History
Unlike other North
African nations, Morocco has been largely
occupied by one group of people for as long as
recorded history can recall. The Berbers, or
Imazighen (men of the land), settled in the area
thousands of years ago and at one time
controlled all of the land between Morocco and
Egypt. Divided into clans and tribes, they have
always jealously guarded their independence.
It's this fierce spirit that has helped preserve
one of Africa's most fascinating cultures.
The early Berbers were
unmoved by the colonizing Phoenicians, and even
the Romans did little to upset the Berber way of
life after the sack of Carthage in 146 BC. All
the same, the Romans ushered in a long period of
peace during which many cities were founded, and
the Berbers of the coastal plains became city
dwellers. Christianity turned up in the 3rd
century AD, and again the Berbers asserted their
traditional dislike of centralized authority by
following Donatus (a Christian sect leader who
claimed that the Donatists alone constituted the
true church).
Islam burst onto the
world stage in the 7th century when armies swept
out of Arabia. Quickly conquering Egypt, the
Arabs controlled all of North Africa by the
start of the 8th century. By the next century
much of North Africa had fragmented, with the
move towards a united Morocco steadily growing.
A fundamentalist Berber movement emerged from
the chaos caused by the Arab invasion,
overrunning Morocco and Muslim Andalucia. The
Almoravids founded Marrakesh as their capital,
but they were soon replaced by the Almohads.
Under these new rulers,
a professional civil service was set up and the
cities of Fès, Marrakesh, Tlemcen and Rabat
reached the peak of their cultural development.
But eventually weakened by Christian defeats in
Spain, and paying the price for heavily taxing
tribes, the Muslim (or Moorish) rule began to
wane. In their place came the Merenids, from the
Moroccan hinterland, and the area again
blossomed - until the fall of Spain to the
Christians, in 1492, unleashed a revolt that
dissolved the new dynasty within 100 years.
After a number of
short-lived dynasties rose and fell, the Alawite
family secured a stranglehold in the 1630s that
remains firm to this day. Although it was rarely
a smooth ride, this pragmatic dynasty managed to
keep Morocco independent for more than three
centuries.
Enter the European
traders in the late 19th century, and a long era
of colonial renovations. Suddenly France, Spain
and Germany were all keen on hijacking the
country for its strategic position and rich
trade resources. France won out and occupied
virtually the entire country by 1912. Spain
clung to a small coastal protectorate and
Tangier was declared an international zone.
Relatively speaking,
the first French resident-general, Marshal
Lyautey, respected the Arab culture. He
generously resisted the urge to destroy the
existing Moroccan towns and instead built French
villes nouvelles (new towns) alongside
them. He made Rabat on the Atlantic coast the
new capital and developed the port of
Casablanca. The sultan remained, but as little
more than a figurehead. Lyautey's successors
were not so sensitive. Their efforts to speed
French settlement prompted the people of the Rif
Mountains, led by the Berber scholar Abd el-Krim,
to rise up against both colonial forces. It was
only through the combined efforts of 25,000
Spanish-French troops that Abd el-Krim was
eventually forced to surrender in 1926. By the
1930s, more than 200,000 French had made Morocco
home. WWII saw Allied forces use Morocco as a
base from which to drive the Germans out of
North Africa.
With the war over,
Sultan Mohammed V inspired an independence party
that finally secured Moroccan freedom in 1956.
Tangier was reclaimed in the process, but Spain
refused to hand over the northern towns of Ceuta
and Melilla (to this day they remain Spain's
last tenuous claim on Africa).
Mohammed V promoted
himself to king in 1957 and was succeeded four
years later by his son, Hassan II. This popular
leader cemented his place in Moroccan hearts and
minds by staging the Green March into the
Western Sahara, an area formerly held by Spain.
With a force of 350,000 volunteers, Hassan's
followers overcame the indigenous Sahrawis to
claim the mineral-rich region as their own.
By the 1960s it had
become clear that the 100,000 or so inhabitants
of the 'territory' wanted independence. Western
Sahara's Popular Front for the Liberation of
Saguia al-Hamra and Rio de Oro (Polisario)
didn't take kindly to the invasion and embarked
on a long and gruesome war of independence
against Morocco. Despite attempts at
international mediation the issue remains
unresolved. While the Moroccan masses applauded
the southern invasion, it left nearby Algeria
about as happy as the Western Saharans
themselves. Morocco's relations with this
particular war-torn neighbor have been poor ever
since.
In 1999, Mohammed VI
ascended to the Moroccan throne just prior to
his 35th birthday. The young king accelarated
the more liberal trends that began late in his
father's rule. In his first speech as king, he
promised the amnesty of nearly 50,000 prisoners
and apologized for past political repressions.
More significantly, he sacked the powerful and
much feared long-time head of the security
forces, the infamous 'Butcher Basri'. Still,
Morocco remains a monarchy in which the limits
of political tolerance reflect the king's
personal views.
The new king has made
economic development a priority. He has
continued his father's policies of economic
liberalisation and privatization of state
industries, forced into place by stagnant growth
rates going back to the 1980's. The economy is
still heavily dependent on agriculture, which
has been hampered by droughts. Unemployment is
high, running at rates of 20 percent in the
cities and causing fear of social unrest.
Mohammed VI has shown
himself to be most innovative in the field of
social policy, and more specifically, in women's
rights. In 2002, the king married Salma Bennani,
a computer engineer - an event that appeared to
symbolize acceptance of an increasingly modern
role for women. In 2004, the government adopted
landmark changes to the Moudawana, or Family
Law, aimed at 'lifting the inequity imposed on
women, protecting children's rights, and
safeguarding men's dignity'. The new legislation
grants unprecented rights and protections for
women concerning marriage, divorce and custody
of children. (Source: Lonely Planet.com)