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Wikipedia

Bounouh

Bou-Nouh is a town and commune in Tizi Ouzou Province in northern Algeria.[2]

Bounouh
Ath Smail
Bou-Nouh
Commune and town
Bounouh
Coordinates: Coordinates: 36°30′00″N 3°56′00″E / 36.5000°N 3.9333°E / 36.5000; 3.9333
Country Algeria
ProvinceTizi Ouzou
DistrictBoghni
Area
 • Total26.99 km2 (10.42 sq mi)
Population
 (2008[1])
 • Total9,731
 • Density361/km2 (930/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
Postcode
Area code020
Bounouh new Town Hall

Geography

Bounouh is the head commune[3] within the Arch of Ath Smaïl which is located next to the Djurdjura National Park. Its GPS coordinates are 36.49935,3.936558. In truth, Bounouh is the name of a town and, mistakenly, its name has been given a meaning to represent the whole Arch of Ath Smaïl. This Ath Smaïl should not be mistaken for a namesake in the Wilaya of Bejaïa. The Arch of Ath Smaïl is located to the south west of the Wilaya of Tizi-Ouzou and is in close proximity to the Daïras of Boghni (driving distance from Bounouh is about 10.9 km through Thala Oulili and Amezaourou and under 9.6 km through Ighil Aanane and Amezaourou) and Draâ-El Mizan (driving distance from Bounouh is approximately 13 km) whereas the bird's flight distance from Bou-Nouh to Boghni is merely 5 km and this is testimony of the hilly landscape. Boghni to Draâ El Mizan driving distance is 15.4 km. It has become fashionable to change the spelling of Bou-Nouh to Bounouh! There is also Ait Bounouh in Tiznit, Morocco.[4]

Ait Smaïl is a mountainous region and offers many beautiful landscapes. Thala Oulili is merely 400m above sea level whilst Helouane is at an altitude of more than 1200m. Again there is a namesake Helouane within the Wilaya of Bejaïa. There are sensational panoramic views and splendid walks throughout Ath Smaïl to charm any demanding visitor. The Arch of Ath Smaïl has an area of 26.99 km2[5] with 80% in rural setting.[citation needed] The population is 9,731 inhabitants distributed over 23 villages. Ath Smaïl is bordered by Boghni to the north, the villages of Ath Mendes and Ath Kouffi (District of Boghni) to the east, The Djurdjura Mountains, Ait Laaziz and Taghzout (Province of Bouira) to the south and finally Frikat and Ain Zaouïa on its western flank. As is customary throughout Kabylia, villages in Bounouh are often perched on hills so as to defend themselves against any invasion. Recently, people from Tizi L Had, Ibouhatène, Chebaba, and other villages have started to settle in the plains of Lemhella where the number of houses has kept increasing year on year.

 
Village Awrir
 
Lemhella where many people are relocating

The various locations are: Amezaourou, Amalou, Awrir, Ath Telha, Ath Si Ali, Baâli, Bou-Nouh, Bouzoula, Chebaba, Helouane, Ibouhatène, Ijebaren, Ighil Aânane, Ikaânane, Ikhelfounene, L’Merdja, Oufella, Thala Khelouf, Thala Oulili, Thamalouts, Tizi L Had, Tizi Meden, Tizi N'Chreât and Zaârour.

The clan system is strong in Ath Smaïl. In the early 1980s,

  • Thala Oulili is dominated mainly by the Chergui family as well as Khendriche and Touati,
  • Taghza by the Lakrimi (who moved from Tizi L Had) and Lamrani (Ibouhatène) and others: Bouchareb (originating from outside Ath Smaïl) and Idir (Ibouhatène),
  • Tizi N Chreât by Aissani, Amokrane (Tizi L Had) and Chemoune (Bouzoula),
  • Thoulmouts exclusively by Hamoudi (Ibouhatène) and others: Merkilou,
  • Thiwririne is exclusively Lamrani (Ibouhatène),
  • Lemqessa by Oukil (Ath Telha) and Mokrani,
  • Tizi L Had by mainly the Ait Ali Ou Ahmed formed by Aissani, Ayad, Amrioui, Lakrimi, Amokrane and Riche (the original clan was split by the French administration due to its size) and Saadi. Others: Berkane, Mahloul, Kheladi, Nanouche, Saadoune and Zaidi,
  • Lqahwa by Ziani (Ibouhatène),
  • Bouzoula by Chabni, Chahmi, Chemoun, Guettatfi and Zourdani,
  • Ath Si Ali by Baghdadi,
  • Bou-Nouh by Adli, Aissaoui, Aissat, Aissi, Benchebana, Boudraa, Bouricha, Fouchal, Hadj Arab, Hamache, Meziani and Laïb,
  • Ikhelfounene by mostly Guirad and others: Hadjarab, Benabi, Boumail, Bouteldja, Gadoum, Khelifi, Ouchène and Touah,
  • L’Merdja dominated by Belgacem and others: Amrouz, Benamrouz and Boudissa,
  • Helouane by Massaid,
  • Amezaourou by Hamdi, Hamidi, Idja, Makhlouf, Mansouri and Rabia,
  • Zaârour by Zerrouki,
  • Baâli by Abbas, Amirat and Djemah,
  • Tizi Medene by Madani and Slimani,
  • etc.

Some villages even take the name of the clan itself such as

  • Ichemounene: family Chemoun,
  • Chebaba: family Bouchebaba and others: Hadji, Hadj Larbi and Hamia,
  • Ibouhatène: family Bouha and others: Idir, Mokhtari, Semsar, and Souissi,
  • Ikaânanene: family Kaanan,
  • Ath el hadjarab
  • Awrir also known as Ibecharene: family Béchar and others: Akli, Amir, Hadj Ali, Lounas and Lounes,
  • etc.

Driving from Boghni (36.542369,3.953723), heading to Ath Smaïl, and following the road of Ath Mendes and then the road of Frikat, one passes the following places: Thala Oulili (36.516231,3.947715), Taghza (36.517693,3.933147), Lemhella (36.517226,3.929172), Tizi N Chreat (36.517764,3.921472), Thiwririne (36.522644,3.914477), Ichemounene (36.515039,3.918961), Lemqessa (36.513539,3.923296), Tizi L Had (36.511828,3.928797), Chebaba (36.508725,3.929585), Issidikene and Ibouhatène (36.506845,3.928576). Just after Tizi L Had and before Ibouhatène, one can turn right towards Bouzoula (36.50655,3.926935), Ath Si-Ali (36.50602,3.926061), Zaarour (36.469446,3.930506), Ath Telha, Tizi Medene and Helouane (36.489414,3.921999). However, if after Tizi L Had and continuing straight, one passes by Ibouhatène, Bou-Nouh, L’Merdja (36.498005,3.943554), Axxam N Cheikh (Sidi Abderrahmane, 36.493484,3.942578), Baâli (36.492468,3.939777), Ikaananene (36.489598,3.933982), Ath Telha, and then finishing in Helouane. From L’Merdja, one can visit Amalou (36.496125,3.944991) and Awrir (36.502363,3.941618). From Bou-Nouh, one can return towards Taghza following the road of Ath Smaïl-Boghni and passing by Ikhalfounene (36.50155,3.935797), Amezaourou (36.511493,3.944541), Alma B-Uli (36.514571,3.935335), Lejnan N Cheikh (36.515942,3.936376), and Taghza. From Taghza, one could drive back to Boghni following the road of Ath Smaïl-Boghni also known as Ighil Aanane (36.522925,3.941939) and pass at close proximity to the forest of Tazrouts (36.522822,3.944128) and finish at the higher secondary school (Lycée) Zamoum Mohamed of Boghni.

