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History of the Jews in Algeria

The history of Jews in Algeria goes back to Antiquity, although it is not possible to trace with any certainty the time and circumstances of the arrival of the first Jews in what is now Algeria.[N 1] In any case, several waves of immigration helped to increase the population. There may have been Jews in Carthage and present-day Algeria before the Roman conquest, but the development of Jewish communities is linked to the Roman presence. Jewish revolts in Israel and Cyrenaica in the 1st and 2nd centuries certainly led to the arrival of Jewish immigrants from these regions. Jewish proselytizing among the Berbers is an established historical fact, but its importance remains debated.

Algerian Jews
يهود الجزائر

Juifs d’Algérie

יהדות אלג'יריה
Algerian Jews by Théodore Chassériau (1851).
Total population
<200[1] (2020)
Regions with significant populations
Algiers
Languages
Arabic, French, Berber, Tetuani Ladino
Religion
Judaism
Related ethnic groups
Jews (Maghrebi Jews)

The Muslim conquest of North Africa, which was completed in Algeria in the 8th century, brought North Africa into the realm of Islamic civilization and had a lasting impact on the identity of local Jewish communities, whose status was henceforth governed by the dhimma.

New immigrants later strengthened the Algerian Jewish community: Jews fled Spain during the Visigothic persecutions of the 5th and 6th centuries, and again during the persecutions linked to the Spanish Reconquista of the 14th and 16th centuries. Many Jews from the Iberian Peninsula settled in Algeria, mixing with the local Jewish population and influencing its traditions. In the 18th century, other Jews, the Granas of Livorno, were few in number, but played a role as commercial intermediaries between Europe and the Ottoman Empire. Later in the 19th century, many Jews from Tetouan arrived in Algeria, strengthening the ranks of the community.[2]

After the French colonization of Algeria in 1830, Algerians were guaranteed respect for their religious freedom and customs. The dhimma was abolished, and Jews became equal to Muslims under French law. Indeed, the Muslim law that governed the country put the former at a distinct disadvantage to the latter, especially in the legal sphere and their treatment as inhabitants of the country. This explains the pro-French opinion that developed among Algerian Jews from this period onwards.[citation needed] Having become French citizens following the Crémieux Decree of 1870, the Jews increasingly identified with metropolitan France, and despite their forced return to second-class indigenous status during World War 2,[3] they opted en masse to be repatriated to France on the eve of Algerian Independance, with a minority choosing Israel. This exile virtually put an end to more than 2,000 years of presence on Algerian soil. A few dozen very discreet Jews still live in Algeria.[4][5]

History edit

Early Jewish history in Algeria edit

 
A Jew of Algiers, late 19th century

There is evidence of Jewish settlements in Algeria since at least the Roman period (Mauretania Caesariensis).[6] Epitaphs have been found in archaeological excavations that attest to Jews in the first centuries CE. Berber lands were said to welcome Christians and Jews very early from the Roman Empire. The destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem by Titus in 70 CE, and thereafter by the Kitos War in 117, reinforced Jewish settlement in North Africa and the Mediterranean. Early descriptions of the Rustamid capital, Tahert, note that Jews were found there, as they would be in any other major Muslim city of North Africa. Centuries later, the letters found in the Cairo Geniza mention many Algerian Jewish families.

Muslim dominance era edit

In the 7th century, Jewish settlements in North Africa were reinforced by Jewish immigrants that came to North Africa after fleeing from the persecutions of the Visigothic king Sisebut[7] and his successors. They escaped to the Maghreb, which was at the time still part of the Byzantine Empire. It is debated whether Jews influenced the Berber population, making converts among them. In that century, Islamic armies conquered the whole Maghreb and most of the Iberian peninsula. The Jewish population was placed under Muslim domination in constant cultural exchanges with Al Andalus and the Near East.

Later many Sephardic Jews were forced to take refuge in Algeria from the persecutions in Spain of Catalonia, Valencia and Balearic Islands in 1391 and the Spanish Inquisition in 1492.[8] Together with the Moriscos, they thronged to the ports of North Africa, and mingled with native Jewish people. In the 16th century there were large Jewish communities in places such as Oran, Bejaïa and Algiers. Jews were also present in the cities of the interior such as Tlemcen and Constantine and as far spread as Touggourt and M'zab in the south, with the permission of the Muslim authorities. Some Jews in Oran preserved Ladino language—which was a uniquely conservative dialect of Spanish—until the 19th century.

Jewish merchants did well financially in late Ottoman Algiers. The French attack on Algeria was provoked by the Dey's demands that the French government pay its large outstanding wheat debts to two Jewish merchants. Between the 16th and 17th centuries, richer Jews from Livorno in Italy started settling in Algeria. Commercial trading and exchanges between Europe and the Ottoman Empire reinforced the Jewish community. Later again in the 19th century, many Sephardic Jews from Tetouan settled in Algeria, creating new communities, particularly in Oran.

French Algeria edit

In 1830, the Algerian Jewish population was between 15,000 and 17,000, mostly congregated in the coastal area. Some 6,500 Jews lived in Algiers, where they made up 20% of the population; 2,000 in Oran; 3,000 in Constantine; and 1000 in Tlemcen.[9] After their conquest, the French government rapidly restructured the Ottoman millet system. While Muslims resisted the French occupation, some Algerian Jews aided in the conquest, serving as interpreters or suppliers.[10]

At the time, the French government distinguished French citizens (who had national voting rights and were subject to French laws and conscription) from Jewish and Muslim "indigenous" peoples, who each were allowed to keep their own laws and courts. By 1841, the Jewish batei din "religious courts" were placed under French jurisdiction, linked to the Israelite Central Consistory of France. Regional Algerian courts or consistoires were put in place, operating under French oversight.[10]

In 1845, the French colonial government reorganized communal structure, appointing French Jews, who were Ashkenazi Jews, as chief rabbis for each region, with the duty "to inculcate unconditional obedience to the laws, loyalty to France, and the obligation to defend it".[11] Such oversight was an example of the French Jews' attempt to "civilize" Jewish Algerians, as they believed their European traditions were superior to Sephardic practices.

This marked a change in the Jewish relationship with the state. They were separated from the Muslim court system, where they had previously been classified as dhimmis, or a protected minority people. As a result, Algerian Jews resisted those French Jews attempting to settle in Algeria; in some cases, there was rioting, in others the local Jews refused to allow French Jewish burials in Algerian Jews' cemeteries.[10] In 1865, the Senatus-Consulte liberalized rules of citizenship, to allow Jewish and Muslim "indigenous" peoples in Algeria to become French citizens if they requested it. Few did so, however, because French citizenship required renouncing certain traditional mores. The Algerians considered that a kind of apostasy.[10]

The French government granted the Jews, who by then numbered some 33,000,[12] French citizenship in 1870 under the Crémieux Decree, while maintaining an inferior status for Muslims who, though technically French nationals, were required to apply for French citizenship and undergo a naturalization process.[13] For this reason, they are sometimes incorrectly categorized as pieds-noirs. The decision to extend citizenship to Algerian Jews was a result of pressures from prominent members of the liberal, intellectual French Jewish community, which considered the North African Jews to be "backward" and wanted to bring them into modernity.

