Influence of French Consuls.Arrival of the Governor of Mogador from
the Capital; he brings an order to imprison the late Governor; his
character, and mode of administering affairs.Statue of a Negress at
the bottom of a well.Spanish Renegades.Various Wedding Festivals of
Jews.Frequent Fêtes and Feastings amongst the Jewish population of
Morocco.Scripture Illustration, “Behold the Bridegroom
cometh!”Jewish Renegades.How far women have souls.Infrequency of
Suicides.
Notwithstanding the sarcasm of a French
journalist that the French and other Europeans consuls
are “consuls des jusifs, et pour
la protection des jusifs,” the
French consuls both here and at Tangier, have real
power and influence with the Government.
The Governor of Mogador, Sidi Haj
El-Arby, arrived from Morocco. His Excellency
feared an attack from the Shedma and the Hhaha people,
and was obliged to have a strong escort. Not
long ago, the Sultan himself had a narrow escape from
falling into the hands of a band of insurgents; their
object was to make their lord-paramount a prisoner,
and extort concessions as the price of his liberty.
This will help us to form an opinion of the want of
sympathy between potentate and subjects in Morocco.
His Excellency brought an order from
the Imperial despot to imprison the late governor,
if the balance of 6,000 dollars was not instantly
forthcoming, he having only paid nine out of the 15,000
demanded. The late governor was confined in his
house, instead of in the common prison. It was
said he was worth 30,000 dollars, but that he was afraid
to make too prompt a payment of the demand of the Emperor,
lest he should be called upon for more. However,
his furniture, horses, and mules were sold in the
public streets; a melancholy spectacle was the degradation
of a former governor of this city.
The Moors look upon these things as
matters of course, or with indifference, quietly ejaculating,
“It is destiny! who can resist?” but the
Moor, nevertheless, can clearly discern that wealth
is a crime in the eyes of their sovereign. I
am not surprised at the present governor absolutely
rejecting all presents, and making the people call
him by the soubriquet of “the Governor
of no presents,”
A short time after his appointment, a merchant having left
his Excellency a present during his absence from home, was immediately summoned
before him, when the following dialogue ensued:
His Excellency.“Sir,
how dare you leave a present at my house?”
The Merchant.“Other
governors before your Excellency have received presents.”
His Excellency.“I
am a governor of no presents! How much do you
owe the Sultan, my master?”
The Merchant.“IIIdon’t
know,” (hesitating and trembling)
His Excellency.“Very
well, when you owe the Sultan nothing, bring me a
present, and take this away, and make known to everybody,
that Haj El-Arby receives no presents.”
The fact is, the Governor knows what
he is about. Were his Excellency to receive 16,000
dollars per annum as presents from the merchants of
Mogador, the Sultan would demand of him 15,999; besides,
there is not a merchant who makes a present that does
not demand its value, a quid pro quo in the
remission of custom-duties. Sidi-El-Arby is also
a thorough diplomatist, so far as report goes; he
promises anybody anything; he keeps all on the tiptoe
of most blessed expectation, and so makes friends
of everybody. “To his friend, Cohen,”
he says, “I’ll take you back to my country
with me, and make you rich; we are of the same country.”
To Phillips, “You shall have a ship of your own
soon.” To the merchants, “The Sultan
shall lend you money whenever you want it.”
To the Moors in general, “You shall have your
taxes reduced.” In this way, his Excellency
promises and flatters all, but takes very good care
to compromise himself with none.
The frequented as well as the unfrequented
spots are centres of superstition. In the Sahara,
by a lonely well, in the midst of boundless sterility,
where the curse on earth seems to have burnt blackest,
a camel passes every night groaning piteously, and
wandering about in search of its murdered master,
so the tale was told me. Now, about two day’s
journey from Mogador, there is also a well, containing
within its dank and dark hollow a perpetual apparition.
At its bottom is seen the motionless statue of a negress,
with a variety of wearing materials placed beside
her, all made of fine burnished gold, and so bright,
that the dreary cavern of the deep well is illuminated.