History

During French occupation of Algeria, Bou-Nouh was a commune within the District of Draâ-El Mizan and ahead of the now Daïra of Boghni. Ath Smaïl entered history at the beginning of the 16th century. The Turks (Ottoman Empire) set up a Bordj, a few hundred metres from the Lycée Zamoum (close proximity to family Terkmani) in Boghni to collect taxes. This was attacked and subsequently destroyed on 16 July 1756 by Iflissen and Ath Smaïl and consequently the Turks left the garrison. However, nothing is said or mentioned about the megalithic[6] structures in Tissamamine. Tissamamine is known locally as the shortcut to walk from Bou-Nouh towards Chebaba. Back in the 70's, it was littered with large T shaped structures. Their significance is not clear and not documented. Nowadays, only the large and bulky axial rocks lay on the ground as the flat stones have been broken down and used in the construction of private houses. There was however one remaining structure[7] on the grounds of Cheikh Ben Abderrahmane until 2011 when this one also mysteriously disappeared without a trace, its fate unbeknown to the locals. Even the ground around its placement was completely reshaped to wipe out any trace of existence. Visitors to the mosque could lean at its entrance and call their beloved ones to come back, especially immigrants. It was told that outcomes were excellent.

According to religious records, the Catholic Church was set up in Bou-Nouh in 1876[8] and soon after the boys and girls schools (in Bou-Nouh) were founded in 1877 and 1892, respectively.[8] It is not clear from the records as to when Bou-Nouh benefited from a health clinic. The Catholic Church held a conference in 1937 in the commune[8] and this denotes the importance and prestige of Bou-Nouh. However, long before the French set foot in Algeria, one could not forget the illustrious Cheikh Sidi M'hamed Ben Abderrahmane who had set up his own illuminating Tariqa Rahmani in Ait Smaïl in 1769! The Rahmania, which preached a form of passive religious belief, was to play a role in Algerian insurrection against the French. Inside the mosque there is a poster summarizing the spiritual and combative sides of Cheikh Ben Abderrahmane. Even after his death, his mosque continued to play a massive role in all uprisings and this led to several closures as a form of punishment. Cheikh Mohand Ameziane Aheddad, from Seddouk Oufela (Bejaïa), a fervent preacher of the Rahmania which he studied in Ath Irathen and Ath Smaïl, allied himself along El Mokrani in 1871 to lead a rebellion against the French invasion. After his capture, Cheikh Aheddad died on 29 April 1873 at the prison of El Koudiat (Constantine) at the age of 83 and he was initially buried in Constantine against his known wish and then later exhumed and reburied in Seddouk to fulfil his request to be buried in his beloved home town. After the conquest of Kabylie in 1871, the French embarked on founding a number of towns between Draâ-El Mizan and Larbaâ N Ath Irathen (ex Fort Napoléon and Fort National), such as Draâ-El Mizan (1873), Beauprètre (1874), Pirette (now Ain Zaouia) (1875), Tizi-Gheniff (1875) and Boghni (1876). From Larbaâ Nath Irathen to Béjaïa were created Fréha (1882), Azazga (1882) and Yakouren (1888). Then the French adopted, using a number of measures between 1871 and 1878, the American Homestead rule to confiscate and give land free to French Colons and their number swelled to 207,615 on 1 January 1888![9] This led to the beginning of the erosion of the socio-economic structure which supported Kabylie and to a larger extent Algeria. Although, it could be argued that land productivity increased, the (agricultural) food exports from Algeria to France soared from 9.7 to in excess of 125million French Francs for only the ports of Algiers, Annaba, and Oran over the period of 1838-40 to 1885-87.[9]

 
Library Farid Ali
 
Tizi L Had, destroyed by the French in November 1958 but the mosque and eucalyptus tree survived the relentless bombing

The indomitable Ath Smaïl, who rose against the Turks and French colonisation, played its crucial part in the Algerian war for independence which started in 1954 and lasted until 1962. Many regional leaders originated from Ath Smaïl and several people lost their lives or have been imprisoned. Tizi L Had was turned to rubble by the French canons in November 1958 and, as by miracle, only the mosque stood unshaken. Both Bou-Nouh and Boghni honoured a number of the heroes by naming streets and schools after them. The widows from Ath Smaïl often evoke a number of poems to recount the horrors of the war and their sufferings. Students at the University Mouloud Mammeri of Tizi-Ouzou originating from the Arch of Ath Smaïl took part in the foundation of the Comité Anti-Repression in 1980 and played an active role in the movement that fashioned the Berber Spring which led to the recognition of the Berber language and culture,[10] threatened with certain extinction.

After independence, the strong but not so rich Bounouh lost its status of commune and the ever-developing Boghni was promoted in its place. At Ath Smaïl, all roads pass by the side of the villages, because the villages came to exist first and the road network followed much later on. At Ath Smaïl, even walking paths had names such as Adjroud, Lburath, Tissamamine, Tassawent L Had, etc. Even small patches of land carried names which are beyond comprehension such as Alma Bwuli (literally land of sheep), Lemhella, Taghza, Tabaquit Irumiyen (literally the French or Roman table), Lemqessa, etc. This demonstrates the historical heritage of Ath Smaïl. In Boghni, however, the road network came to exist first as part of the link between Draâ-El Mizan and Larbaâ Nath Irathen (ex- Fort Napoléon and Fort National) and then people moved in afterwards. Based on knowledge from the early 1970s, a large number of the first inhabitants or the people to set up business in Boghni originated mostly from Ath Smaïl such as the families Hadjarab, Abbas, Amrani, Ayad, Béchar, Bouha, Boukhalfa, Chabane, Chemoune, Chergui, Djebbar, Guirad, Hamoudi, Idir, Kaanane, Lamrani, Riche, Semsar, Touah, Zourdani, etc. and very few from other villages such as the Families of Iouadarene, Saidani [Moh Said Nath Ou Said was the first to own a lorry in Boghni] and Yahiaténe (Ath Mendes), Agdal, Dahmani, Kadri, Larbi and Yahiaoui (Ath Kouffi), followed by the Haddadi (Laâzib N’Cheikh). There was only a tiny influx from neighbouring Mechtras and Ouadhias which were already benefiting from good infrastructure in terms of land, roads and water. Other families include Amarouche (from Béjaia), Belhadj Ali, Berkouk, Benamar, Dr Ben Lahreche, Benlarbi, Berkouk, Hamrani, Haroun, Kara, Lamara, Madani, Marouf (from Ath Yenni), Meghari, Mitiche, Tamimount, Touati, etc. Other families which settled in Algiers and in other parts of Algeria are Aissani, Lakrimi, Saâdi, Amrioui (Tizi L Had) and Ziani (Ibouhaténe). The Catholics established a College of Further Education (Centre de Formation Professionnelle) in Boghni where the first 20 technicians to be employed by Sonatrach when it opened the Arzew oil refinery (near Oran) were formed[11] included pupils from Ath Smail.

