Accord militaire Algérie-Tunisie : un pas discret vers l'érosion de la souveraineté tunisienne    Accord militaire Algérie-Tunisie : Kais Saied en colère après une fuite présumée du document    Challenges : le Maroc érige le sport en moteur de développement    Hakimi reprend le fil, le Maroc respire avant le grand rendez-vous continental    Maroc - Qatar : Abdelouafi Laftit rencontre son homologue à Doha    LGV : L'ONCF commande 8 lorrys automoteurs pour 54,48 MDH    Le Ministère public insiste sur l'obligation de l'examen médical des détendus    Marruecos: Alerta naranja, nieve, lluvia y frío de viernes a lunes    Copa Árabe: Jamal Sellami hacia la ciudadanía jordana tras una final histórica    Moroccan healthcare group Akdital acquires hospital in Mecca    Interpellation d'un individu ayant remis en cause le nombre de victimes à Safi    Maroc : Rabat Patrimoine, l'application de visite audioguidée dans la capitale    CAN 2025 : French Montana et Davido en concert d'ouverture à la fan zone de Rabat    Le pianiste de renommée internationale Mahmoud El Moussaoui en récital exceptionnel à Rabat    Cinéma arabe : cinq films marocains consacrés parmi les 100 chefs-d'œuvre de tous les temps    Ouenza, du rap au petit et au grand écran... et vice versa [Portrait]    Maroc – Royaume-Uni : Convergence des intérêts autour du Mondial 2030    Russie : Sergueï Lavrov défend un partenariat durable et respectueux avec l'Afrique    Mondial FIFA 2026: des Prize money record allant de 9 millions à 50 millions de dollars    Soft power : Forbes Africa met en lumière les visages de l'influence du Royaume    CA FIFA 2025 : l'Arabie saoudite et les Emirats se partagent la troisième place    Coupe du Monde 2026 : un arbitre marocain présélectionné pour la VAR    Coupe arabe de la FIFA : Les Lions ont encore rugi    ANCFCC. Des performances record en 2025    Atacadão s'implante à Ouarzazate    Réorganisation du CNP : Bras de fer entre majorité et opposition    Le Front Polisario et les vents qu'il a semés    Opération « Grand Froid » : 7.000 ménages soutenus dans la province de Chichaoua    Le Bénin entre dans l'ère du télé-enseignement    CAN 2025 : les bons plans à Tanger    CAN 2025: le Maroc se dote d'un Centre de coopération policière africaine    Nucléaire. L'Ethiopie et la Russie signent un accord    Trois projets de décrets au menu du prochain Conseil de gouvernement    Edito. Service client et dynamique continentale    Edito. Nouveau paradigme    CAN 2025 : 20 accords de droits médias, un record pour la CAF    Coupe Arabe FIFA 2025 : le président de la FIFA salue le sacre du Maroc    Températures prévues pour samedi 20 décembre 2025    IPC en novembre: évolution par division de produits    « Elevate Your Business » : BANK OF AFRICA et Mastercard au cœur de l'écosystème entrepreneurial marocain    Fracture numérique : l'ADD envisage la création d'antennes régionales    Etats-Unis : Trump annonce une prime de 1 776 dollars pour les militaires à l'occasion des 250 ans de l'indépendance    Accord Mercosur-UE : signature reportée à janvier en raison des réticences européennes    Le Conseil de gouvernement adopte un projet de décret relatif au salaire minimum légal dans les activités agricoles et non agricoles    Sahara, culture, sport : Les piliers du Maroc triomphant en 2025    CAN 2025 : l'Océanie Club de Casablanca lance « Saveurs & Couleurs d'Afrique »    Clinton a-t-il convié Epstein et Maxwell au mariage du roi Mohammed VI ?    Suprématie aérienne au Maghreb : Soukhoï Su-57, F-35,... au-delà des mythes ! [INTEGRAL]    







Merci d'avoir signalé!
Cette image sera automatiquement bloquée après qu'elle soit signalée par plusieurs personnes.