Whoever presumes to look down the well at her, and
covets her shining property, is instantaneously seized
with thirst and fever; and, if he does not expire
at once, he never recovers from the fatal effects of
his combined curiosity and avarice. People draw
water daily from this well, but no one dare look down
it.
Truth may be in this well! since there
is a sad want of it on this, as on other parts of
the world.
I was introduced to a Spanish renegade,
a great many make their escape from the presidios
of the North. On getting away from these convict
establishments, they adopt the Mahometan religion,
are pretty well received by the Maroquines, and generally
pass the rest of their days tranquilly among the Moors.
I imagine the better sort of them remain Christians
at heart, notwithstanding their public assumption of
Islamism. This renegade was a stonemason, whom
I found at work, and he was not at all distinguishable
by strangers from the Moors, being dressed precisely
in the same fashion. I had some conversation with
him, which was characteristic of conceit, feeling
and honour.
Traveller“How long have you
escaped?”
Renegade.“More than twenty
years.”
Traveller.“Do you like this
country and the Moors?”
Renegade.“Better is Marruecos
than Spain.”
Traveller.“Shall
you ever attempt to return to Spain?”
Renegade.“Why?
here I have all I want. Besides, they would stretch
my neck for sending a fellow out of the world without
his previously having had an interview with his confessor.”
Traveller.“Are
you not conscience-stricken? having committed such
a crime, how can you mention it?”
Renegade.“Pooh, conscience!
pooh, corazor!”
Many of those wretched men have indeed
lost their corazor, or it is seared with a red-hot
iron.
Some hundreds of these Spanish convicts
are scattered over the country, but they soon lose
their nationality. It is probable that, from some
knowledge of them, the Emperor presumed lately to call
the Spaniards “the vilest of nations,”
and yet at various times, the Maroquines have shown
great sympathy for the Spaniards. Some of these
renegades were found at the Battle of Isly in charge
of field-pieces, where, according to the French reports,
they displayed great devotion to the cause of the
Emperor.
When the governors of the convict
settlements find too many on his hands, or the prisons
too full, they let a number of their best conducted
escape to the interior. The presence of those
cut-throats in Morocco may have something to do with
such broils as the following, of which I was a witness.
Two fellows quarrelled violently, and were on the
point of sticking one another with their knives, when
up stepped a third party and cried out, “What!
do you intend to act like Christians and kill one
another?” At the talismanic word of Eusara ("Christians,
or Nazareens,”) they instantly desisted and
became friends. The term “Christian or
Nazareen,” is one of the most oppobrious names
with which the people of Mogador can abuse one another.
The weddings and attendant feasts
of the Jews are the more remarkable, when we consider
the circumstance of the social state of this oppressed
race in Morocco, their precarious condition, and the
numberless insults and oppressions inflicted
on them by both the government and the people; I was
present at several of these weddings, and shall give
the readers a glimpse of them. I had read and
heard a great deal about the persecution of the Jews
in Morocco, and was, therefore, not a little surprised
to meet with these continual feasts and festivals
among a people so much talked about as victims of
Mussulman oppression.
I find two sentences in my notes containing
the pith of the whole. “The Jews continued
their feasts; about a third of their time is spent
in feasting.” Again“Amidst
all their degradation, the Jew we saw to-day recreating
themselves to the utmost extent of their capacities
of enjoyment.” It appears that during the
time I was at Mogador there was an unusual number
of weddings, and then followed the feast of the Passover.
I think, whilst I was at Tangier, weddings or celebration
of weddings were going on every night. It may
be safely asserted, that no people in Barbary enjoy
themselves more than the Jews, or more pamper and
gratify their appetites. What with weddings, feasts,
and obligatory festivals, their existence is one round
of eating and drinking. These feasts, besides,
do not take place in a corner, nor are they barricaded
from public, or envious, or inquisitorial view, but
are open to all, being attended by Christians, Moors
and Arabs.
These wedding-feasts are substantial
things. Here is the entry in my journal of an
account of them: “A bullock was killed at
the house of the bridegroom, tea and cakes and spirits
were freely, nay universally distributed there.