 
Primary School Ahmed Zourdani at Ibouhaténe
 
Middle School Frères Kanane
 
New Middle School

It was only in 1985 following a new administrative landscape that Bounouh was granted its title of commune again[12] and tied to the much prosperous and developed Boghni which had already been elevated to the status of Daïra (District). A new Town Hall with better facilities was built and the old town Hall was changed into a Center of Further Education.

Economics and infrastructure

Despite its glorious past and harbouring several wealthy families, people from Ath Smaïl never sought to invest locally and Bou-nouh is actually a poor town. In a census published in 2001, it is lagging in 11th place from the bottom, behind 40 other communes within the province of Tizi-Ouzou.[13] Neighbouring Frikat has a much higher ratio of wealth than Bou-Nouh. The poverty index means that Bou-Nouh could not self-support itself. Its entrepreneurial citizen preferred to invest and set up their commercial ventures and industries outside Ath Smaïl, namely in Boghni and as far afield as Algiers. In truth, the landscape, road networks and lack of electricity, water and telephone were not conducive to a business and entrepreneurial environment. Despite one hydroelectric power station on its territory and another in adjacent Ath Kouffi, the homes in Ath Smaïl only received electricity in the late 80’s after much protest and people stopped lighting their candles and afegag. Drinking water is now available in most houses and it is planned to supply cooking gas to every house in Ath Smaïl. Although several villages have now been connected with gas the actual supply is yet to be switched on. Due to be inaugurated in November 2012, the valve has remained shamefully and indeterminately closed because villages not yet connected to the gas supply objected. The stalemate is beyond reason; when some villages were not connected to electricity in the 1980s, such was the case of Thala Oulili and Taghza, the villages which today objected to the switching of the gas never uttered a shred of support and these villages went on went for years without any electricity and intermittent drinking water. The local administration has a challenge to resolve this very sad state of affairs!

Most farming land is located in Azaghar. Azaghar represents a truly vast expanse and for land attached to Ath Smaïl this represents Thiwririne, bordering Frikat and Ain Zaouïa, Lemqessa, Thoulmouts, Taghza, and Lemhella where wheat, barley and fodder are cultivated. This is why the French erected a railway line crossing this rich and vast land to transport the goods. Viaducts in good condition are still in existence at Thiwrine, known locally as Lghar n Tekoukt, and at Laanasser in Boghni either side of the river between Azagher (land of Saidani Moh Said N Ath U Said) and Azouggar (land of Yahiatene). As far as trees are concerned, olives yield the largest revenue in Ath Smaïl followed by dried figs and acorns. Families cultivate their small holdings from September to May and allotments along the river in the summer. People also raise chicken and sometimes sheep or cows to help supplement the family income by selling a lamb or a calf every year. Ath Smaïl is also famous for its craft in pottery, raffia, weaving and sewing of Berber dresses.

Otherwise, Ath Smaïl has little to offer in terms of jobs and industry. There is only one post office which covers all villages, two middle secondary schools and six primary schools for a sparse population scattered over 23 villages and nearly 10,000 inhabitants .[5] School children lead a demeaning life, without public transport to school; they endure long and arduous journeys, as is the case for the children from Thiwririne and Taghza to attend The Primary School Ahmed Zourdani at Ibouhaténe and from Helouane or Taghza or Thala Oulili to the Brothers Kaanane middle secondary school at Bou-Nouh. These walking journeys consist of a few kilometres return journey to school on a daily basis. Bounouh have just commissioned a second middle school,[14] two health clinics at Helouane and Ath Telha, and the library named after Farid Ali, premises for the unemployed, cooking gas, and a highly performing football team, The IRBB (Itihad Ryadhi Baladiat Bounouh), to foster the fantastic local talent. However, children are very motivated and their dedication is unsurpassable given the miserable economic and sociological upheavals in Kabylie. Nowadays, there are still 600 pupils from Ath Smaïl commuting to the higher secondary school (Lycée Zamoum) in Boghni. It is for this reason that the town has tabled a proposal for a high secondary school to share with the neighbouring commune of Frikat, etc. It was not until the late 1980s that Ath Smaïl had its first children complete postgraduate studies. During French colonisation, good pupils from Ath Smaïl achieved an excellent and envious Certificat d’Etudes Primaires (aged 12 to 13) and stopped education (mostly due to family pressure and lack of means to pursue their studies). Of course there were a few exceptions such as Belaid Zawadi, Ahcene Lamrani, Belkacem Lakrimi, and a few others.

Given the lack of employment, people feel compelled to emigrate outside the region and look for work in other parts of Algeria and even abroad. Families rely immensely on war and work pensions to stave off the nightmare of poverty. The lack of economic development at Ath Smaïl is also rendered even more difficult, in fact complicated, by its proximity to Boghni which used to be the most developed town in Algeria in the 1970s. Again in the 1970s and 1980s, Ath Smaïl was neglected by the administrators of Boghni to the extent that the provision of public transport was withdrawn. Fortunately, the Belgacem brothers from L’Merdja stepped in with their coaches to take people to Boghni, Draa El Mizan and even to Rouiba for people employed at the state company for transport, SONACOM. Nowadays, the commune of Bou-Nouh continues to search for its destiny. It is heavily dependent on state subsidies and its administrative representatives shoulder a massive responsibility.

Arts

Ath Smaïl is well known for its pottery, despite the proximity of Maâtkas and Ouadhias. Women decorate their own designs ;[15] they exploit several kinds of clay which they steal from open fields, usually on the day of the market which men attend in Boghni on Sundays. Women are very entrepreneurial; they make soap using spent cooking oil and marinate olives, tomatoes and peppers. During shortages of candles, they light the afegags using again spent oil. They embraced Recycle, Reduce and Reuse from an early age; in hardship, this was their motto. Just like men went to markets in Boghni on Sundays and Draâ-El Mizan on Thursdays, women had their own market on Wednesdays. Although, men were tolerated, stalls were run by women. They sold jewellery, pottery, and craft objects, especially made using raffia. The market is held near the Catholic Church.

