the original on 2023-11-16. Retrieved 2023-11-16.
  17. ^ "Le Radical de Marseille". Gallica. 1939-01-24. from the original on 2023-11-16. Retrieved 2023-11-16.
  18. ^ a b Rue89Lyon (2021-09-20). "" Désolé, Eric Zemmour, mais on compte de nombreux 'Mohamed' dans la Résistance "". Rue89Lyon (in French). from the original on 2023-05-04. Retrieved 2023-05-04.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  19. ^ "Islamic Calendar 1943 - Global Hijri Dates". www.al-habib.info. from the original on 2023-07-15. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  20. ^ Bancel, Nicolas; Boubeker, Ahmed; Bencharif, Léla, eds. (2007). Lyon, capitale des outre-mers: immigration des suds & culture coloniale en Rhône-Alpes & Auvergne. Paris: La Découverte. ISBN 978-2-7071-5318-0.
  21. ^ Cloarec, Par Times of Israel Staff et Glenn. "Abdelkader Mesli, l'imam parisien qui a sauvé des Juifs pendant la Shoah". fr.timesofisrael.com (in French). from the original on 2023-09-24. Retrieved 2023-05-04.
  22. ^ "Vaulx-en-Velin. Djaafar Khemdoudi, héros de la Résistance française". www.leprogres.fr (in French). from the original on 2023-05-01. Retrieved 2023-05-06.
  23. ^ "Chronique histoire. 8 mai 1945 : la capitulation de l'Allemagne met fin aux persécutions religieuses des nazis". actu.fr (in French). 2023-05-08. from the original on 2023-05-25. Retrieved 2023-05-25.
  24. ^ Voeux oecuméniques de paix des religieux lyonnais, Le Progrès (Lyon), friday 29 december 2000 : "Bel Hadj el Maafi's friendship with Brother Benoit, Father Chaillet and Pastor Roland de Pury"
  25. ^ texte, Circonscription consistoriale israélite de Lyon Auteur du (1948-10-01). "Bulletin mensuel de la Circonscription consistoriale israélite de Lyon". Gallica. from the original on 2023-07-15. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  26. ^ "Bron (Rhône), terrain d'aviation, 17 - 21 août 1944 - Maitron". fusilles-40-44.maitron.fr. from the original on 2023-04-02. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  27. ^ texte, Circonscription consistoriale israélite de Lyon Auteur du (1948-11-01). "Bulletin mensuel de la Circonscription consistoriale israélite de Lyon". Gallica. from the original on 2023-11-16. Retrieved 2023-11-16.
  28. ^ "Journal officiel de la République française. Lois et décrets". Gallica. 1949-02-17. from the original on 2023-07-15. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  29. ^ "Parmi les Algériens arrêtés figure l'assassin du colonel Riez". Le Monde.fr (in French). 1958-02-07. from the original on 2023-07-16. Retrieved 2023-07-16.
  30. ^ II JURE SON INNOCENCE SUR LE CORAN. (1959, Dec 12). Le Monde
  31. ^ Mon Lyon à moi, Catherine Lagrange et Claire James, Le Point, Thursday, 8 november 2007 : "Few Lyonnais know it, but it was on the slopes of the Croix-Rousse that the city's first mosque was born in the 1970s. It was housed in a tiny room made available to it by sisters, at the 11 of the rise of Lieutenant-Allouche. Islam in Lyon is thus closely linked to Christianity, to meeting those Catholics who have reached out to people who had abandoned their country. It is also here that the first imam of Lyon, Bel Hadj el-Maafi, practiced, who went alone to meet Muslims, in hospitals and prisons."
  32. ^ "Montée Lieutenant Allouche". Les rues de Lyon (in French). 2016-10-19. from the original on 2023-07-18. Retrieved 2023-07-18.
  33. ^ 6 january 1972, Sud Ouest, Bordeaux, (archived on Europress)
  34. ^ "Treize enfants et leur monitrice meurent noyés à Lyon". Le Monde.fr (in French). 1976-12-23. from the original on 2023-07-15. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  35. ^ "OFFICE MULTICONFESSIONNEL POUR LES VICTIMES DE L'ACCIDENT DE LYON". Le Monde.fr (in French). 1976-12-27. from the original on 2023-07-15. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  36. ^ Delorme, Christian (1995). "Le baptistère des Gaules et les étrangers". Hommes & Migrations. 1186 (1): 21–25. doi:10.3406/homig.1995.2432. from the original on 2023-07-15. Retrieved 2023-07-15.