Within a generation, despite initial resistance, most Algerian Jews came to speak French rather than Arabic or Judaeo-Spanish, and they embraced many aspects of French culture. In embracing "Frenchness," the Algerian Jews joined the colonizers, although they were still considered "other" to the French. Although some took on more typically European occupations, "the majority of Jews were poor artisans and shopkeepers catering to a Muslim clientele."[10] Moreover, conflicts between Sephardic Jewish religious law and French law produced contention within the community. They resisted changes related to domestic issues, such as marriage.[14]

After the 1882 conquest of the M'zab, the French government in Algeria legally categorized southern Algerian Jews, like the Muslims, as "indigènes", and thus subject to restricted and decreased rights under the indigénat compared to their northern Jewish counterparts, who were still French citizens under the Crémieux Decree of 1870. In 1881, there were only about 30,000 Mozabite Jews in Southern Algeria. They established, in Southern Algeria, “local civil status” laws, with rabbis overseeing legal issues. The French government recognized Jewish laws pertaining to domestic issues, such as marriage and inheritance. While these laws allowed for Jews to be structured under halakha, it prevented southern Jews from accessing “elite” opportunities, as their indigenous status established them as lesser citizens.[15]

French antisemitism set down strong roots among the expatriate French community in Algeria, where every municipal council was controlled by anti-Semites, and newspapers were rife with xenophobic attacks on the local Jewish communities.[16] Much of this was encouraged by the French colonial administration, in particular by the militant antisemitic Max Régis. In Algiers when Émile Zola was brought to trial for his defense in an 1898 open letter, J'Accuse…!, of Alfred Dreyfus, sympathy for whom was widespread in the Arabic press,[17] over 158 Jewish owned shops were looted and burned and two Jews were killed, while the army stood by and refused to intervene (see 1898 Algerian riots).[18] Hannah Arendt was to comment later that,'that pogroms against Jews in Algeria were carried out not, as it was claimed, by “‘backward Arabs’” but by “thoroughly sophisticated officers of the French colonial administration” and by the mayor of Algiers, Max Régis.'[19]

Under French rule, some Muslim anti-Jewish riots still occurred, as in 1897 in Oran.[20]

 
Great Synagogue of Oran, turned into a mosque

In 1931, Jews made up less than 2% of Algeria's total population. This population was more represented in the largest cities: Algiers, Constantine and Oran, which each had Jewish populations of over 7%. Many smaller cities such as Blida, Tlemcen and Setif also had small Jewish populations.[citation needed] By the mid-thirties, François de La Rocque's extremist Croix-de-Feu and, later, the French Social Party movements in Algeria proved active in trying to turn Muslims against Algerian Jews by publishing tracts in Arabic, and were responsible for inciting the 1934 Constantine Pogrom, in which 25 Jews were killed and some 200 stores were pillaged.[21][16][22]

Holocaust in Algeria, under the Vichy regime edit

One of the first moves of the pro-German Vichy regime was to revoke the effects of the Crémieux Decree, on October 7, 1940, thereby abolishing French citizenship for Algerian Jews, affecting some 110,000 Algerians.[23][24] Under Vichy rule in Algeria, even Karaites and Jews who had converted to another religion were subject to anti-semitic laws, known collectively as Statut des Juifs.[23][25] The Vichy regime's laws ensured that Jews were forbidden from holding public office or other governmental positions, as well as from holding jobs in industries such as insurance and real estate.[23] In addition, the Vichy regime set strict limitations on Jewish people working as doctors or lawyers.[23]

The Vichy regime also limited the number of Jewish children in Algeria's public school system, and eventually terminated all Jewish enrollment in public schools.[23] In response, Jewish professors who had been forced from their jobs set up a Jewish university in 1941, only for its forced dissolution to occur at the end of that same year.[23] The Jewish communities of Algeria also set up a system of Jewish primary schools for children, and by 1942 some 20,000 Jewish children were enrolled in 70 elementary and 5 secondary schools all over Algeria.[23] The Vichy government eventually created legislation allowing the government to control school curriculum, and schedules, which helped dampen efforts to educate young Jews in Algeria.[23]

Under Admiral Darlan and General Giraud, two French officials who administered the French military in North Africa, the antisemitic legislation was applied more severely in Algeria than France itself, under the pretext that it enabled greater equality between Muslims and Jews and considered racial laws a condition sine qua non of the armistice. Under the Vichy regime in Algeria, an office called the "Special Department for the Control of the Jewish Problem" handled the execution of laws applying to Algeria's Jewish population.[23] This was unique in French North Africa, and as such the laws covering the status of Jews were governed much more harshly in Algeria than in Morocco or Tunisia.[23] A bureau for "Economic Aryanization" was also installed in order to eradicate the Jewish community's significance in the economy, mostly by taking control of Jewish businesses.[23]

On March 31, 1942, the Vichy government issued a decree demanding the creation of a local Jewish government called the Union Générale des Israélites d’Algérie (UGIA).[23] The UGIA was intended to be a body of Jews that would execute the Vichy regulations within Jewish communities, and was seen by much of the Jewish population as collaboration with the government.[23] In response, many young Jews joined the Algerian resistance movement, which itself had been founded by Jews in 1940. On November 8, 1942, the Algerian resistance to the Vichy government took part in the takeover of Algiers in preparation for the Allied liberation of North Africa, known as "Operation Torch."[23] Of the 377 resistance members who took Algiers, 315 were Jewish.[23] In November 1942, Allied forces landed and took control of Algiers and the rest of Algeria. However, Jews were not returned all of their former civil rights and liberties, nor their French citizenships until 1943. This can partially be explained by the fact that Giraud himself, along with the Governor-General Marcel Peyrouton, in promulgating the cancellation of Vichy statutes on March 14, 1943, after the allies landed in North Africa, retained exceptionally the decree abolishing citizenship rights for Algerian Jews, claiming that they did not wish to incite violence between the Jewish and Muslim communities in Algiers.[25] It was not until the arrival of Charles De Gaulle in October 1943 that Jewish Algerians finally regained their French citizenship with the reinstatement of the Crémieux Decree.

In addition to the discriminatory and antisemitic laws faced by Jews all over Algeria, some 2,000 Jews were placed in concentration camps at Bedeau and Djelfa.[23] The camp at Bedeau, near Sidi-bel-Abbes, became a place for the concentration of Jewish Algerian soldiers, who were forced to perform hard labor.[26] These prisoners formed the "Jewish Work Group," and worked on a Vichy plan for a trans-Saharan railroad; many died from hunger, exhaustion, disease, or beatings.[23][26]

After WWII edit

During the Algerian War, most Algerian Jews took sides with France, out of loyalty to the Republic which gave them French citizenship, against the indigenous Independence movement, though they rejected that part of the official policy which proposed independence for Algeria. Some Jews did join the FLN fighting for independence, but a larger group made common cause with the OAS, secret paramilitary group.[27]

The FLN published declarations guaranteeing a place in Algeria for Jews as an integral constituent of the Algerian people,[28] hoping to attract their support. Algerian Muslims had assisted Jews during their trials under the Vichy régime in WW2, when their citizenship rights under the Crémieux Degree had been revoked.[27][28]

Some Algerian Jews responded positively to the call from the FLN, joining with local militias or making financial contributions. For these Jews, they recognized a common attachment to Algeria and the antisemitism prevalent among the French.[29] For others, memories of the 1934 pogrom, and incidents of violent Muslim assault on Jews in Constantine and Batna, together with arson attacks on the Batna and Orleanville synagogues, played a role in their decisions to turn down the offer.