 
Monument

Rabia Ziani, a passionate, well published writer and pedagogue, is from Ath Smaïl.[16] Several Algerian famous singers originate from Ath Smaïl. The famous film producer Amar Tribèche originates from Baâli. Farid Ali (né Khelifi Ali) fought for Algerian independence from the French and sang the evocative a yemma sbar ur e tsru (literally translated: mum, be patient and don’t cry) and several other militant songs. After independence, he was a great sympathiser of the Berber Academy in Paris which became active in the recognition of the Berber language.[17] Oukil Amar sang C’min di fir (literally: the railway lines) and the eloquent Innas im layune tawass (literally: tell the bright eyed lady), et Moh Said U Belaid was famous for Takbaylit m uxelxal (literally: The Kabyl woman with jewellery) and marked by emigration a itbir siwdhessen sslem iwarac n’tmurt iw (literally: pigeon take my regards to my fellow countrymen). Mohamed Chemoune had hits with a taazizt atin hemlagh (literally: the cherished one I love) and a wahmimi (literally: my dear friend) and he is extremely well known for his party concerts. He introduced Moroccan songs. There is also the new generation, such as Rabia Brahim and many others. Less remembered nowadays is Hadjaz Youcef, a blind, whose poems circulated from person to person in the form of typed manuscripts. Nowadays there is a monument in Bou-Nouh celebrating from right to left Moh Said U Belaid, Farid Ali alongside Lounes Matoub.

Religious heritage

 
Cathedral
 
Inside Cheikh Ben Abderrahmane mosque
 
Cheikh Ben Abderrahmane provides a vantage point for a panoramic view of its surrounding villages and extends to Boghni

Ath Smaïl has a unique experience in the coexistence of two religions, namely the Catholic Church with the Nuns and Priests in Bou-Nouh and Islamic mosques of Sidi Ben Abderrahmane barely a kilometre away, Rebaâine Wali (40 Saints) at Awrir, Sidi Mansour at Tizi L Had, Si Mhend U Idir at Ibouhaténe, and Ath Sidi Lounis at Tala Oulili. Nowadays, it is mostly for the Cheikh Ben Abderrahmane that Ath Smaïl is most famous for. The Saint exists both at Ath Smaïl and Al Hama in Algiers. Even his death in 1793 became a legend; the people of Algiers and of Ath Smaïl embarked in a dispute about his corpse because each side wanted him for their region and started stealing each other his corpse. Calm resumed when both the inhabitant of Ath Smaïl found the Saint buried at their cemetery and the people of Algiers also found the Saint at their cemetery. It was customary for the Ath Smaïl to vow on a lewli yebdan ghef sin (literally: the Saint who split in two), in reference to this mysterious doubling of the tomb. This explains why he is also known as Bou Qabrine, i.e. the Saint with two tombs. Today, the two zaouïas of Bou-Nouh and Algiers which carry his name continue to draw visitors from all corners of Algeria, especially at religious festivals.

The Cheikh Sidi M’hemed Ben Aberrahmane is a native of Ath Smaïl and was born around 1715 in the village of Baâli. He is said to be a descendant of Fatima Ezzahra, the daughter of Prophet Mohamed (his lineage is Cheikh Sidi M’hemed son of Abderahmane son of Ahmed son of Ben Youcef son of Abi Kacem son of Ali Ibrahim son of Abderahmane son of Ahmed son of El Hussein son of Mohamed son of El Hussein son of Fatima Ezzahra).[18] He studied cultural sciences at the Zaouïa of Cheikh Essedik Ouarab of Larbaâ N Ath Irathen, moved to Algiers, accomplished his Hajj at Mecca (Saudi Arabia) and then to El Azhar in Cairo (Egypt) where he spent 25 years studying and carrying out research in theology .[19] He learned the figh under Cheikh Mohamed Salem El Hafnaoui who sent him to India and Sudan to teach the Koran and the Sunna. He invented his own religious path called Tariqa Rahmania. After fulfilling this mission, he returned to Egypt. In 1769, he returned to Algeria, further developed his path and settled himself between Algiers and Ath Smaïl where he set up the zaouïa of the Ghechtoula at Ath Smaïl. It is thus at Ath Smaïl where he established his zaouïa and taught Koran and the El Khaloutia method to his followers. After a few years he felt the urge to expand his teaching to a larger audience. He settled in El Hama (Algiers) where again he established his zaouïa. He died in 1793 at Ath Smaïl. Given the common heritage, Bou-Nouh is now twinned with Sidi M’hemed in Algiers.

References

  1. ^ Evolution intercensitaire de la population sur le site de la wilaya de Tizi Ouzou April 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Consulté le 25/02/2011
  2. ^ "Communes of Algeria". Statoids. Retrieved December 12, 2010.
  3. ^ Algeria's administration is geographically split into 48 Wilayas (regions or provinces) which in turn consist of several Daira (districts or counties) which group several communes (towns) which are formed by a number of villages.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-04-02. Retrieved 2011-11-11.
  5. ^ a b . www.tiziouzou-dz.com. Archived from the original on 31 October 2007. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
  6. ^ Megalith
  7. ^ Photograph needed
  8. ^ a b c http://www.djurdjurakabylie.com/Les%20chretiens%20de%20Kabylie/Les%20chretiens%20de%20Kabylie.htm[permanent dead link] and references therein. Also . Archived from the original on 2011-10-28. Retrieved 2011-11-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) and search for Boghni and Bou-Nouh.
  9. ^ a b Le développement géographique de la colonisation agricole en Algérie, Henri Busson, in Annales de Géographie, Year 1898, Volume 7, Number 31, pp. 34-54.
  10. ^ M'hamed Lakrimi in autobiography, unpublished.
  11. ^ C'était une longue fidélité: à l'Algérie et au Rwanda, Armand Duval, 1998, ISBN 2-7122-0735-1, page 81.
  12. ^ Journal officiel de la République Algérienne [archive], 19 décembre 1984. Décret n° 84-365, fixant la composition, la consistance et les limites territoriale des communes. Wilaya de Tizi Ouzou, page 1505.
  13. ^ Carte de la Pauvreté en Algérie, published by Agence nationale de l’Aménagement du Territoire, 2001, pages 92-93, Ministère de l’Action Sociale et de la Solidarité Nationale, Programme des Nations Unies pour le développent, also available from (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-10-21. Retrieved 2013-12-26.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  14. ^ Enfin un deuxième collège pour la commune de Bou-Nouh (Boghni), Journal Liberté, 13 Septembre 2011.
  15. ^ http://kimvip.skyrock.com/5.html and http://www.culture.fr/recherche/?typeSearch=collection&SearchableText=Bou-Nouh&SearchWhere[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ http://www.livrescq.com/livrescq/?p=865 [Rabia Ziani : Ma vie est un roman in LivrEscq, Littérature Algérienne no 7, 15 July 2010] and http://www.blogg.org/blog-85611-billet-rabia_ziani_portrait_d_un_ecrivain_race-1219811.html. See also Dictionnaire des auteurs maghrébins de langue française: Algérie, Jean Déjeux, ISBN 2-86537-085-2.
  17. ^ Chants kabyles de la guerre d'indépendance. Algérie 1954-1962 ». Préface Mohammed Harbi. Séguier – Atlantica, Paris, 2002
  18. ^ Une histoire, des artistes, et une quête de développement, Amar Ouramdane, La Dépêche de Kabylie, 28 Juillet 2008.
  19. ^ For his different placements, he is also known as Sidi Abderrahmane El Gechtouli El Djerdjeri Al Azhari.