hadj, maafi, arabic, اج, ٱل, sometimes, called, hadj, maafi, october, 1900, february, 1999, french, algerian, imam, marabout, resistance, fighter, mufti, born, oasis, lichana, near, biskra, practiced, city, lyon, from, 1923, until, death, hadj, maafi, white, 1. Bel Hadj El Maafi in Arabic ب ل ح اج ٱل م ع ف ي sometimes called Bel Hadj Ben Maafi October 25 1900 February 22 1999 was a French Algerian imam marabout resistance fighter and mufti born in the oasis of Lichana near Biskra He practiced in the city of Lyon from 1923 until his death Bel Hadj El MaafiBel Hadj el Maafi in white in 1947 in front of the Montluc prison during a commemoration of the French ResistanceBornOctober 25 1900Lichana near Biskra AlgeriaDiedFebruary 22 1999NationalityFrench AlgerianOccupation s Imam muftiKnown forResistance activities during World War II collaboration with French authorities during Algerian War As a privileged intermediary between the French authorities and Algerians in Lyon he engaged in the Resistance and saved numerous Jews during World War II Before and during the Algerian War El Maafi chose to collaborate with the French authorities and remained opposed to Algerian independence His ties with the French authorities made him a target and as part of the Cafe Wars between the National Liberation Front FLN and the Algerian National Movement MNA he was targeted in an attack by the FLN from which he survived Despite the different political currents during the Algerian War Bel Hadj El Maafi remained highly appreciated by the Muslim community in Lyon until his death This was mainly due to his longevity and his visits to prisoners the sick and Muslim soldiers However he left a mixed impression among some former FLN militants He was the first imam in Lyon and the first Muslim cleric to have a mosque in the city Contents 1 Youth and Interwar Period 2 French Resistance 3 After the War 3 1 Resistance as an unifying force and the break of the Algerian War 4 Later years and death 5 Decorations 6 See also 7 ReferencesYouth and Interwar Period editBel Hadj El Maafi was born on October 25 1900 in the oasis of Lichana 1 ten kilometers from the city of Biskra in French Algeria 2 3 4 He came from a family of imams his father Maafi was also an imam 1 and his brother who shared the same name was a military chaplain who was Mort pour la France on April 28 1918 5 in Verona Italy during World War I at the age of 21 3 His mother s name was Salam Khadouje 1 After studying the Quran he moved to metropolitan France in 1923 6 He was sent to Lyon by the Rahmaniyya Sufi brotherhood to which he belonged and which was the largest brotherhood in Algeria at that time 7 More precisely it was the leader of the zawiya of Tolga Hadj Ben Ali Ben Othman 8 who sent him to Metropolitan France 9 He was a sufi marabout meaning a sufi religious leader of Northern Africa 10 11 Upon his arrival his knowledge of the French language was very poor but he gradually learned 3 In 1923 he became a military chaplain for a regiment of tirailleurs 6 From the 1930s onwards El Maafi collaborated with the French authorities He became the assistant secretary of the Committee for the Protection of North African Workers and also served as an auxiliary for the North African Services of the Rhone Prefecture One of his tasks was to monitor the Algerian community and identify individuals involved in the independence movement 2 12 In this capacity he assisted Julien Azario a civil servant in the prefecture who was a French resistance member and recognized as Righteous Among the Nations in his surveillance work 13 In 1933 with the assistance of Lyon s mayor Edouard Herriot and the prefect of Rhone Achille Villey Desmeserets he requested the opening of the first Muslim place of worship in Lyon 12 However this request was denied by the Minister of Interior Camille Chautemps who stated 12 14 These so called mokkadems seek under the cover of religious proselytism purely temporal advantages notably gifts of money extorted from their Muslim coreligionists In addition to these connections during the interwar period El Maafi served as a military chaplain He also visited Muslim inmates on death row from 1931 onwards 6 including Sada Abdelkader who was sentenced to death for shooting two police officers during his arrest 15 16 17 El Maafi was actively involved in providing spiritual support to the sick often visiting hospitals 4 French