Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

2,000 Jews visit Morocco to mark ‘Yom Hiloula’ of Rabbi Haim Pinto

A video livestream of the celebration was posted online, and a large crowd is shown singing, dancing and celebrating the life of the rabbi.

The "Yom Hiloula" celebration for Rabbi Haim Pinto in Essaouira, Morocco, Sept. 18, 2022. Source: YouTube.
The “Yom Hiloula” celebration for Rabbi Haim Pinto in Essaouira, Morocco, Sept. 18, 2022. Source: YouTube.

Amid warming relations between Israel and Morocco in the wake of the signing of the Abraham Accords two years ago, some 2,000 Jews traveled to Essouira in the North African country last week to celebrate the Yom Hiloula, the anniversary of the passing, of a Moroccan rabbinic leader, Rabbi Haim Pinto. It was believed to be the largest gathering in many years.

A Yom Hiloula (“Day of Festivity”), unlike a regular yahrzeit, is commemorated through joy and celebration.

Rabbi Pinto was born in the Moroccan city of Agadir in 1749 and lived much of his life in the seaside city of Essaouira, known then and until the 1960s as Mogador.

He was known throughout the country and beyond for his great Torah knowledge and for performing miracles. He passed away in 1845, on the Hebrew date of the 26th of Elul, which usually falls in September, and was buried in Essaouira.

Eyal David, the deputy chief of mission of Israel in Morocco, tweeted, as rendered by Google Translate, on Sept. 16, “Yesterday, Essouira Airport received the first flight of the Israeli Company El Al directly from Tel Aviv. Tourists from Israel came specially to attend the annual celebration of Rabbi Haim Pinto’s Hiloula. I am sure they will enjoy discovering this wonderful, historical city that I personally adore.”

A video livestream of the Yom Hiloula celebration was posted online, and the large crowd is shown singing, dancing and celebrating the life of Rabbi Pinto. Those who visited and participated in the Hiloula also had a chance to pray and place notes with requests for blessings and help on the grave of the rabbi.

Much of the program was conducted in French, which is commonly spoken among Jews from Morocco. In the video, people offered their impressions of the event. While most answered in French, one boy speaking in English said, “Everyone’s tefillot [prayers] should be answered. What an experience I had this year! And I am coming back next year, be’azrat Hashem,” with G-d’s help.

In a letter to the U.S. State Department, the Democratic legislators pressed the Trump admin to revoke its condemnation of the flotilla and rescind calls for port restrictions from allies.
Police told JNS that an officer was injured as a result of protesters attempting to remove barriers and that no arrests were made.
The latest version blames Iran entirely and invokes a U.N. provision that could allow for the use of force.
Washington is “fighting this war side-by-side with a country, whose potential nuclear weapons program the U.S. government officially refuses to acknowledge,” the lawmakers wrote to the U.S. secretary of state.
Trump says U.S. will intensify strikes if Tehran rejects a draft deal, as officials say a 14-point framework to end the war is close.
Officials condemned prosecutors’ alleged decision to go after Jewish circumcisers, calling it antisemitic and a threat to religious freedom.