bounouh, nouh, town, commune, tizi, ouzou, province, northern, algeria, smailbou, nouhcommune, towncoordinates, coordinates, 5000, 9333, 5000, 9333country, algeriaprovincetizi, ouzoudistrictboghniarea, total26, population, 2008, total9, density361, time, zoneu. Bou Nouh is a town and commune in Tizi Ouzou Province in northern Algeria 2 Bounouh Ath SmailBou NouhCommune and townBounouhCoordinates Coordinates 36 30 00 N 3 56 00 E 36 5000 N 3 9333 E 36 5000 3 9333Country AlgeriaProvinceTizi OuzouDistrictBoghniArea Total26 99 km2 10 42 sq mi Population 2008 1 Total9 731 Density361 km2 930 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Postcode15445Area code020 Bounouh new Town Hall Contents 1 Geography 2 History 3 Economics and infrastructure 4 Arts 5 Religious heritage 6 ReferencesGeography EditBounouh is the head commune 3 within the Arch of Ath Smail which is located next to the Djurdjura National Park Its GPS coordinates are 36 49935 3 936558 In truth Bounouh is the name of a town and mistakenly its name has been given a meaning to represent the whole Arch of Ath Smail This Ath Smail should not be mistaken for a namesake in the Wilaya of Bejaia The Arch of Ath Smail is located to the south west of the Wilaya of Tizi Ouzou and is in close proximity to the Dairas of Boghni driving distance from Bounouh is about 10 9 km through Thala Oulili and Amezaourou and under 9 6 km through Ighil Aanane and Amezaourou and Draa El Mizan driving distance from Bounouh is approximately 13 km whereas the bird s flight distance from Bou Nouh to Boghni is merely 5 km and this is testimony of the hilly landscape Boghni to Draa El Mizan driving distance is 15 4 km It has become fashionable to change the spelling of Bou Nouh to Bounouh There is also Ait Bounouh in Tiznit Morocco 4 Ait Smail is a mountainous region and offers many beautiful landscapes Thala Oulili is merely 400m above sea level whilst Helouane is at an altitude of more than 1200m Again there is a namesake Helouane within the Wilaya of Bejaia There are sensational panoramic views and splendid walks throughout Ath Smail to charm any demanding visitor The Arch of Ath Smail has an area of 26 99 km2 5 with 80 in rural setting citation needed The population is 9 731 inhabitants distributed over 23 villages Ath Smail is bordered by Boghni to the north the villages of Ath Mendes and Ath Kouffi District of Boghni to the east The Djurdjura Mountains Ait Laaziz and Taghzout Province of Bouira to the south and finally Frikat and Ain Zaouia on its western flank As is customary throughout Kabylia villages in Bounouh are often perched on hills so as to defend themselves against any invasion Recently people from Tizi L Had Ibouhatene Chebaba and other villages have started to settle in the plains of Lemhella where the number of houses has kept increasing year on year Village Awrir Lemhella where many people are relocating The various locations are Amezaourou Amalou Awrir Ath Telha Ath Si Ali Baali Bou Nouh Bouzoula Chebaba Helouane Ibouhatene Ijebaren Ighil Aanane Ikaanane Ikhelfounene L Merdja Oufella Thala Khelouf Thala Oulili Thamalouts Tizi L Had Tizi Meden Tizi N Chreat and Zaarour The clan system is strong in Ath Smail In the early 1980s Thala Oulili is dominated mainly by the Chergui family as well as Khendriche and Touati Taghza by the Lakrimi who moved from Tizi L Had and Lamrani Ibouhatene and others Bouchareb originating from outside Ath Smail and Idir Ibouhatene Tizi N Chreat by Aissani Amokrane Tizi L Had and Chemoune Bouzoula Thoulmouts exclusively by Hamoudi Ibouhatene and others Merkilou Thiwririne is exclusively Lamrani Ibouhatene Lemqessa by Oukil Ath Telha and Mokrani Tizi L Had by mainly the Ait Ali Ou Ahmed formed by Aissani Ayad Amrioui Lakrimi Amokrane and Riche the original clan was split by the French administration due to its size and Saadi Others Berkane Mahloul Kheladi Nanouche Saadoune and Zaidi Lqahwa by Ziani Ibouhatene Bouzoula by Chabni Chahmi Chemoun Guettatfi and Zourdani Ath Si Ali by Baghdadi Bou Nouh by Adli Aissaoui Aissat Aissi Benchebana Boudraa Bouricha Fouchal Hadj Arab Hamache Meziani and Laib Ikhelfounene by mostly Guirad and others Hadjarab Benabi Boumail Bouteldja Gadoum Khelifi Ouchene and Touah L Merdja dominated by Belgacem and others Amrouz Benamrouz and Boudissa Helouane by Massaid Amezaourou by Hamdi Hamidi Idja Makhlouf Mansouri and Rabia Zaarour by Zerrouki Baali by Abbas Amirat and Djemah Tizi Medene by Madani and Slimani etc Some villages even take the name of the clan itself such as Ichemounene family Chemoun Chebaba family Bouchebaba and others Hadji Hadj Larbi and Hamia Ibouhatene family Bouha and others Idir Mokhtari Semsar and Souissi Ikaananene family Kaanan Ath el hadjarab Awrir also known as Ibecharene family Bechar and others Akli Amir Hadj Ali Lounas and Lounes etc Driving from Boghni 36 542369 3 953723 heading to Ath Smail and following the road of Ath Mendes and then the road of Frikat one passes the following places Thala Oulili 36 516231 3 947715 Taghza 36 517693 3 933147 Lemhella 36 517226 3 929172 Tizi N Chreat 36 517764 3 921472 Thiwririne 36 522644 3 914477 Ichemounene 36 515039 3 918961 Lemqessa 36 513539 3 923296 Tizi L Had 36 511828 3 928797 Chebaba 36 508725 3 929585 Issidikene and Ibouhatene 36 506845 3 928576 Just after Tizi L Had and before Ibouhatene one can turn right towards Bouzoula 36 50655 3 926935 Ath Si Ali 36 50602 3 926061 Zaarour 36 469446 3 930506 Ath Telha Tizi Medene and Helouane 36 489414 3 921999 However if after Tizi L Had and continuing straight one passes by Ibouhatene Bou Nouh L Merdja 36 498005 3 943554 Axxam N Cheikh Sidi Abderrahmane 36 493484 3 942578 Baali 36 492468 3 939777 Ikaananene 36 489598 3 933982 Ath Telha and then finishing in Helouane From L Merdja one can visit Amalou 36 496125 3 944991 and Awrir 36 502363 3 941618 From Bou Nouh one can return towards Taghza following the road of Ath Smail Boghni and passing by Ikhalfounene 36 50155 3 935797 Amezaourou 36 511493 3 944541 Alma B Uli 36 514571 3 935335 Lejnan N Cheikh 36 515942 3 936376 and Taghza From Taghza one could drive back to Boghni following the road of Ath Smail Boghni also known as Ighil Aanane 36 522925 3 941939 and pass at close proximity to the forest of Tazrouts 36 522822 3 944128 and finish at the higher secondary school Lycee Zamoum Mohamed of Boghni History EditDuring French occupation of Algeria Bou Nouh was a commune within the District of Draa El Mizan and ahead of the now Daira of Boghni Ath Smail entered history at the beginning of the 16th century The Turks Ottoman Empire set up a Bordj a few hundred metres from the Lycee Zamoum close proximity to family Terkmani in Boghni to collect taxes This was attacked and subsequently destroyed on 16 July 1756 by Iflissen and Ath Smail and consequently the Turks left the garrison However nothing is said or mentioned