Resistance edit nbsp Testimony of Bel Hadj El Maafi about Djaafar Khemdoudi During the occupation of France El Maafi joined the resistance and appeared to have various roles Firstly he provided information to the French internal resistance about Muslim resistance fighters to prevent infiltrators and collaborators from penetrating the resistance In this capacity he is believed to have recruited Djaafar Khemdoudi to join the resistance as expressed in a letter to the military governor of Lyon in 1946 6 18 He affected sympathy with Julien Azario towards the collaborationist authorities but resisted in secret Thus he sacrificed a sheep at the Maison des Africans in Saint Antoine street on December 8 1943 the day of Eid al Adha 19 in the presence of Alexandre Angeli collaborationist prefect of the Rhone Julien Azario and the head of the Lyon s Milice 8 He also participated in such a ceremony in 1942 20 Furthermore although he never openly discussed it he is said to have saved numerous Sephardic Moroccan Jews 21 particularly the community in the town of Saint Fons according to a report from the Renseignement generaux in 1950 The report stated that 6 he often took advantage of his role as an interpreter for the North African Brigade to obtain false identity cards for Moroccan Jews especially those from the commune of Saint Fons This rescue of Jews in Saint Fons is likely to be related to the actions of Djaafar Khemdoudi in the same town where he saved Jewish children 22 He acted also in connection with Jacob Kaplan Chief Rabbi of France and Pierre Gerlier Cardinal and Archbishop of Lyon 23 El Maafi also established networks with the religious resistance against Nazism clandestinely burying the dead from the resistance and bombings alongside Brother Benoit a fellow resistance member with whom he maintained a friendly relationship after the war They both participated in demonstrations organized by former resistance fighters 6 18 He also had friendly relations with Pastor Roland de Pury and Father Chaillet two other resistance fighters 24 After the War editResistance as an unifying force and the break of the Algerian War edit As the Second World War came to an end El Maafi continued to participate in meetings of former resistance fighters and demonstrate alongside them 6 He represented Algerian resistance fighters and prisoners from Montluc prison during official ceremonies and actively spoke out about the Holocaust starting from 1945 to 1950 El Maafi represented an idea of national unity around the resistance and that was the message he sought to convey in his speeches 6 He sought to establish closer ties with the Jewish communities in metropolitan France many of whom came from North Africa and lived in the same areas as Muslims 6 In 1948 he took part with the Chief Rabbi of Lyon Salomon Poliakof and the Archbishop of Lyon Pierre Gerlier in a pilgrimage to the mass grave of the Bron massacre 25 where 109 prisoners including 72 Jews were executed by the Nazis 26 On October 10 1948 El Maafi attended the inauguration of a monument in Lyon in honor of the Jews of Lyon who had died during the Holocaust 27 On February 17 1949 he was made a Knight of the Ordre du Merite social for his action within the social works of Lyon 28 Bel Hadj El Maafi was caught off guard by the Algerian War He was fully integrated into the society of former resistance fighters but found himself in a complicated situation facing growing Algerian nationalism and anti colonialism among his fellow Algerians and coreligionists He chose to maintain an anti independence stance and the Renseignements generaux testified that 6 During the events in Algeria Bel Hadj El Maafi consistently expressed pro French sentiments Due to his connections with France the Rhone prefecture and the Algerian National Movement he became a target of an assassination attempt which he survived on April 23 1957 in the midst of the Cafe War The perpetrator of the attack Amar Akbache one of the leaders of the FLN of Lyon 29 refused to see him before being executed considering him a collaborator with the colonial power 6 He continued to participate in public actions in 1959 he intervened during a trial to make a Muslim swear his innocence on the Quran while the man was accused of theft by one of his co religionists The individual was then released for lack of evidence the judge trusting his profession of faith 30 Later years