In 1961, with the French National Assembly Law 61-805,[30] the Mozabite Jews, who had been excluded from the Cremieux Decree, were also given French citizenship.[31]

Following a 1961 referendum, the 1962 Évian Accords secured Algerian independence. Some Algerian Jews had joined the Organisation armée secrète, which aimed to disrupt the process of independence with bombings and assassination attempts, targets including Charles de Gaulle and Jean-Paul Sartre.[32] Although final appeals were made in Algeria for the Jews to remain, around 130,000 Algerian Jews chose to leave the country, and went to France. Since 1948, around 25,000 Algerian Jews have moved to Israel.[33]

Independent Algeria edit

Between late 1961 and late summer 1962, 130,000 of Algeria's approximately 140,000 Jews left for France, while about 10,000 of them emigrated to Israel.[34][35] Moroccan Jews who were living in Algeria and Jews from the M'zab Valley in the Algerian Sahara, who did not have French citizenship, as well as a small number of Algerian Jews from Constantine, also emigrated to Israel at that time.[36]

By 1969, fewer than 1,000 Jews were still living in Algeria.[37] By 1975 the government had seized all but one of the country's synagogues and converted them to mosques or libraries.[38]

Since 2005, the Algerian government has attempted to reduce discrimination against the Jewish population, by establishing a Jewish association, and passing a law that recognized freedom of religion. They also allowed a relaunching of Jewish pilgrimage, to the most holy Jewish sites in North Africa. In 2014, the Minister of Religious Affairs Mohammed Eissa announced that the Algerian government would foster the reopening of Jewish synagogues. However, this never came to fruition, with Eissa stating that it was no longer the interest of Algerian Jews.[33] In 2017, there were an estimated 50 Jews remaining in Algeria, mostly in Algiers.[21] In 2020, there are an estimated 200 Jews in Algeria.[1]

Traditional dress edit

 
Jewish women in Algeria, 1851

According to the Jewish Encyclopedia,[39]

A contemporary [1906] Jewess of Algiers wears on her head a "takrita" (handkerchief), is dressed in a "bedenor" (gown with a bodice trimmed with lace) and a striped vest with long sleeves coming to the waist. The "mosse" (girdle) is of silk. The native Algerian Jew wears a "ṭarbush" or oblong turban with silken tassel, a "ṣadriyyah" or vest with large sleeves, and "sarwal" or pantaloons fastened by a "ḥizam" (girdle), all being covered by a mantle, a burnus (also spelled burnoose), and a large silk handkerchief, the tassels of which hang down to his feet. At an earlier stage the Algerian Jewess wore a tall cone-shaped hat resembling those used in England in the fifteenth century.

Synagogues in Algeria edit

Notable Algerian Jews edit

Genetics edit

The largest study to date on the Jews of North Africa has been led by Gerard Lucotte et al. in 2003. Sephardi population studied is as follows: 58 Jews from Algeria, 190 from Morocco, 64 from Tunisia, 49 from the island of Djerba, 9 and 11 from Libya and Egypt, respectively, which makes 381 people.[45] This study showed that the Jews of North Africa showed frequencies of their paternal haplotypes almost equal to those of the Lebanese and Palestinian non-Jews when compared to European non-Jews.

The Moroccan/Algerian, Djerban/Tunisian and Libyan subgroups of North African Jewry were found to demonstrate varying levels of Middle Eastern (40-42%), European (37-39%) and North African ancestry (20-21%),[46] with Moroccan and Algerian Jews tending to be genetically closer to each other than to Djerban Jews and Libyan Jews.[47][48][49][50] According to the study:

"distinctive North African Jewish population clusters with proximity to other Jewish populations and variable degrees of Middle Eastern, European, and North African admixture. Two major subgroups were identified by principal component, neighbor joining tree, and identity-by-descent analysis—Moroccan/Algerian and Djerban/Libyan—that varied in their degree of European admixture. These populations showed a high degree of endogamy and were part of a larger Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jewish group. By principal component analysis, these North African groups were orthogonal to contemporary populations from North and South Morocco, Western Sahara, Tunisia, Libya, and Egypt. Thus, this study is compatible with the history of North African Jews—founding during Classical Antiquity with proselytism of local populations, followed by genetic isolation with the rise of Christianity and then Islam, and admixture following the emigration of Sephardic Jews during the Inquisition."[46]

Population numbers edit

Year Jewish Population[51]
1830 26,000
1850 26,000
1866 38,500
1881 52,000
1914 96,000
1931 110,000
1948 140,000
1960 130,000
1963 4,000
2005 150
2020 <100