about the megalithic 6 structures in Tissamamine Tissamamine is known locally as the shortcut to walk from Bou Nouh towards Chebaba Back in the 70 s it was littered with large T shaped structures Their significance is not clear and not documented Nowadays only the large and bulky axial rocks lay on the ground as the flat stones have been broken down and used in the construction of private houses There was however one remaining structure 7 on the grounds of Cheikh Ben Abderrahmane until 2011 when this one also mysteriously disappeared without a trace its fate unbeknown to the locals Even the ground around its placement was completely reshaped to wipe out any trace of existence Visitors to the mosque could lean at its entrance and call their beloved ones to come back especially immigrants It was told that outcomes were excellent According to religious records the Catholic Church was set up in Bou Nouh in 1876 8 and soon after the boys and girls schools in Bou Nouh were founded in 1877 and 1892 respectively 8 It is not clear from the records as to when Bou Nouh benefited from a health clinic The Catholic Church held a conference in 1937 in the commune 8 and this denotes the importance and prestige of Bou Nouh However long before the French set foot in Algeria one could not forget the illustrious Cheikh Sidi M hamed Ben Abderrahmane who had set up his own illuminating Tariqa Rahmani in Ait Smail in 1769 The Rahmania which preached a form of passive religious belief was to play a role in Algerian insurrection against the French Inside the mosque there is a poster summarizing the spiritual and combative sides of Cheikh Ben Abderrahmane Even after his death his mosque continued to play a massive role in all uprisings and this led to several closures as a form of punishment Cheikh Mohand Ameziane Aheddad from Seddouk Oufela Bejaia a fervent preacher of the Rahmania which he studied in Ath Irathen and Ath Smail allied himself along El Mokrani in 1871 to lead a rebellion against the French invasion After his capture Cheikh Aheddad died on 29 April 1873 at the prison of El Koudiat Constantine at the age of 83 and he was initially buried in Constantine against his known wish and then later exhumed and reburied in Seddouk to fulfil his request to be buried in his beloved home town After the conquest of Kabylie in 1871 the French embarked on founding a number of towns between Draa El Mizan and Larbaa N Ath Irathen ex Fort Napoleon and Fort National such as Draa El Mizan 1873 Beaupretre 1874 Pirette now Ain Zaouia 1875 Tizi Gheniff 1875 and Boghni 1876 From Larbaa Nath Irathen to Bejaia were created Freha 1882 Azazga 1882 and Yakouren 1888 Then the French adopted using a number of measures between 1871 and 1878 the American Homestead rule to confiscate and give land free to French Colons and their number swelled to 207 615 on 1 January 1888 9 This led to the beginning of the erosion of the socio economic structure which supported Kabylie and to a larger extent Algeria Although it could be argued that land productivity increased the agricultural food exports from Algeria to France soared from 9 7 to in excess of 125million French Francs for only the ports of Algiers Annaba and Oran over the period of 1838 40 to 1885 87 9 Library Farid Ali Tizi L Had destroyed by the French in November 1958 but the mosque and eucalyptus tree survived the relentless bombing The indomitable Ath Smail who rose against the Turks and French colonisation played its crucial part in the Algerian war for independence which started in 1954 and lasted until 1962 Many regional leaders originated from Ath Smail and several people lost their lives or have been imprisoned Tizi L Had was turned to rubble by the French canons in November 1958 and as by miracle only the mosque stood unshaken Both Bou Nouh and Boghni honoured a number of the heroes by naming streets and schools after them The widows from Ath Smail often evoke a number of poems to recount the horrors of the war and their sufferings Students at the University Mouloud Mammeri of Tizi Ouzou originating from the Arch of Ath Smail took part in the foundation of the Comite Anti Repression in 1980 and played an active role in the movement that fashioned the Berber Spring which led to the recognition of the Berber language and culture 10 threatened with certain extinction After independence the strong but not so rich Bounouh lost its status of commune and the ever developing Boghni was promoted in its place At Ath Smail all roads pass by the side of the villages because the villages came to exist first and the road network followed much later on At Ath Smail even walking paths had names such as Adjroud Lburath Tissamamine Tassawent L Had etc Even small patches of land carried names which are beyond comprehension such as Alma Bwuli literally land of sheep Lemhella Taghza Tabaquit Irumiyen literally the French or Roman table Lemqessa etc This demonstrates the historical heritage of Ath Smail In Boghni however the road network came to exist first as part of the link between Draa El Mizan and Larbaa Nath Irathen ex Fort Napoleon and Fort National and then people moved in afterwards Based on knowledge from the early 1970s a large number of the first inhabitants or the people to set up business in Boghni originated mostly from Ath Smail such as the families Hadjarab Abbas Amrani Ayad Bechar Bouha Boukhalfa Chabane Chemoune Chergui Djebbar Guirad Hamoudi Idir Kaanane Lamrani Riche Semsar Touah Zourdani etc and very few from other villages such as the Families of Iouadarene Saidani Moh Said Nath Ou Said was the first to own a lorry in Boghni and Yahiatene Ath Mendes Agdal Dahmani Kadri Larbi and Yahiaoui Ath Kouffi followed by the Haddadi Laazib N Cheikh There was only a tiny influx from neighbouring Mechtras and Ouadhias which were already benefiting from good infrastructure in terms of land roads and water Other families include Amarouche from Bejaia Belhadj Ali Berkouk Benamar Dr Ben Lahreche Benlarbi Berkouk Hamrani Haroun Kara Lamara Madani Marouf from Ath Yenni Meghari Mitiche Tamimount Touati etc Other families which settled in Algiers and in other parts of Algeria are Aissani Lakrimi Saadi Amrioui Tizi L Had and Ziani Ibouhatene The Catholics established a College of Further Education Centre de Formation Professionnelle in Boghni where the first 20 technicians to be employed by Sonatrach when it opened the Arzew oil refinery near Oran were formed 11 included pupils from Ath Smail Primary School Ahmed Zourdani at Ibouhatene Middle School Freres Kanane New Middle School It was only in 1985 following a new administrative landscape that Bounouh was granted its title of commune again 12 and tied to the much prosperous and developed Boghni which had already been elevated to the status of Daira District A new Town Hall with better facilities was built and the old town Hall