and death editHe continued to participate in the commemorations of the Second World War and the Shoah as well as to direct his mosque the first in Lyon which he had obtained in the meantime 3 and which was located in a small room lent by Catholic nuns in the Croix Rousse district 11 Montee Lieutenant Allouche 31 32 Until his death he received dozens of co religionists there daily for prayers burials and other religious practices 9 On January 6 1972 he signed a joint text against racism with Alexandre Renard archbishop of Lyon and cardinal pastor Yves Dargigue president of the Reformed Church of Lyon and Jean Kling chief rabbi of Lyon where he declared 33 All men created in the image of God are brothers and must be respected in their difference Every believer must ask himself about the real concrete immediate scope of this teaching and be fully aware of his responsibility before God and before the world On December 27 1976 after the death of thirteen disabled children and their instructor a few days earlier who drowned in Lyon 34 including some Muslims he intervened during the multi confessional service to say a few words in their memory alongside Francisque Collomb mayor of Lyon Alexandre Renard and Pierre Doueil prefect of the Rhone 35 On June 11 1978 he was appointed Officer of the Ordre national du merite in recognition of his services as a hospital chaplain by the Mayor of Lyon Louis Pradel He was later awarded the rank of Knight of the Legion d Honneur in 1984 and Commander of the Ordre national du merite in 1989 6 He met Pope Paul VI in Lyon in 1986 2 36 He passed away on February 22 1999 at the age of 99 According to Le Monde he was highly esteemed by the Muslim community for his numerous visits to the families of the sick prisoners and Muslim soldiers 2 However his memory was mixed among some former FLN militants 6 Decorations edit nbsp Knight of the Legion of Honour nbsp Commander of the Ordre national du Merite after being Officer nbsp Knight of the Ordre du Merite socialSee also editKaddour Benghabrit Abdelkader Mesli Djaafar KhemdoudiReferences edit a b c N E E Lafitte Jacques Taylor Stephen 1954 Who s Who in France Paris Books Abroad 28 4 452 doi 10 2307 40093595 JSTOR 40093595 Archived from the original on 2023 06 22 Retrieved 2023 05 27 a b c d L imam Ben Maafi Le Monde fr in French 1999 02 26 Archived from the original on 2023 05 04 Retrieved 2023 05 04 a b c d Jouanneau Solenne 2018 Les Imams en France Agone ISBN 978 2 7489 1160 2 OCLC 1153447129 Archived from the original on 2023 12 28 Retrieved 2023 05 04 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Ordre national du merite Bel Hadj El Maafi www legifrance gouv fr Archived from the original on 2023 05 04 Retrieved 2023 05 04 Faire une recherche Memoire des hommes www memoiredeshommes sga defense gouv fr Archived from the original on 2023 06 03 Retrieved 2023 05 04 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Andre Marc 2022 Une prison pour memoire Montluc de 1944 a nos jours Lyon ENS Editions ISBN 979 10 362 0575 0 OCLC 1363109813 Archived from the original on 2023 12 28 Retrieved 2023 05 04 Horizons Maghrebins Le droit a la memoire PERSEE Program doi 10 3406 horma Archived from the original on 2023 12 28 Retrieved 2023 05 04 a b Videlier Philippe 2003 L Algerie a Lyon une memoire centenaire nouvelle inedite Lyon Bibliotheque municipale de Lyon ISBN 978 2 900297 17 9 a b Binzin Rasid Delorme Christian 1998 Nous avons tant de choses a nous dire pour un vrai dialogue entre chretiens et musulmans Spiritualites Edition au format de poche ed Paris A Michel p 80 ISBN 978 2 226 10532 5 Roncoli Carla Ingram Keith Kirshen Paul May 2002 Reading the Rains Local Knowledge and Rainfall Forecasting in Burkina Faso Society amp Natural Resources 15 5 409 427 Bibcode 2002SNatR 15 409R doi 10 1080 08941920252866774 ISSN 0894 1920 S2CID 154758380 Archived from the original on 2023 12 28 Retrieved 2023 12 28 Trumbull George R 2007 08 01 Au Coin des Rues Diderot et Moise Religious Politics and the Ethnography of Sufism in Colonial Algeria 1871 1906 French Historical Studies 30 3 451 483 doi 10 1215 00161071 2007 005 ISSN 0016 1071 Archived from the original on 2023 12 28 Retrieved 2023 12 28 a b c MacMaster Neil 1997 Colonial migrants and racism Algerians in France 1900 62 St Martin s Press ISBN 0 333 64466 2 OCLC 35174905 Archived from the original on 2023 12 28 Retrieved 2023 05 04 