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Jews of Algeria". Jewish Virtual Library.
  2. ^ Jean-Jacques Deldyck (2000). Le processus d'acculturation des Juifs d'Algérie (in French). CIEMI. p. 41. ISBN 978-2-7384-9677-5..
  3. ^ "Les Juifs d'Algérie pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale". northafricanjews-ww2.org.il/fr (in French). Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  4. ^ Maïna Fauliot (11 July 2014). "Algérie : Juifs, chrétiens… Comment le pays encadre les religions minoritaires". Jeune Afrique.
  5. ^ Benjamin Roger (2013-04-26). "Y a-t-il encore des Juifs au Maghreb ?". JeuneAfrique.com (in French). Retrieved 2019-02-04.
  6. ^ Karen B. Stern, Inscribing devotion and death: archaeological evidence for Jewish populations of North Africa, Bril, 2008, p.88
  7. ^ "Algeria". JewishEncyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
  8. ^ "The Edict of Expulsion of the Jews - 1492 Spain". Sephardicstudies.org. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
  9. ^ Yardeni, Myriam (1980). Les juifs dans l'histoire de France : Premier colloque internationale de Haïfa (in French). BRILL. ISBN 978-9004060272.
  10. ^ a b c d e Friedman, Elizabeth. Colonialism & After. South Hadley, Massachusetts: Bergen, 1988. Print.
  11. ^ Stillman, Norman. . The Jews of Arab Lands in Modern Times. The Jewish Publication Society. Archived from the original on August 28, 2006. Retrieved January 5, 2012.
  12. ^ Paula Hyman, The Jews of Modern France, University of California Press, 1998 p.83.
  13. ^ Patrick Weil, How to Be French: Nationality in the Making since 1789, Duke University Press 2008 pp. 128, 253.
  14. ^ [1], University of California Santa Cruz
  15. ^ Sarah Abrevaya Stein (6 May 2014). Saharan Jews and the Fate of French Algeria. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-12388-2. OCLC 1014071469.
  16. ^ a b Samuel Kalman (2008). The Extreme Right in Interwar France: The Faisceau and the Croix de Feu. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 210. ISBN 978-0-7546-6240-2. OCLC 1120553086.
  17. ^ Orit Bashkin, 'The Colonized Semites and the Infectious Disease: Theorizing and Narrativizing Anti-Semitism in the Levant, 1870–1914,' Critical Inquiry, Winter 2021, Vol. 47 Issue 2, pp.189-217, pp.199-202
  18. ^ Hyman p.105.
  19. ^ Orit Bashkin, 'The Colonized Semites and the Infectious Disease,' 2021 pp.202-203.
  20. ^ Algeria, 1830-2000: A Short History. Cornell University Press. 2004. pp. 10–. ISBN 978-0-8014-8916-7.
  21. ^ a b "Jews of Algeria". Jewish Virtual Library. 2000-09-05. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
  22. ^ Vance, Sharon (10 May 2011). The Martyrdom of a Moroccan Jewish Saint. BRILL. p. 182. ISBN 978-90-04-20700-4. Muslim anti Jewish riots in Constantine in 1934 when 25 Jews were killed
  23. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q "The Jews of Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia". Yad Vashem. Retrieved 2018-12-02.
  24. ^ "The Jews of Algeria". dbs.bh.org.il. Retrieved 2018-12-02.
  25. ^ a b French civilization and its discontents: nationalism, colonialism, race. Stovall, Tyler Edward. Van den Abbeele, Georges. Lanham: Lexington Books. 2003. pp. 258, 259. ISBN 978-0739106464. OCLC 52109410.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  26. ^ a b "Algeria" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Retrieved 2 December 2018.
  27. ^ a b Pierre Birnbaumn, 'French Jews and the "Regeneration" of Algerian Jewry,' in Ezra Mendelsohn (ed.)Studies in Contemporary Jewry: Volume XIX: Jews and the State: Dangerous Alliances and the Perils of Privilege, Studies in Contemporary Jewry, Vol. XIX Oxford University Press/Hebrew Institute of Jerusalem 2004 pp.88-103 p.97:'A larger group... took up arms towards the end of the war, with the opposing French terror group, the Organisation Armée Secréte (OAS), even though this group contained members of some of the most antisemitic and reactionary of French Algerian circles.'
  28. ^ a b Naomi Davidson, Only Muslim: Embodying Islam in Twentieth-Century France, Cornell University Press 2012 p.136:'It is because the FLN considers Algerian Jews as sons of our country that we hope the leaders of the Jewish community will have the wisdom to contribute to the construction of a free and truly fraternal Algeria. The FLN is convinced that leaders will understand that it is the duty and of course in the interest of the entire Jewish community not to remain "above the fray", to condemn without fail the dying French colonial regime, and to proclaim their choice of Algerian nationality.'
  29. ^ Fanon, Frantz (1967). A Dying Colonialism. New York: Grove Press. pp. 155–157.
  30. ^ Shepard, Todd. The invention of decolonization: the Algerian War and the remaking of France. Cornell University Press, 2008.
  31. ^ Sung-Eun Choi (19 November 2015). Decolonization and the French of Algeria: Bringing the Settler Colony Home. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 84–. ISBN 978-1-137-57289-9.
  32. ^ Sung-Eun Choi (19 November 2015). Decolonization and the French of Algeria: Bringing the Settler Colony Home. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 84. ISBN 978-1-137-57289-9. Jewish participation in the OAS has been widely acknowledged by historians, though just how many actually joined the organization and why, remain difficult to know exactly
  33. ^ a b "Community in Algeria." WJC, World Jewish Congress, Jan. 2018, www.worldjewishcongress.org/en/about/communities/DZ.
  34. ^ Ethan Katz (2015). The Burdens of Brotherhood Jews and Muslims from North Africa to France. Harvard University Press. p. 212. ISBN 978-0-674-08868-9.
  35. ^ "Marking the 60th Anniversary of the Mass Jewish Emigration from Algeria". JDC. Accessed 7 Dec. 2023.
  36. ^ Laskier, Michael M. (1994). North African Jewry in the Twentieth Century: The Jews of Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria. NYU Press. ISBN 9780814750728.
  37. ^ "Algeria", Jewish Virtual Library
  38. ^ "Behind the Headlines the Jews of Algeria". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 15 April 1975.
  39. ^ "Costume". JewishEncyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
  40. ^ "Fear Was My Father". Haaretz. 22 November 2007. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
  41. ^ Jessica Hammerman. "Ben, Myriam." Encyclopedia of Jews in the Islamic World. Executive Editor Norman A. Stillman. Brill Online, 2015. Reference. <http://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopedia-of-jews-in-the-islamic-world/ben-myriam-SIM_000694>
  42. ^ "This domain was registered by Youdot.io".
  43. ^ Hallé, Charlotte (24 December 2004). "A Site for Sore Eyes The Israel21c Web site aims to show Americans that there's much more to Israel than the war-torn images they see on TV". Haaretz. Retrieved 13 May 2019.
  44. ^ "Un Nul bourré de talents". L'Express (in French). 24 January 2002. Retrieved 2021-09-06.
  45. ^ Lucotte, G; David, F (October 1992). "Y-chromosome-specific haplotypes of Jews detected by probes 49f and 49a". Hum. Biol. 64 (5): 757–61. PMID 1398615.
  46. ^ a b Campbell, Christopher L.; Palamara, Pier F.; Dubrovsky, Maya; Botigue, Laura R.; Fellous, Marc; Atzmon, Gil; Oddoux, Carole; Pearlman, Alexander; Hao, Li; Henn, Brenna M.; Burns, Edward; Bustamante, Carlos D.; Comas, David; Friedman, Eitan; Pe'er, Itsik; Ostrer, Harry (2012). "North African Jewish and non-Jewish populations form distinctive, orthogonal clusters" (PDF). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 109 (34): 13865–70. Bibcode:2012PNAS..10913865C. doi:10.1073/pnas.1204840109. PMC 3427049. PMID 22869716.
  47. ^ "Study completes genetic map of N. African Jews". The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com. Retrieved 2017-05-28.
  48. ^
  49. ^ Even, Dan (8 August 2012). "International genetic study traces Jewish roots to ancient Middle East". Haaretz. Retrieved 2 December 2021.
  50. ^ Brown, Eryn (2008-04-13). "Genetics study of North African Jews tells migratory tale - Los Angeles Times". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2013-04-12.
  51. ^ "The Jews of Algeria". The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot.
  1. ^ La graphie « Juifs » (avec une capitale) désigne les membres d'une identité nationale ou ethnique. La graphie « juifs » (sans capitale) désigne les pratiquants de la religion juive. Voir à ce propos les articles Juifs et Usage des majuscules en français.

Sources edit

  • Fieni, David (2020). Decadent Orientalisms: The Decay of Colonial Modernity. Fordham University Press. ISBN 9780823286409.
  • Roberts, Sohpie P. (2017). Citizenship and Antisemitism in French Colonial Algeria, 1870-1962. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107188150.