was changed into a Center of Further Education Economics and infrastructure EditDespite its glorious past and harbouring several wealthy families people from Ath Smail never sought to invest locally and Bou nouh is actually a poor town In a census published in 2001 it is lagging in 11th place from the bottom behind 40 other communes within the province of Tizi Ouzou 13 Neighbouring Frikat has a much higher ratio of wealth than Bou Nouh The poverty index means that Bou Nouh could not self support itself Its entrepreneurial citizen preferred to invest and set up their commercial ventures and industries outside Ath Smail namely in Boghni and as far afield as Algiers In truth the landscape road networks and lack of electricity water and telephone were not conducive to a business and entrepreneurial environment Despite one hydroelectric power station on its territory and another in adjacent Ath Kouffi the homes in Ath Smail only received electricity in the late 80 s after much protest and people stopped lighting their candles and afegag Drinking water is now available in most houses and it is planned to supply cooking gas to every house in Ath Smail Although several villages have now been connected with gas the actual supply is yet to be switched on Due to be inaugurated in November 2012 the valve has remained shamefully and indeterminately closed because villages not yet connected to the gas supply objected The stalemate is beyond reason when some villages were not connected to electricity in the 1980s such was the case of Thala Oulili and Taghza the villages which today objected to the switching of the gas never uttered a shred of support and these villages went on went for years without any electricity and intermittent drinking water The local administration has a challenge to resolve this very sad state of affairs Most farming land is located in Azaghar Azaghar represents a truly vast expanse and for land attached to Ath Smail this represents Thiwririne bordering Frikat and Ain Zaouia Lemqessa Thoulmouts Taghza and Lemhella where wheat barley and fodder are cultivated This is why the French erected a railway line crossing this rich and vast land to transport the goods Viaducts in good condition are still in existence at Thiwrine known locally as Lghar n Tekoukt and at Laanasser in Boghni either side of the river between Azagher land of Saidani Moh Said N Ath U Said and Azouggar land of Yahiatene As far as trees are concerned olives yield the largest revenue in Ath Smail followed by dried figs and acorns Families cultivate their small holdings from September to May and allotments along the river in the summer People also raise chicken and sometimes sheep or cows to help supplement the family income by selling a lamb or a calf every year Ath Smail is also famous for its craft in pottery raffia weaving and sewing of Berber dresses Otherwise Ath Smail has little to offer in terms of jobs and industry There is only one post office which covers all villages two middle secondary schools and six primary schools for a sparse population scattered over 23 villages and nearly 10 000 inhabitants 5 School children lead a demeaning life without public transport to school they endure long and arduous journeys as is the case for the children from Thiwririne and Taghza to attend The Primary School Ahmed Zourdani at Ibouhatene and from Helouane or Taghza or Thala Oulili to the Brothers Kaanane middle secondary school at Bou Nouh These walking journeys consist of a few kilometres return journey to school on a daily basis Bounouh have just commissioned a second middle school 14 two health clinics at Helouane and Ath Telha and the library named after Farid Ali premises for the unemployed cooking gas and a highly performing football team The IRBB Itihad Ryadhi Baladiat Bounouh to foster the fantastic local talent However children are very motivated and their dedication is unsurpassable given the miserable economic and sociological upheavals in Kabylie Nowadays there are still 600 pupils from Ath Smail commuting to the higher secondary school Lycee Zamoum in Boghni It is for this reason that the town has tabled a proposal for a high secondary school to share with the neighbouring commune of Frikat etc It was not until the late 1980s that Ath Smail had its first children complete postgraduate studies During French colonisation good pupils from Ath Smail achieved an excellent and envious Certificat d Etudes Primaires aged 12 to 13 and stopped education mostly due to family pressure and lack of means to pursue their studies Of course there were a few exceptions such as Belaid Zawadi Ahcene Lamrani Belkacem Lakrimi and a few others Given the lack of employment people feel compelled to emigrate outside the region and look for work in other parts of Algeria and even abroad Families rely immensely on war and work pensions to stave off the nightmare of poverty The lack of economic development at Ath Smail is also rendered even more difficult in fact complicated by its proximity to Boghni which used to be the most developed town in Algeria in the 1970s Again in the 1970s and 1980s Ath Smail was neglected by the administrators of Boghni to the extent that the provision of public transport was withdrawn Fortunately the Belgacem brothers from L Merdja stepped in with their coaches to take people to Boghni Draa El Mizan and even to Rouiba for people employed at the state company for transport SONACOM Nowadays the commune of Bou Nouh continues to search for its destiny It is heavily dependent on state subsidies and its administrative representatives shoulder a massive responsibility Arts EditAth Smail is well known for its pottery despite the proximity of Maatkas and Ouadhias Women decorate their own designs 15 they exploit several kinds of clay which they steal from open fields usually on the day of the market which men attend in Boghni on Sundays Women are very entrepreneurial they make soap using spent cooking oil and marinate olives tomatoes and peppers During shortages of candles they light the afegags using again spent oil They embraced Recycle Reduce and Reuse from an early age in hardship this was their motto Just like men went to markets in Boghni on Sundays and Draa El Mizan on Thursdays women had their own market on Wednesdays Although men were tolerated stalls were run by women They sold jewellery pottery and craft objects especially made using raffia The market is held near the Catholic Church Monument Rabia Ziani a passionate well published writer and pedagogue is from Ath Smail 16 Several Algerian famous singers originate from Ath Smail The famous film producer Amar Tribeche originates from Baali Farid Ali ne Khelifi Ali fought for Algerian independence from the French and sang the evocative a yemma sbar ur e tsru literally translated mum be patient and don t cry and several other militant songs