The company afterwards went off with the bridegroom
to the house of the bride, where another distribution
of the same kind took place, whilst half of the bullock
was brought for the bride’s friends. Here
the bridegroom, in true oriental style, mounted upon
a couch of damask and gold. The bride, laden
with bridal ornaments of gold and jewels, and covered
with a gauze veil, was led out by the women and placed
by his side. She was then left alone to sit in
state as queen of the feast, whilst the company regaled
themselves with every imaginable luxury of eating
and drinking. Her future husband now produced,
as a present for his bride, a splendid pair of jewelled
ear-rings, which were held up amidst the screaming
approbation of the guests. The Jewesses present,
were weighed down under the dead weight of a profusion
of jewels and gold, tiaras of pearls, necklaces
of coral and gems, armlets, wristlets and legets of
silver gold and jet, with gold and silver braided
gowns, skirts and petticoats.
This fiesta was kept up for seven
days. Astonished at the profusion of jewels worn
by the various guests, I received a solution by a question
I asked, touching this mavellous circumstance.
The greater part of the jewels, worn on these occasions,
are borrowed from friends and neighbours; they must
belong to some of the Jewish families, and their quantity
shews the great wealth possessed by the Jews living
under this despotic government,
I assisted at the celebration of the
nuptials of a portion of the family of the feather
merchants, a rich and powerful firm established in
the south for the purchase of ostrich-feathers.
This was a wedding of great eclat;
all the native Jewish aristocracy of Mogador being
invited to it. The festivities, beginning at noon,
I first entered the apartment where the bride was
sitting in state. She was elevated on a radiant
throne of gold and crimson cushions amidst a group
of women, her hired flatterers, who kept singing and
bawling out her praises. “As beautiful
as the moon is Rachel!” said one. “Fairer
than the jessamine!” exclaimed another.
“Sweeter than honey in the honey-comb!”
ejaculated a third. Her eyes were shut, it being
deemed immodest to look on the company, and the features
of her face motionless as death, which made her look
like a painted corpse.
To describe the dresses of the bride
would be tedious, as she was carried away every hour
and redressed, going through and exhibiting to public
view, with the greatest patience, the whole of her
bridal wardrobe. Her face was artistically painted;
cheeks vermillion; lips browned, with an odoriferous
composition; eye-lashes blackened with antimony; and
on the forehead and tips of the chin little blue stars.
The palms of the hands and nails were stained with
henna, or brown-red, and her feet were naked, with
the toe-nails and soles henna-stained. She was
very young, perhaps not more than thirteen, and hugely
corpulent, having been fed on paste and oil these
last six months for the occasion. The bridegroom,
on the contrary, was a man of three times her age,
tall, lank and bony, very thin, and of sinister aspect.
The woman was a little lump of fat and flesh, apparently
without intelligence, whilst the man was a Barbary
type of Dickens’ Fagan.
The ladies had now arranged themselves
in tiers, one above the other, and most gorgeous was
the sight. Most of them wore tiaras, all
flaming with gems and jewels. They were literally
covered from head to foot with gold and precious stones.
As each lady has but ten fingers, it was necessary
to tie some scores of rings on their hair. The
beauty of the female form, in these women, was quite
destroyed by this excessive quantity of jewellery.
These jewels were chiefly pearls, brilliants, rubies
and emeralds.
They are amassed and descend as heir-looms
in families, from mother to daughter. Some of
the jewels being very ancient, they constitute the
riches of many families. In reverses of fortune,
they are pledged, or turned into money to relieve
immediate necessity. The upper tiers of ladies
were the youngest, and least adorned, and consequently
the prettiest. The ancient dowagers sat below
as so many queens enthroned, challenging scrutiny
and admiration. They were mostly of enormous
corpulency, spreading out their naked feet and trousered
legs of an enormous expanse.
