Moroccan Jews gather for pilgrimage at newly renovated Al Jadida cemetery

The 200-odd participants prayed on the grave of Rabbi Ihya Haïm Assouline.

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(JTA) — Moroccan officials and Jewish community leaders celebrated the renovation of a Jewish cemetery in the coastal city of Al Jadida.

About 200 people gathered earlier this month at the newly restored Jewish cemetery of the city, which is situated about 80 miles southwest of the capital Rabat.

The Jewish participants used the occasion to complete a pilgrimage to the grave of the 19th-century kabbalah expert Rabbi Ihya Haïm Assouline, who is buried there, Liberation reported.

The entire surface of the large cemetery was paved to prevent the growth of weeds that, before the renovation, had grown wild amid the tombstones of Al Jadida, which does not have a functioning Jewish community. The walls and some tombstones were washed and given a fresh coat of paint and the entrance gate was replaced.

In 2010, Morocco’s king, Mohammed VI, announced the launch of a project to restore at least 167 Jewish burial sites throughout his country.

Morocco used to have about 250,000 Jews. The community now numbers about 3,000.

 

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