After independence he was a great sympathiser of the Berber Academy in Paris which became active in the recognition of the Berber language 17 Oukil Amar sang C min di fir literally the railway lines and the eloquent Innas im layune tawass literally tell the bright eyed lady et Moh Said U Belaid was famous for Takbaylit m uxelxal literally The Kabyl woman with jewellery and marked by emigration a itbir siwdhessen sslem iwarac n tmurt iw literally pigeon take my regards to my fellow countrymen Mohamed Chemoune had hits with a taazizt atin hemlagh literally the cherished one I love and a wahmimi literally my dear friend and he is extremely well known for his party concerts He introduced Moroccan songs There is also the new generation such as Rabia Brahim and many others Less remembered nowadays is Hadjaz Youcef a blind whose poems circulated from person to person in the form of typed manuscripts Nowadays there is a monument in Bou Nouh celebrating from right to left Moh Said U Belaid Farid Ali alongside Lounes Matoub Religious heritage Edit Cathedral Inside Cheikh Ben Abderrahmane mosque Cheikh Ben Abderrahmane provides a vantage point for a panoramic view of its surrounding villages and extends to Boghni Ath Smail has a unique experience in the coexistence of two religions namely the Catholic Church with the Nuns and Priests in Bou Nouh and Islamic mosques of Sidi Ben Abderrahmane barely a kilometre away Rebaaine Wali 40 Saints at Awrir Sidi Mansour at Tizi L Had Si Mhend U Idir at Ibouhatene and Ath Sidi Lounis at Tala Oulili Nowadays it is mostly for the Cheikh Ben Abderrahmane that Ath Smail is most famous for The Saint exists both at Ath Smail and Al Hama in Algiers Even his death in 1793 became a legend the people of Algiers and of Ath Smail embarked in a dispute about his corpse because each side wanted him for their region and started stealing each other his corpse Calm resumed when both the inhabitant of Ath Smail found the Saint buried at their cemetery and the people of Algiers also found the Saint at their cemetery It was customary for the Ath Smail to vow on a lewli yebdan ghef sin literally the Saint who split in two in reference to this mysterious doubling of the tomb This explains why he is also known as Bou Qabrine i e the Saint with two tombs Today the two zaouias of Bou Nouh and Algiers which carry his name continue to draw visitors from all corners of Algeria especially at religious festivals The Cheikh Sidi M hemed Ben Aberrahmane is a native of Ath Smail and was born around 1715 in the village of Baali He is said to be a descendant of Fatima Ezzahra the daughter of Prophet Mohamed his lineage is Cheikh Sidi M hemed son of Abderahmane son of Ahmed son of Ben Youcef son of Abi Kacem son of Ali Ibrahim son of Abderahmane son of Ahmed son of El Hussein son of Mohamed son of El Hussein son of Fatima Ezzahra 18 He studied cultural sciences at the Zaouia of Cheikh Essedik Ouarab of Larbaa N Ath Irathen moved to Algiers accomplished his Hajj at Mecca Saudi Arabia and then to El Azhar in Cairo Egypt where he spent 25 years studying and carrying out research in theology 19 He learned the figh under Cheikh Mohamed Salem El Hafnaoui who sent him to India and Sudan to teach the Koran and the Sunna He invented his own religious path called Tariqa Rahmania After fulfilling this mission he returned to Egypt In 1769 he returned to Algeria further developed his path and settled himself between Algiers and Ath Smail where he set up the zaouia of the Ghechtoula at Ath Smail It is thus at Ath Smail where he established his zaouia and taught Koran and the El Khaloutia method to his followers After a few years he felt the urge to expand his teaching to a larger audience He settled in El Hama Algiers where again he established his zaouia He died in 1793 at Ath Smail Given the common heritage Bou Nouh is now twinned with Sidi M hemed in Algiers References Edit Algeria portal Evolution intercensitaire de la population sur le site de la wilaya de Tizi Ouzou Archived April 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine Consulte le 25 02 2011 Communes of Algeria Statoids Retrieved December 12 2010 Algeria s administration is geographically split into 48 Wilayas regions or provinces which in turn consist of several Daira districts or counties which group several communes towns which are formed by a number of villages Ait Bounouh Accueil Archived from the original on 2012 04 02 Retrieved 2011 11 11 a b Carte adminitratif de la wilaya de Tizi Ouzou www tiziouzou dz com Archived from the original on 31 October 2007 Retrieved 22 May 2022 Megalith Photograph needed a b c http www djurdjurakabylie com Les 20chretiens 20de 20Kabylie Les 20chretiens 20de 20Kabylie htm permanent dead link and references therein Also Archived copy Archived from the original on 2011 10 28 Retrieved 2011 11 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link and search for Boghni and Bou Nouh a b Le developpement geographique de la colonisation agricole en Algerie Henri Busson in Annales de Geographie Year 1898 Volume 7 Number 31 pp 34 54 M hamed Lakrimi in autobiography unpublished C etait une longue fidelite a l Algerie et au Rwanda Armand Duval 1998 ISBN 2 7122 0735 1 page 81 Journal officiel de la Republique Algerienne archive 19 decembre 1984 Decret n 84 365 fixant la composition la consistance et les limites territoriale des communes Wilaya de Tizi Ouzou page 1505 Carte de la Pauvrete en Algerie published by Agence nationale de l Amenagement du Territoire 2001 pages 92 93 Ministere de l Action Sociale et de la Solidarite Nationale Programme des Nations Unies pour le developpent also available from Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2012 10 21 Retrieved 2013 12 26 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Enfin un deuxieme college pour la commune de Bou Nouh Boghni Journal Liberte 13 Septembre 2011 http kimvip skyrock com 5 html and http www culture fr recherche typeSearch collection amp SearchableText Bou Nouh amp SearchWhere permanent dead link http www livrescq com livrescq p 865 Rabia Ziani Ma vie est un roman in LivrEscq Litterature Algerienne no 7 15 July 2010 and http www blogg org blog 85611 billet rabia ziani portrait d un ecrivain race 1219811 html See also Dictionnaire des auteurs maghrebins de langue francaise Algerie Jean Dejeux ISBN 2 86537 085 2 Chants kabyles de la guerre d independance Algerie 1954 1962 Preface Mohammed Harbi Seguier Atlantica Paris 2002 Une histoire des artistes et une quete de developpement Amar Ouramdane La Depeche de Kabylie 28 Juillet 2008 For his different placements he is also known as Sidi Abderrahmane El Gechtouli El Djerdjeri Al Azhari Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bounouh amp oldid 1124691181, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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