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Report: As part of growing ties to Africa, Netanyahu may visit Moroccan king

Were the visit to occur, it would exemplify the initiative by Israel to improve relations with African countries, including Chad and Oman, which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu recently visited.

King Mohammed VI of Morocco. Credit: Flickr.
King Mohammed VI of Morocco. Credit: Flickr.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu may visit Moroccan King Mohammed VI sometime after March 30, when Pope Francis is expected to visit the country, according to the Arabic-language newspaper Al-Ousboue Assahafi, citing a “reliable source.”

Were the visit to occur, it would exemplify the initiative by Israel to cultivate and improve relations with African countries, including Chad and Oman, which Netanyahu visited this month and in October, respectively. Netanyahu would follow Ehud Barak, who attended King Hassan II’s funeral in 1999.

“Although Israel is not officially recognized by Rabat, reports about clandestine relations, including security services, between the two countries have circulated for years. Moroccan officials have publicly expressed their sympathy to Israel and Jews,” reported The Jerusalem Post.

For instance, Andre Azoulay, Mohammed VI’s personal adviser, who is Jewish, went to the state funeral of former Israeli President Shimon Peres in 2016.

Additionally, Princess Lalla Joumala Alaoui sent a note to New York’s Jewish community regarding the passing last April of Rabbi Masoud Abuhatzeira.

Before the establishment of the State of Israel, Morocco, which gained its independence from France in 1956, was home to a large Jewish community numbering between 250,000 and 350,000 Jews. They started leaving en masse for Israel in the early years of the state until before and just after the Yom Kippur War in 1973. Fewer than 2,500 remain.

“Morocco’s Jewish heritage continues to be part and parcel of our lives and who we are,” read the letter. “His Majesty King Mohammed VI is committed to follow in the footsteps of his forefathers and spares no effort in the preservation of this shared heritage.”


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