External links edit

  • The Jewish History Resource Center, Project of the Dinur Center for Research in Jewish History, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • Site multilingue sur la Hazanout des Juifs de Constantine
  • Zlabia.com French site for Jews of Algerian origins
  • Rabbis of Algeria
  • Algeria Sephardim Deported from France or Executed in France during WWII (PDF)
  • The Jewish Community of Oran 2018-06-12 at the Wayback Machine Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot
  • Documents from Old Jewish Algeria

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This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French December 2023 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 6 009 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at fr Histoire des Juifs en Algerie see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated fr Histoire des Juifs en Algerie to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources History of the Jews in Algeria news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The history of Jews in Algeria goes back to Antiquity although it is not possible to trace with any certainty the time and circumstances of the arrival of the first Jews in what is now Algeria N 1 In any case several waves of immigration helped to increase the population There may have been Jews in Carthage and present day Algeria before the Roman conquest but the development of Jewish communities is linked to the Roman presence Jewish revolts in Israel and Cyrenaica in the 1st and 2nd centuries certainly led to the arrival of Jewish immigrants from these regions Jewish proselytizing among the Berbers is an established historical fact but its importance remains debated Algerian Jewsيهود الجزائر Juifs d Algerie יהדות אלג יריהAlgerian Jews by Theodore Chasseriau 1851 Total population lt 200 1 2020 Regions with significant populationsAlgiersLanguagesArabic French Berber Tetuani LadinoReligionJudaismRelated ethnic groupsJews Maghrebi Jews The Muslim conquest of North Africa which was completed in Algeria in the 8th century brought North Africa into the realm of Islamic civilization and had a lasting impact on the identity of local Jewish communities whose status was henceforth governed by the dhimma New immigrants later strengthened the Algerian Jewish community Jews fled Spain during the Visigothic persecutions of the 5th and 6th centuries and again during the persecutions linked to the Spanish Reconquista of the 14th and 16th centuries Many Jews from the Iberian Peninsula settled in Algeria mixing with the local Jewish population and influencing its traditions In the 18th century other Jews the Granas of Livorno were few in number but played a role as commercial intermediaries between Europe and the Ottoman Empire Later in the 19th century many Jews from Tetouan arrived in Algeria strengthening the ranks of the community 2 After the French colonization of Algeria in 1830 Algerians were guaranteed respect for their religious freedom and customs The dhimma was abolished and Jews became equal to Muslims under French law Indeed the Muslim law that governed the country put the former at a distinct disadvantage to the latter especially in the legal sphere and their treatment as inhabitants of the country This explains the pro French opinion that developed among Algerian Jews from this period onwards citation needed Having become French citizens following the Cremieux Decree of 1870 the Jews increasingly identified with metropolitan France and despite their forced return to second class indigenous status during World War 2 3 they opted en masse to be repatriated to France on the eve of Algerian Independance with a minority choosing Israel This exile virtually put an end to more than 2 000 years of presence on Algerian soil A few dozen very discreet Jews still live in Algeria 4 5 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early Jewish history in Algeria 1 2 Muslim dominance era 1 3 French Algeria 1 4 Holocaust in Algeria under the Vichy regime 1 5 After WWII 1 6 Independent Algeria 2 Traditional dress 3 Synagogues in Algeria 4 Notable Algerian Jews 5 Genetics 6 Population numbers 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksHistory editEarly Jewish history in Algeria edit nbsp A Jew of Algiers late 19th centuryThere is evidence of Jewish settlements in Algeria since at least the Roman period Mauretania Caesariensis 6 Epitaphs have been found in archaeological excavations that attest to Jews in the first centuries CE Berber lands were said to welcome Christians and Jews very early from the Roman Empire The destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem by Titus in 70 CE and thereafter by the Kitos War in 117 reinforced Jewish settlement in North Africa and the Mediterranean Early descriptions of the Rustamid capital Tahert note that Jews were found there as they would be in any other major Muslim city of North Africa Centuries later the letters found in the Cairo Geniza mention many Algerian Jewish families Muslim dominance era edit In the 7th century Jewish settlements in North Africa were reinforced by Jewish immigrants that came to North Africa after fleeing from the persecutions of the Visigothic king Sisebut 7 and his successors They escaped to the Maghreb which was at the time still part of the Byzantine Empire It is debated whether Jews influenced the Berber population making converts among them In that century Islamic armies conquered the whole Maghreb and most of the Iberian peninsula The Jewish population was placed under Muslim domination in constant cultural exchanges with Al Andalus and the Near East Later many Sephardic Jews were forced to take refuge in Algeria from the persecutions in Spain of Catalonia Valencia and Balearic Islands in 1391 and the Spanish Inquisition in 1492 8 Together with the Moriscos they thronged to the ports of North Africa and mingled with native Jewish people In the 16th century there were large Jewish communities in places such as Oran Bejaia and Algiers Jews were also present in the cities of the interior such as Tlemcen and Constantine and as far spread as Touggourt and M zab in the south with the permission of the Muslim authorities Some Jews in Oran preserved Ladino language which was a uniquely conservative dialect of Spanish until the 19th century Jewish merchants did well financially in late Ottoman Algiers The French attack on Algeria was provoked by the Dey s demands that the French government pay its large outstanding wheat debts to two Jewish merchants Between the 16th and 17th centuries richer Jews from Livorno in Italy started settling in Algeria Commercial trading and exchanges between Europe and the Ottoman Empire reinforced the Jewish community Later again in the 19th century many Sephardic Jews from Tetouan settled in Algeria creating new communities particularly in Oran French Algeria edit See also Indigenat In 1830 the Algerian Jewish population was between 15 000 and 17 000 mostly congregated in the coastal area Some 6 500 Jews lived in Algiers where they made up 20 of the population 2 000 in Oran 3 000 in Constantine and 1000 in Tlemcen 9 After their conquest the French government rapidly restructured the Ottoman millet system While Muslims resisted the French occupation some Algerian Jews aided in the conquest serving as interpreters or suppliers 10 At the time the French government distinguished French citizens who had national voting rights and were subject to French laws and conscription from Jewish and Muslim indigenous peoples who each were allowed to keep their own laws and courts By 1841 the Jewish batei din religious courts were placed under French jurisdiction linked to the Israelite Central Consistory of France Regional Algerian courts or consistoires were put in place operating under French oversight 10 In 1845 the French colonial government reorganized communal structure appointing French Jews who were Ashkenazi Jews as chief rabbis for each region with the duty to inculcate unconditional obedience to the laws loyalty to France and the obligation to defend it 11 Such oversight was an example of the French Jews attempt to civilize Jewish Algerians as they believed their European traditions were superior to Sephardic practices This marked a change in the Jewish relationship with the state They were separated from the Muslim court system where they had previously been classified as dhimmis or a protected minority people As a result Algerian Jews resisted those French Jews attempting to settle