Dosssiers Comite Francais pour Yad Vashem in French Archived from the original on 2023 05 04 Retrieved 2023 05 04 Massard Guilbaud Genevieve 1995 Des Algeriens a Lyon de la Grande Guerre au Front populaire Paris CIEMI ISBN 2 7384 3256 5 OCLC 33197336 Archived from the original on 2023 12 28 Retrieved 2023 05 04 Le Petit Dauphinois puis journal politique agricole industriel et commercial puis republicain puis le grand quotidien des Alpes francaises Gallica 1939 01 25 Archived from the original on 2023 11 16 Retrieved 2023 11 16 Le Grand echo du Nord de la France Gallica 1939 01 25 Archived from the original on 2023 11 16 Retrieved 2023 11 16 Le Radical de Marseille Gallica 1939 01 24 Archived from the original on 2023 11 16 Retrieved 2023 11 16 a b Rue89Lyon 2021 09 20 Desole Eric Zemmour mais on compte de nombreux Mohamed dans la Resistance Rue89Lyon in French Archived from the original on 2023 05 04 Retrieved 2023 05 04 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Islamic Calendar 1943 Global Hijri Dates www al habib info Archived from the original on 2023 07 15 Retrieved 2023 07 15 Bancel Nicolas Boubeker Ahmed Bencharif Lela eds 2007 Lyon capitale des outre mers immigration des suds amp culture coloniale en Rhone Alpes amp Auvergne Paris La Decouverte ISBN 978 2 7071 5318 0 Cloarec Par Times of Israel Staff et Glenn Abdelkader Mesli l imam parisien qui a sauve des Juifs pendant la Shoah fr timesofisrael com in French Archived from the original on 2023 09 24 Retrieved 2023 05 04 Vaulx en Velin Djaafar Khemdoudi heros de la Resistance francaise www leprogres fr in French Archived from the original on 2023 05 01 Retrieved 2023 05 06 Chronique histoire 8 mai 1945 la capitulation de l Allemagne met fin aux persecutions religieuses des nazis actu fr in French 2023 05 08 Archived from the original on 2023 05 25 Retrieved 2023 05 25 Voeux oecumeniques de paix des religieux lyonnais Le Progres Lyon friday 29 december 2000 Bel Hadj el Maafi s friendship with Brother Benoit Father Chaillet and Pastor Roland de Pury texte Circonscription consistoriale israelite de Lyon Auteur du 1948 10 01 Bulletin mensuel de la Circonscription consistoriale israelite de Lyon Gallica Archived from the original on 2023 07 15 Retrieved 2023 07 15 Bron Rhone terrain d aviation 17 21 aout 1944 Maitron fusilles 40 44 maitron fr Archived from the original on 2023 04 02 Retrieved 2023 07 15 texte Circonscription consistoriale israelite de Lyon Auteur du 1948 11 01 Bulletin mensuel de la Circonscription consistoriale israelite de Lyon Gallica Archived from the original on 2023 11 16 Retrieved 2023 11 16 Journal officiel de la Republique francaise Lois et decrets Gallica 1949 02 17 Archived from the original on 2023 07 15 Retrieved 2023 07 15 Parmi les Algeriens arretes figure l assassin du colonel Riez Le Monde fr in French 1958 02 07 Archived from the original on 2023 07 16 Retrieved 2023 07 16 II JURE SON INNOCENCE SUR LE CORAN 1959 Dec 12 Le Monde Mon Lyon a moi Catherine Lagrange et Claire James Le Point Thursday 8 november 2007 Few Lyonnais know it but it was on the slopes of the Croix Rousse that the city s first mosque was born in the 1970s It was housed in a tiny room made available to it by sisters at the 11 of the rise of Lieutenant Allouche Islam in Lyon is thus closely linked to Christianity to meeting those Catholics who have reached out to people who had abandoned their country It is also here that the first imam of Lyon Bel Hadj el Maafi practiced who went alone to meet Muslims in hospitals and prisons Montee Lieutenant Allouche Les rues de Lyon in French 2016 10 19 Archived from the original on 2023 07 18 Retrieved 2023 07 18 6 january 1972 Sud Ouest Bordeaux archived on Europress Treize enfants et leur monitrice meurent noyes a Lyon Le Monde fr in French 1976 12 23 Archived from the original on 2023 07 15 Retrieved 2023 07 15 OFFICE MULTICONFESSIONNEL POUR LES VICTIMES DE L ACCIDENT DE LYON Le Monde fr in French 1976 12 27 Archived from the original on 2023 07 15 Retrieved 2023 07 15 Delorme Christian 1995 Le baptistere des Gaules et les etrangers Hommes amp Migrations 1186 1 21 25 doi 10 3406 homig 1995 2432 Archived from the original on 2023 07 15 Retrieved 2023 07 15 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bel Hadj El Maafi amp oldid 1192181244, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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