Jewish Pilgrimage in Morocco #17 : Braham Moul Nesse, Azemmour's guardian saint
Publié dans Yabiladi le 22 - 10 - 2019

Braham Moul Nesse is a Jewish saint buried in Azemmour near the city of El Jadida and whose Hiloula is celebrated during Lag Baomer, the Jewish rabbinical institution holiday generally celebrated in May.
Built in the 7th century to become the capital city of the Barghawata Kingdom, a Berber state that controlled the area of Tamesna on the Atlantic coast between Safi and Salé, Azemmour is one of Morocco's historical cities. Under the reign of the Portuguese, the town lying at the Atlantic ocean coast and on the left bank of the Oum Er-Rbia River, was home to bastions, citadels, arcades and ramparts.
But unlike its neighboring city Mazagan, known as El Jadida nowadays, which had several of its monuments destroyed by the Portuguese before their departure, Azemmour preserved its Arab-Berber sites.
The same thing goes for the city's Jewish heritage. Indeed, Azemmour is still preserving the tomb of Rabbi Braham Moul Nesse, a Jewish saint who lays in a mausoleum in the middle of the ancient Medina.
The saint who did not want to be disturbed by a mill
Nobody knows the true story of this man who came to settle in the city, according to various stories, around five hundred years ago. Rabbi Braham Moul Nesse, or Abrahm Moul Niss for others, venerated by Jews and Muslims in the city, was revered as tsaddik only after a series of events, Fatima, a local woman who has been taking care of the mausoleum, told Yabiladi.
According to one of the stories, the inhabitants of Azemmour set up a horse-drawn mill just in front of the place of the mausoleum of the tsaddik for wheat. But every horse or mule that the inhabitants of Azemmour attach to this mill to begin their work would get sick before dying, or simply die for no reason.
Fatima furthermore tells us that «after a while, Jews and Muslims in the city started to have the same dream». The legend goes that they would dream of «a man telling them that he was a tsaddik, that he rests in such a place and that he does not wish to be disturbed by the mill anymore».
The mausoleum was not yet built and was only a cave with walls that had water leaks from time to time. «It's a phenomenon that we always get to observe nowadays», she explained.
Rabbi Braham Moul Nesse was a Muslim saint, called Sidi Brahim, but the Jews of the city prefer to call him by the name of Rabbi Abraham and consider him a Jewish saint. The Jews decided to build a mausoleum for him, to venerate him and to devote a Hiloula to him. Their visits can even occur at any time of the year. According to Fatima, «Muslims and Jews visit his tomb every day, except on Saturdays which are reserved for Jews only».
Rabbi Braham Moul Nesse, the author of miracles
Over the years, many miracles attributed to Rabbi Braham Moul Nesse found a place in the memories of the Jews of Azemmour. «It is said that Rabbi Braham Moul Nesse is behind several miracles. My mother lived in Azemmour and heard a lot about his miracles», says a Moroccan Jew.
She refers to him as 'The healing Rabbi'. «During her childhood, everyone would make the pilgrimage and the newborns would get their first haircut in the small room near his tomb».
«People arrive melancholic and sad but leave happy, praising God and the tsaddik. I venerate him myself and when I have problems, I go in to light candles near the tomb of the tsaddik and God helps me to solve them», Fatima said. «Since I have been looking after the mausoleum, I am more and more certain of these miracles», she stated.
But what makes the mausoleum of Rabbi Braham Moul Nesse even more mysterious is that it is close to that of another Muslim saint. According to Fatima, she says «it's Sidi Daoui, although there is another mausoleum of Sidi Daoui in El Jadida».
Today it remains difficult to date the mausoleums and tombs or to identify who was there from the beginning, Sidi Daoui or Rabbi Braham Moul Nesse. She also finds it rather mysterious that a mausoleum of a Muslim saint is buried in the middle of the Jewish quarter, without there being stories about two saints resting alongside each other.


Cliquez ici pour lire l'article depuis sa source.