in Algeria in some cases there was rioting in others the local Jews refused to allow French Jewish burials in Algerian Jews cemeteries 10 In 1865 the Senatus Consulte liberalized rules of citizenship to allow Jewish and Muslim indigenous peoples in Algeria to become French citizens if they requested it Few did so however because French citizenship required renouncing certain traditional mores The Algerians considered that a kind of apostasy 10 The French government granted the Jews who by then numbered some 33 000 12 French citizenship in 1870 under the Cremieux Decree while maintaining an inferior status for Muslims who though technically French nationals were required to apply for French citizenship and undergo a naturalization process 13 For this reason they are sometimes incorrectly categorized as pieds noirs The decision to extend citizenship to Algerian Jews was a result of pressures from prominent members of the liberal intellectual French Jewish community which considered the North African Jews to be backward and wanted to bring them into modernity Within a generation despite initial resistance most Algerian Jews came to speak French rather than Arabic or Judaeo Spanish and they embraced many aspects of French culture In embracing Frenchness the Algerian Jews joined the colonizers although they were still considered other to the French Although some took on more typically European occupations the majority of Jews were poor artisans and shopkeepers catering to a Muslim clientele 10 Moreover conflicts between Sephardic Jewish religious law and French law produced contention within the community They resisted changes related to domestic issues such as marriage 14 After the 1882 conquest of the M zab the French government in Algeria legally categorized southern Algerian Jews like the Muslims as indigenes and thus subject to restricted and decreased rights under the indigenat compared to their northern Jewish counterparts who were still French citizens under the Cremieux Decree of 1870 In 1881 there were only about 30 000 Mozabite Jews in Southern Algeria They established in Southern Algeria local civil status laws with rabbis overseeing legal issues The French government recognized Jewish laws pertaining to domestic issues such as marriage and inheritance While these laws allowed for Jews to be structured under halakha it prevented southern Jews from accessing elite opportunities as their indigenous status established them as lesser citizens 15 French antisemitism set down strong roots among the expatriate French community in Algeria where every municipal council was controlled by anti Semites and newspapers were rife with xenophobic attacks on the local Jewish communities 16 Much of this was encouraged by the French colonial administration in particular by the militant antisemitic Max Regis In Algiers when Emile Zola was brought to trial for his defense in an 1898 open letter J Accuse of Alfred Dreyfus sympathy for whom was widespread in the Arabic press 17 over 158 Jewish owned shops were looted and burned and two Jews were killed while the army stood by and refused to intervene see 1898 Algerian riots 18 Hannah Arendt was to comment later that that pogroms against Jews in Algeria were carried out not as it was claimed by backward Arabs but by thoroughly sophisticated officers of the French colonial administration and by the mayor of Algiers Max Regis 19 Under French rule some Muslim anti Jewish riots still occurred as in 1897 in Oran 20 nbsp Great Synagogue of Oran turned into a mosqueIn 1931 Jews made up less than 2 of Algeria s total population This population was more represented in the largest cities Algiers Constantine and Oran which each had Jewish populations of over 7 Many smaller cities such as Blida Tlemcen and Setif also had small Jewish populations citation needed By the mid thirties Francois de La Rocque s extremist Croix de Feu and later the French Social Party movements in Algeria proved active in trying to turn Muslims against Algerian Jews by publishing tracts in Arabic and were responsible for inciting the 1934 Constantine Pogrom in which 25 Jews were killed and some 200 stores were pillaged 21 16 22 Holocaust in Algeria under the Vichy regime edit Main article Jews outside Europe under Axis occupation One of the first moves of the pro German Vichy regime was to revoke the effects of the Cremieux Decree on October 7 1940 thereby abolishing French citizenship for Algerian Jews affecting some 110 000 Algerians 23 24 Under Vichy rule in Algeria even Karaites and Jews who had converted to another religion were subject to anti semitic laws known collectively as Statut des Juifs 23 25 The Vichy regime s laws ensured that Jews were forbidden from holding public office or other governmental positions as well as from holding jobs in industries such as insurance and real estate 23 In addition the Vichy regime set strict limitations on Jewish people working as doctors or lawyers 23 The Vichy regime also limited the number of Jewish children in Algeria s public school system and eventually terminated all Jewish enrollment in public schools 23 In response Jewish professors who had been forced from their jobs set up a Jewish university in 1941 only for its forced dissolution to occur at the end of that same year 23 The Jewish communities of Algeria also set up a system of Jewish primary schools for children and by 1942 some 20 000 Jewish children were enrolled in 70 elementary and 5 secondary schools all over Algeria 23 The Vichy government eventually created legislation allowing the government to control school curriculum and schedules which helped dampen efforts to educate young Jews in Algeria 23 Under Admiral Darlan and General Giraud two French officials who administered the French military in North Africa the antisemitic legislation was applied more severely in Algeria than France itself under the pretext that it enabled greater equality between Muslims and Jews and considered racial laws a condition sine qua non of the armistice Under the Vichy regime in Algeria an office called the Special Department for the Control of the Jewish Problem handled the execution of laws applying to Algeria s Jewish population 23 This was unique in French North Africa and as such the laws covering the status of Jews were governed much more harshly in Algeria than in Morocco or Tunisia 23 A bureau for Economic Aryanization was also installed in order to eradicate the Jewish community s significance in the economy mostly by taking control of Jewish businesses 23 On March 31 1942 the Vichy government issued a decree demanding the creation of a local Jewish government called the Union Generale des Israelites d Algerie UGIA 23 The UGIA was intended to be a body of Jews that would execute the Vichy regulations within Jewish communities and was seen by much of the Jewish population as collaboration with the government 23 In response many young Jews joined the Algerian resistance movement which itself had been founded by Jews in 1940 On November 8 1942 the Algerian resistance to the Vichy government took part in the takeover of Algiers in preparation for the Allied liberation of North Africa known as Operation Torch 23 Of the 377 resistance members who took Algiers 315 were Jewish 23 In November 1942 Allied forces landed and took control of Algiers and the rest of Algeria However Jews were not returned all of their former civil rights and liberties nor their French citizenships until 1943 This can partially be explained by the fact that Giraud himself along with the Governor General Marcel Peyrouton in promulgating the cancellation of Vichy statutes on March 14 1943 after the allies landed in North Africa retained exceptionally the decree abolishing citizenship rights for Algerian Jews claiming that they did not wish to incite violence between the Jewish and Muslim communities in Algiers 25 It was not until the arrival of Charles De Gaulle in October 1943 that Jewish Algerians finally regained their French citizenship with the reinstatement of the Cremieux Decree In addition to the discriminatory and antisemitic laws faced by Jews all over Algeria some 2 000 Jews were placed in concentration camps at Bedeau and Djelfa 23 The camp at Bedeau near Sidi bel Abbes became a place for the concentration of Jewish Algerian soldiers who were forced to perform hard labor 26 These prisoners formed the Jewish Work Group and worked on a Vichy plan for a trans Saharan railroad many died from hunger exhaustion disease or beatings 23 26 After WWII edit During the