Several dowagers seemed scarcely to
be able to breathe from heat, and the plethora of
their own well-fed and pampered flesh. We had
now music, and several attempts were made to get up
the indecent Moorish dance, which, however, was forbidden
as too vulgar for such fashionable Jews, and honoured
by the presence of Europeans. Not much pleased
with this spectacle, I looked out of the window into
the patio, or court-yard, where I saw a couple of
butchers’ boys slaughtering a bullock for the
evening carousal. A number of boys were dipping
their hands in the blood, and making with it the representation
of an outspread hand on the doors, posts and walls,
for the purpose of keeping off “the evil eye,”
(el ojo maligno,) and so ensuring good luck
to the new married couple.
I then mounted the house-top to see
a game played by the young men. Here, on the
flat roof, was assembled a court, with a sultan sitting
in the midst. Various prisoners were tried and
condemned. Two or three of the greatest culprits
were then secured and dragged down to the ladies,
the officers of justice informing them that, if no
one stepped forward to rescue them, it was the sultan’s
orders that they should be imprisoned. Several
young Jewesses now clamourously demanded their release.
It is understood that these compassionate maidens who,
on such occasions, step forward to the rescue, and
take one of the young men by the hand, are willing
to accept of the same when it may hereafter be offered
to them in marriage, so the contagion of wedding-feasts
spreads, and one marriage makes many.
I now proceed to the supper-table
of the men, where the party ate and drank to gluttonous
satiety. Several rabbis were hired to chant,
over the supper-table, prayers composed of portions
of Scripture, and legends of the Talmud.
The dinning noise of bad music, and
horrible screaming, called singing, with the surfeit
of the feast, laid me up for two days afterwards.
The men supped by themselves, and the women of course
were also apart.
My host, anxious that I should see
all, insisted upon my going to have a peep at the
ladies whilst they were supping. Unlike us men,
who sat up round a table, because there were several
Europeans among us, the women lay sprawling and rolling
on carpets and couches.
In their own allotted apartments,
these gorgeous daughters of Israel looked still more
huge and enormous, feasting almost to repletion, like
so many princesses of the royal orgies of Belshazzar.
But this was a native wedding, and, of course, when
we consider the education of these Barbary women,
we must expect, when they have drink like the men,
white spirits for protracted hours until midnight,
the proprieties of society are easily dispensed with.
Happily the class of women, who so kept up the feast,
were all said to be married, the maidens having gone
home with the bride.
Very different, indeed, was another
distinguished wedding at which I had the honour of
assisting, and which all the European consuls and their
families attended, with the elite of the society
of Mogador; this was the marriage of M. Bittern, of
Gibraltar, with Miss Amram Melek. The bridegroom
was the Portuguese Consul, the bride, the daughter
of the greatest Jewish merchant of the south, and
consequently the Emperor’s greatest and most
honoured debtor. The celebration of this wedding
lasted fourteen days.
On the grand day, a ball and supper
were given. All the Moors of the town came to
see the Christians and their ladies dance. Our
musician, or fiddler, kept away from some petty pique,
and we were accordingly reduced to the hard necessity
of making use of a drum and whistling, both to keep
up our spirits and serve up the quadrilles. We
had, however, some good singing to make up for the
disappointment. His Excellency the Governor intended
to have honoured us with his presence, but he gave
way to the remonstrance of an inflexible marabout,
who declared it a deadly sin to attend the marriages
of Jews and Christians.
The marriage guests were of three
or four several sets and sorts. There was the
European coterie, the choicest and most select, graced
by the presence of the bride; then the native aristocrats,
and here were the gorgeous sultanas and Fezan spouses;
then the lesser stars, and the still more diminished.
Finally, the “blind, the lame,
and the halt,” surrounded the doors of the house
in which the marriage-feast was held, receiving a portion
of the good things of this life. The whole number
of guests was not more than two hundred. Plenty
of European Jewesses shone as bewitching stars at
this wedding; but all param to us poor Christians.
Indeed, there is as little as no lovemaking, and match-making
amongst the isolated Nazarenes; for, out of a population
of some fifty European families, there are only two
marriageable Christian ladies.
The bride is frequently fetched by
the bridegroom at midnight, when there is a cry made,
“behold, the bridegroom cometh; go ye forth to
meet him!” (Matt xxv6). This
ancient custom prevails most among the Moors.
