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Monday, March 4, 2024

At Mẓab An Amazigh Society in Algeria Confronting A Crisis


     The At Mab (with emphasis on the z) are part of the Amazigh and constitute an ancient civilisation for which evidence dates from prehistoric times. Their history has left the At Mzab in possession of a traditional architecture of world-wide reputation. Since 1982 the Mzab has been listed among UNESCO’s world heritage sites. Its palm groves and its technically sophisticated irrigation systems, its celebrated skill in tapestry, its social structures - these have sustained and inspired this oasis society through the last twelve centuries.

     Whilst the focus of this article is to bring factual information, it will also succinctly show the viable relationship between a harsh natural environment and an Amazigh society still deeply attached to its own values, but which it would be wrong to assume inflexible. In this society, the Amazigh language is the necessary bedrock for its existence; religious practices are followed, often more profoundly than many might imagine: and younger generations are exhorted to live in the world of humanity which progresses at a dizzying pace, yet learn from and apply the lessons of the past.

     Prehistoric stone-age sites have been located in the region, and the evidence points to the presence of early troglodyte communities with their dwellings carved out of the limestone hillsides. Letters belonging to the Lybico-Berber alphabet have been confirmed throughout the Mzab. Yet an enormous amount of work remains, from exploration and discovery to collecting and deciphering these symbols. Whilst the several dozen uninhabited towns of the Mzab indicate the presence of Amazigh prior to the arrival of the Ibadi movement (we know the Ibadi rite was developed in the area among the schools of Islamic jurisprudence, some thousand years ago) it remains true however that knowledge of the early people groups living in this area before the arrival of Islam is still very limited.

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