Algerian War most Algerian Jews took sides with France out of loyalty to the Republic which gave them French citizenship against the indigenous Independence movement though they rejected that part of the official policy which proposed independence for Algeria Some Jews did join the FLN fighting for independence but a larger group made common cause with the OAS secret paramilitary group 27 The FLN published declarations guaranteeing a place in Algeria for Jews as an integral constituent of the Algerian people 28 hoping to attract their support Algerian Muslims had assisted Jews during their trials under the Vichy regime in WW2 when their citizenship rights under the Cremieux Degree had been revoked 27 28 Some Algerian Jews responded positively to the call from the FLN joining with local militias or making financial contributions For these Jews they recognized a common attachment to Algeria and the antisemitism prevalent among the French 29 For others memories of the 1934 pogrom and incidents of violent Muslim assault on Jews in Constantine and Batna together with arson attacks on the Batna and Orleanville synagogues played a role in their decisions to turn down the offer In 1961 with the French National Assembly Law 61 805 30 the Mozabite Jews who had been excluded from the Cremieux Decree were also given French citizenship 31 Following a 1961 referendum the 1962 Evian Accords secured Algerian independence Some Algerian Jews had joined the Organisation armee secrete which aimed to disrupt the process of independence with bombings and assassination attempts targets including Charles de Gaulle and Jean Paul Sartre 32 Although final appeals were made in Algeria for the Jews to remain around 130 000 Algerian Jews chose to leave the country and went to France Since 1948 around 25 000 Algerian Jews have moved to Israel 33 Independent Algeria edit Between late 1961 and late summer 1962 130 000 of Algeria s approximately 140 000 Jews left for France while about 10 000 of them emigrated to Israel 34 35 Moroccan Jews who were living in Algeria and Jews from the M zab Valley in the Algerian Sahara who did not have French citizenship as well as a small number of Algerian Jews from Constantine also emigrated to Israel at that time 36 By 1969 fewer than 1 000 Jews were still living in Algeria 37 By 1975 the government had seized all but one of the country s synagogues and converted them to mosques or libraries 38 Since 2005 the Algerian government has attempted to reduce discrimination against the Jewish population by establishing a Jewish association and passing a law that recognized freedom of religion They also allowed a relaunching of Jewish pilgrimage to the most holy Jewish sites in North Africa In 2014 the Minister of Religious Affairs Mohammed Eissa announced that the Algerian government would foster the reopening of Jewish synagogues However this never came to fruition with Eissa stating that it was no longer the interest of Algerian Jews 33 In 2017 there were an estimated 50 Jews remaining in Algeria mostly in Algiers 21 In 2020 there are an estimated 200 Jews in Algeria 1 Traditional dress edit nbsp Jewish women in Algeria 1851According to the Jewish Encyclopedia 39 A contemporary 1906 Jewess of Algiers wears on her head a takrita handkerchief is dressed in a bedenor gown with a bodice trimmed with lace and a striped vest with long sleeves coming to the waist The mosse girdle is of silk The native Algerian Jew wears a ṭarbush or oblong turban with silken tassel a ṣadriyyah or vest with large sleeves and sarwal or pantaloons fastened by a ḥizam girdle all being covered by a mantle a burnus also spelled burnoose and a large silk handkerchief the tassels of which hang down to his feet At an earlier stage the Algerian Jewess wore a tall cone shaped hat resembling those used in England in the fifteenth century Synagogues in Algeria edit nbsp Grande Synagogue Algiers nbsp Grande Synagogue Algiers nbsp Grande Synagogue Algiers nbsp Houma Keramane Bejaia nbsp Sanya Synagogue Algiers nbsp Belcourt Synagogue Algiers nbsp Synagogue Algiers nbsp Synagogue Oran nbsp Setif synagogue nbsp Setif synagogue interior nbsp Tlemcen synagogue nbsp Rabbi Ephraim Ankawa Synagogue in TlemcenNotable Algerian Jews editJean Pierre Barda singer actor make up artist Jose Aboulker member of the anti Nazi resistance Alon Abutbul an actor 40 Franck Amsallem jazz pianist and composer Francoise Atlan French singer Yvan Attal film director actor Algerian born parents Jacques Attali economist writer Danny Ayalon politician Jean Pierre Bacri actor Myriam Ben activist and novelist 41 Baruj Benacerraf immunologist Nobel prize 1980 Algerian Jewish mother Paul Benacerraf philosopher Algerian Jewish mother Maurice Benayoun artist Jean Benguigui actor 42 Eric Benhamou businessman CEO of 3Com venture capitalist philanthropist 43 Michel Benita double bass player Daniel Bensaid philosopher and trotskyist Jewish Algerian father Richard Berry actor Lili Boniche musician Eliyahu Zini Algerian born rabbi and head of a Hesder Yeshiva in the Israeli town of Haifa and doctor of mathematics from the Technion Patrick Bruel singer actor Alain Chabat actor 44 Andre Chouraqui writer Elie Chouraqui French film director and scriptwriter Helene Cixous feminist writer Robert Cohen boxer World Bantamweight Champion Annie Cohen Solal academic and biographer of Jean Paul Sartre Claude Cohen Tannoudji physicist Nobel prize 1997 Jean Francois Cope Algerian Jew mother President of the Union for a Popular Movement UMP Group in the French National Assembly Abraham Daninos fr author wrote the first theatre play in Arabic 1847 Gerard Darmon actor Jacques Derrida post structuralist philosopher Pascal Elbe actor Jean Pierre Elkabbach journalist David Foenkinos French born author and screenwriter Eva Green actress mother was of Algerian Jewish descent Alphonse Halimi boxer World Bantamweight Champion Roger Hanin film actor amp director Marlene Jobert actress Judah Kalaẓ cabalist and moralist Oded Kattash Israeli basketball player a superstar in Israel and Greece currently head coach of Israel s national team and Panathinaikos Haim Korsia Chief Rabbi of France Algerian parents Claude Lelouch film director Algerian Jew father Bernard Henri Levy philosopher Reinette L Oranaise singer Enrico Macias singer Elissa Rhais novelist Martial Solal jazz pianist and composer Benjamin Stora historian Avraham Tal Israeli singer Patrick Timsit humorist actor Shmuel Trigano sociologist and philosopher Eric Zemmour journalist Claude Zidi film directorGenetics editMain article Genetic studies on Jews The largest study to date on the Jews of North Africa has been led by Gerard Lucotte et al in 2003 Sephardi population studied is as follows 58 Jews from Algeria 190 from Morocco 64 from Tunisia 49 from the island of Djerba 9 and 11 from Libya and Egypt respectively which makes 381 people 45 This study showed that the Jews of North Africa showed frequencies of their paternal haplotypes almost equal to those of the Lebanese and Palestinian non Jews when compared to European non Jews The Moroccan Algerian Djerban Tunisian and Libyan subgroups of North African Jewry were found to demonstrate varying levels of Middle Eastern 40 42 European 37 39 and North African ancestry 20 21 46 with Moroccan and Algerian Jews tending to be genetically closer to each other than to Djerban Jews and Libyan Jews 47 48 49 50 According to the study distinctive North African Jewish population clusters with proximity to other Jewish populations and variable degrees of Middle Eastern European and North African admixture Two major subgroups were identified by principal component neighbor joining tree and identity by descent analysis Moroccan Algerian and Djerban Libyan that varied in their degree of European admixture These populations showed a high degree of endogamy and were part of a larger Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jewish group By principal component analysis these North African groups were orthogonal to contemporary populations from North and South Morocco Western Sahara Tunisia Libya and Egypt Thus this study is compatible with the history of North African Jews founding during Classical Antiquity with proselytism of local populations followed by genetic isolation with the rise of Christianity and then Islam and admixture following the emigration of Sephardic Jews during the Inquisition 46 Population numbers editYear Jewish Population 51 1830 26 0001850 26 0001866 38 5001881 52 0001914 96 0001931 110 0001948 140 0001960 130 0001963 4 0002005 