Once, whilst at Nabal, in Tunis, I was roused
from my sleep at the dead of the night by wild cries,
and the discharging of fire-arms, attended with a
blaze of torches. The bridegroom was conveying
his bride to his home. A crowd of the friends
of the newly-married couple, followed the camel which
carried the precious burden; all were admitted to the
feast in the court-yard, and the doors were shut for
the night.
At the wedding of the lower classes
of the Jews, after dancing and music, there is always
a collection made for the bride, or the musicians.
On these occasions, the master of the ceremonies calls
out the names of the donors as they contribute to
the support of the festivities. I was somewhat
taken by surprise to hear my name called out, Bashador
Inglez (English ambassador) when I attended one of
the weddings. But the fellow, making the announcement,
attracted my attention more than his flattering compliment.
He was dressed in Moorish costume with an immense
white turban folded round his head. I could not
conceive the reason of a Moor taking such interest
in feasts of the Jews.
The secret soon transpired. He
was a renegade, who had apostatized for the sake of
marrying a pretty girl. His heart is always with
his brethren, and the authorities good-naturedly allow
him to be master of the ceremonies at these and other
feasts, to preserve order, or rather to prevent the
Jews from being insulted by the Mahometans.
There are always a few Jewish renegades
in large Moorish towns, just enough, I imagine, to
convince the Mahometans of the superiority of their
religion to that of other nations; for whilst they
obtain converts from both Jews and Christians, and
make prosélytes of scores of Blacks, they never
hear of apostates from Islamism. The manner, however,
in which these renegades abandon their religion, is
no very evident proof of the divine authority of the
Prophet of Mecca. Here is an instance.
A boy of this town ran away from his
father, and prostrated himself before the Governor,
imploring him to make him a Mussulman. The Governor,
actuated by the most rational and proper feeling, remarked
to the boy, “You are a child, you have not arrived
at years of discretion, you have not intellect enough
to make a choice between two religions.”
The boy was kept confined one night, then beaten, and
sent home in the morning.
Another case happened like this when
the boy was admitted within the pale of Islamism.
Jewish boys will often cry out when their fathers are
correcting them, “I will turn Mussulman!”
A respectable Jew, who related this to me, observed,
“were I to hear any of my sons cry out in this
manner, I would immediately give them a dose of poison,
and finish them; I could not bear to see my children
formed into Mussulman devils.”
It really seems the vulgar opinion
among the Jews and Moors of this place, that females
have no souls. I asked many women themselves about
the matter; they replied, “We don’t care,
if we have no souls.” A Rabbi observed,
“If women bear children, make good wives, and
live virtuously and chastely, they will go to heaven
and enjoy an immortal existence; if not, after death,
they will suffer annihilation.”
This appears to be the opinion of
all the well-educated. But a Jewish lady who
heard my conversation with the Rabbi, retorted with
spirit: “Whether I bear children or not,
if my husband, or any man has a soul, I have one likewise,
for are not all men born of us women?”
All, however, are well satisfied with
this life, whatever may happen in the next; male and
female Jews and Mussulmen hold on their mutual career
with the greatest tenacity. I made inquiries about
suicides, and was told there were never any persons
so foolish as to kill themselves.
“We leave it to the Emperor
to take away a man’s life, if such be the will
of God!” and yet the Moors are habitually a grave,
dreamy and melancholy people. No doubt the light,
buoyant atmosphere keeps them from falling into such
a state of mental prostration as to induce suicide.
I now found that many people looked
upon me, in the language of the Jewish renegade, as
an ambassador, and some went so far as to say, “I
can make war with the Emperor if I like;” others
persisted in saying “I am going in search of
the murdered Davidson.” A man took the liberty
of telling Mr. Elton. “A very mysterious
Christian has arrived from the Sultan of the English.
The Governor hearing that he had ordered a pair of
Moorish shoes, sent word to the shoemaker to be as
long about them as possible. This Nazarene is
going to disguise himself as one of us, in order to
spy out our country.”
The Moors are certainly a timid and
suspicious race. They feel their weakness, and
they are frightened of any Christian who does not come
to their country on commercial pursuits, as a sportsman,
or in some directly intelligible character.