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Full Description
Orit Ouaknine-Yekutieli examines the life and deeds of Thami al-Glaoui (1879 1956), and the multiple ways in which his story has been told. She investigates his biography as a creation continuing beyond the demise of its protagonist, asserting a conflation of history, story and storytelling. The book also reconfigures the story of major events and processes in modern Moroccan history and historiography. Thami al-Glaoui, leader of the Amazigh Glaoua tribe and Pasha of Marrakesh throughout Morocco's colonial era (1912 56), was the third most powerful person in Morocco, after the Sultan and the French Resident-General, by the 1930s. In 1953, he was a key supporter of the deportation of Sultan Mohamed V by the French. After recanting three years later, he was pardoned by the returning Sultan, but died shortly afterwards. In the four decades that followed, al-Glaoui became a synonym in Morocco for betrayal and corruption. In the 21st century, however, the ways in which he is told became more complex, and his reputation has been somewhat revised.
Contents
Introduction: The Last Lord of the Atlas
A Loyal Servant of Two Empires
The Glaoua Tribe on River Seine
The Age of Conspiracies
'He is the Jews' Friend'
Erasure and Revelation: Telling al-Glaoui from the 1960s to the Late 1990s
'I am a Moroccan and a Berber': al-Glaoui and Amazigh-ness
Reconciliations
A Never-Ending Story
Bibliography



