Merja Zerga: Pilgrims of the Blue Lagoon

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Legation Courtyard Cookoff: Moroccan Street Food

Why just talk about Morocco’s Street Food, Abdelkrim Raddadi’s new book, when you can eat some caliente too, strait off the burner?


Horsemen of an Apocalypse: les Chevaux de Dieu

The human components of suicide bombings, told with great realism and poetry by Moroccan film maker Nabil Ayouch.


Logistics’ Human Side: “Deep Hanging Out”

PhD candidate Janell Rothenberg has worked for years on the socio-cultural dimensions of the transportation and logistics industry in northern Morocco.


Anfa 1943: President Roosevelt’s Geography Lesson

70 years after the historic Casablanca or Anfa Conference of January 1943, American and Moroccan observers discuss the significance for Morocco’s struggle for independence.


“Because this is his country” – FDR & Mohammed V

Americans, from diplomats in Tangier to President Roosevelt at the Casablanca Conference, met with Moroccan nationalists in defiance of French colonialists.


US Scholarship Programs for Moroccan Students

New US scholarship opportunities for Moroccan students.


An American (& a Czech) in Tangier

A program of Gerswhin and Dvorak, with a theme of New World music, saw the launch of the 2013 season by the Orchestre Philharmonique du Maroc.


Tangier, Northern Morocco, and the Spanish Civil War

TALIM Tangier Gazette Spanish Civil War formatted

The Spanish Civil War erupts, July 1936. From the Tangier Gazette archives at the TALIM research library.

Ali Al Tuma of the Institute for History at Leiden University, the Netherlands, has published "Tangier, Spanish Morocco and Spain's Civil War in Dutch Diplomatic Documents" in the June 2012 issue of JNAS, The Journal of North African Studies (Vol.17:3 (2012) pp.433-453) of the American Institute for Maghrib Studies (AIMS).  Al Tuma has found a valuable resource in the rarely consulted archives of the former Dutch Legation in Tangier, which in its reports did not hide its distaste for Spanish "reds," as it termed the Republicans.

The following excerpts illustrate the confused and "precarious" situation in Tangier at the outset of the Civil War, which ended with Franco's victory and his later takeover of the Tangier International Zone after the fall of France in June 1940.  The entire article can be obtained through the JNAS website of publisher Taylor & Francis.  The excerpts (in plain text below) are presented with the permission of the author, the publisher, and the JNAS editor.

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Tangier: Spain to the north & Spanish Protectorate to the south; Spanish in the International Zone

An international territory since 1923, Tangier's neutrality was supposed to be guaranteed by "The Powers" – represented in the International Zone by the Committee of Control – in time of war, tested for the first time by the Spanish Civil War.

This was not easy, especially during the first stage of the conflict. Tangier was surrounded by the Spanish Protectorate where the military rebellion against the Republic first started and prevailed. Spanish political and diplomatic representation in Tangier was Republican, but the Spanish colony, the largest European one, was divided between Republicans (the majority) and those pro-Franco.

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Firefights over the bay of Tangier

In July 1936, seven Republican warships came to Tangier, precluded from using the Nationalist-held ports of southern Spain for refuelling.

Republican sailors had formed ‘committees’, imprisoned the officers, and asked Madrid to send leftist officers to take command. Franco requested the Mendoub (Sultan’s representative in Tangier) to prevent the ships from leaving the harbor or he would reserve the right to undertake ‘violent measures’. British and Portuguese envoys requested more ships to safeguard the city. Franco’s planes flew over Tangier from Cadiz, [and Republican] ships opened fire. ‘This happened in the immediate neighborhood of the bay in front of thousands of onlookers’. The situation was so tense that the Comité de Contrôle requested French and Italian marines to guard legations.

[Note: Shortly thereafter a British cargo ship was attacked, and the British destroyer Whitehall engaged Nationalist planes.  The Republican ships left Tangier, but later submarines came into Tangier.]

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Read moreTangier, Northern Morocco, and the Spanish Civil War


Tahar Ben Jelloun at the Legation

Morocco’s best-known writer Tahar Ben Jelloun presents his latest novel at the Tangier American Legation.