1502020 lt 100See also editHistory of the Jews in Carthage Jewish exodus from the Muslim world Maghrebi Jews Sephardic JewsReferences edit a b Jews of Algeria Jewish Virtual Library Jean Jacques Deldyck 2000 Le processus d acculturation des Juifs d Algerie in French CIEMI p 41 ISBN 978 2 7384 9677 5 Les Juifs d Algerie pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale northafricanjews ww2 org il fr in French Retrieved 4 June 2018 Maina Fauliot 11 July 2014 Algerie Juifs chretiens Comment le pays encadre les religions minoritaires Jeune Afrique Benjamin Roger 2013 04 26 Y a t il encore des Juifs au Maghreb JeuneAfrique com in French Retrieved 2019 02 04 Karen B Stern Inscribing devotion and death archaeological evidence for Jewish populations of North Africa Bril 2008 p 88 Algeria JewishEncyclopedia com Retrieved 2012 06 10 The Edict of Expulsion of the Jews 1492 Spain Sephardicstudies org Retrieved 2012 06 10 Yardeni Myriam 1980 Les juifs dans l histoire de France Premier colloque internationale de Haifa in French BRILL ISBN 978 9004060272 a b c d e Friedman Elizabeth Colonialism amp After South Hadley Massachusetts Bergen 1988 Print Stillman Norman The Nineteenth Century and the Impact of the West Social Transformations The Jews of Arab Lands in Modern Times The Jewish Publication Society Archived from the original on August 28 2006 Retrieved January 5 2012 Paula Hyman The Jews of Modern France University of California Press 1998 p 83 Patrick Weil How to Be French Nationality in the Making since 1789 Duke University Press 2008 pp 128 253 1 University of California Santa Cruz Sarah Abrevaya Stein 6 May 2014 Saharan Jews and the Fate of French Algeria University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 12388 2 OCLC 1014071469 a b Samuel Kalman 2008 The Extreme Right in Interwar France The Faisceau and the Croix de Feu Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 210 ISBN 978 0 7546 6240 2 OCLC 1120553086 Orit Bashkin The Colonized Semites and the Infectious Disease Theorizing and Narrativizing Anti Semitism in the Levant 1870 1914 Critical Inquiry Winter 2021 Vol 47 Issue 2 pp 189 217 pp 199 202 Hyman p 105 Orit Bashkin The Colonized Semites and the Infectious Disease 2021 pp 202 203 Algeria 1830 2000 A Short History Cornell University Press 2004 pp 10 ISBN 978 0 8014 8916 7 a b Jews of Algeria Jewish Virtual Library 2000 09 05 Retrieved 2012 06 10 Vance Sharon 10 May 2011 The Martyrdom of a Moroccan Jewish Saint BRILL p 182 ISBN 978 90 04 20700 4 Muslim anti Jewish riots in Constantine in 1934 when 25 Jews were killed a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q The Jews of Algeria Morocco and Tunisia Yad Vashem Retrieved 2018 12 02 The Jews of Algeria dbs bh org il Retrieved 2018 12 02 a b French civilization and its discontents nationalism colonialism race Stovall Tyler Edward Van den Abbeele Georges Lanham Lexington Books 2003 pp 258 259 ISBN 978 0739106464 OCLC 52109410 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Algeria PDF Yad Vashem Retrieved 2 December 2018 a b Pierre Birnbaumn French Jews and the Regeneration of Algerian Jewry in Ezra Mendelsohn ed Studies in Contemporary Jewry Volume XIX Jews and the State Dangerous Alliances and the Perils of Privilege Studies in Contemporary Jewry Vol XIX Oxford University Press Hebrew Institute of Jerusalem 2004 pp 88 103 p 97 A larger group took up arms towards the end of the war with the opposing French terror group the Organisation Armee Secrete OAS even though this group contained members of some of the most antisemitic and reactionary of French Algerian circles a b Naomi Davidson Only Muslim Embodying Islam in Twentieth Century France Cornell University Press 2012 p 136 It is because the FLN considers Algerian Jews as sons of our country that we hope the leaders of the Jewish community will have the wisdom to contribute to the construction of a free and truly fraternal Algeria The FLN is convinced that leaders will understand that it is the duty and of course in the interest of the entire Jewish community not to remain above the fray to condemn without fail the dying French colonial regime and to proclaim their choice of Algerian nationality Fanon Frantz 1967 A Dying Colonialism New York Grove Press pp 155 157 Shepard Todd The invention of decolonization the Algerian War and the remaking of France Cornell University Press 2008 Sung Eun Choi 19 November 2015 Decolonization and the French of Algeria Bringing the Settler Colony Home Palgrave Macmillan pp 84 ISBN 978 1 137 57289 9 Sung Eun Choi 19 November 2015 Decolonization and the French of Algeria Bringing the Settler Colony Home Palgrave Macmillan p 84 ISBN 978 1 137 57289 9 Jewish participation in the OAS has been widely acknowledged by historians though just how many actually joined the organization and why remain difficult to know exactly a b Community in Algeria WJC World Jewish Congress Jan 2018 www worldjewishcongress org en about communities DZ Ethan Katz 2015 The Burdens of Brotherhood Jews and Muslims from North Africa to France Harvard University Press p 212 ISBN 978 0 674 08868 9 Marking the 60th Anniversary of the Mass Jewish Emigration from Algeria JDC Accessed 7 Dec 2023 Laskier Michael M 1994 North African Jewry in the Twentieth Century The Jews of Morocco Tunisia and Algeria NYU Press ISBN 9780814750728 Algeria Jewish Virtual Library Behind the Headlines the Jews of Algeria Jewish Telegraphic Agency 15 April 1975 Costume JewishEncyclopedia com Retrieved 2012 06 10 Fear Was My Father Haaretz 22 November 2007 Retrieved 16 January 2016 Jessica Hammerman Ben Myriam Encyclopedia of Jews in the Islamic World Executive Editor Norman A Stillman Brill Online 2015 Reference lt http referenceworks brillonline com entries encyclopedia of jews in the islamic world ben myriam SIM 000694 gt This domain was registered by Youdot io Halle Charlotte 24 December 2004 A Site for Sore Eyes The Israel21c Web site aims to show Americans that there s much more to Israel than the war torn images they see on TV Haaretz Retrieved 13 May 2019 Un Nul bourre de talents L Express in French 24 January 2002 Retrieved 2021 09 06 Lucotte G David F October 1992 Y chromosome specific haplotypes of Jews detected by probes 49f and 49a Hum Biol 64 5 757 61 PMID 1398615 a b Campbell Christopher L Palamara Pier F Dubrovsky Maya Botigue Laura R Fellous Marc Atzmon Gil Oddoux Carole Pearlman Alexander Hao Li Henn Brenna M Burns Edward Bustamante Carlos D Comas David Friedman Eitan Pe er Itsik Ostrer Harry 2012 North African Jewish and non Jewish populations form distinctive orthogonal clusters PDF Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109 34 13865 70 Bibcode 2012PNAS 10913865C doi 10 1073 pnas 1204840109 PMC 3427049 PMID 22869716 Study completes genetic map of N African Jews The Jerusalem Post JPost com Retrieved 2017 05 28 A New Genetic Map Of Jewish Diasporas Even Dan 8 August 2012 International genetic study traces Jewish roots to ancient Middle East Haaretz Retrieved 2 December 2021 Brown Eryn 2008 04 13 Genetics study of North African Jews tells migratory tale Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2013 04 12 The Jews of Algeria The Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot La graphie Juifs avec une capitale designe les membres d une identite nationale ou ethnique La graphie juifs sans capitale designe les pratiquants de la religion juive Voir a ce propos les articles Juifs et Usage des majuscules en francais Sources editFieni David 2020 Decadent Orientalisms The Decay of Colonial Modernity Fordham University Press ISBN 9780823286409 Roberts Sohpie P 2017 Citizenship and Antisemitism in French Colonial Algeria 1870 1962 Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107188150 External links editResources gt Jewish communities gt Magreb The Jewish History Resource Center Project of the Dinur Center for Research in Jewish History The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Site multilingue sur la Hazanout des Juifs de Constantine Zlabia com French site for Jews of Algerian origins Rabbis of Algeria Algeria Sephardim Deported from France or Executed in France during WWII PDF The Jewish Community of Oran Archived 2018 06 12 at the Wayback Machine Museum of the Jewish People at Beit Hatfutsot Documents from Old Jewish Algeria The Jewish Population of Algeria in 1931 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of the Jews in Algeria amp oldid 1207884924, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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