How does Iran seek to make Morocco Shiite?
The report on the religious situation issued by the Moroccan
Center for Studies and Research revealed that the phenomenon of Shiism in
Morocco has become a serious challenge facing the kingdom. For centuries, the
religious system has been framed by the perceptions of the Maliki doctrine and
Ashari creed, but Iran and its allies are exploiting the transformations of
what modern sociologists have called the "age of religions" and its
complex waves to spread Shiism in North Africa. This exposed the religious
fabric of this region to the sectarian interactions taking place in the Middle
East, and forcibly incorporated it into the globalization of values and the
religious ambiguity of Imami Shiism, which Iranians, Iraqis and Lebanese have
adopted as a supreme religious authority.
According to US State Department reports, the number of
Moroccan Shiites is increasing by about a thousand annually, in addition to
more than 8,000 Shiites from Iraq, Syria and Lebanon who are in the kingdom,
while some researchers estimate that only about 3,000 of them are settled,
suggesting the seriousness of the matter and prompting Moroccan authorities to
sever diplomatic ties with Iran.
Why Morocco?
A 2012 Pew Research Center report titled "Muslim World:
Unity and Diversity" stated that the concept of "exporting the
revolution" is ideologically linked to the concept of "Waliyat
al-Faqih", which is not bound by any bilateral or international treaty. This
is manifested in the Houthis, Hezbollah, and Iran’s Revolutionary Guards.
Wilayat al-Faqih and "exporting the revolution" were able to
establish armies and groups that could at any time carry out the aspirations of
the “guardian” and thus achieve a Persian caliphate based on the conquest of
land.
Media sources said that in one of the Friday sermons, a
preacher assigned by Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei said that the whole of
Islam must be under the leadership of one infallible imam and that if there is
one Islamic country governed by such a system like Waliyat al-Faqih then
Muslims living in non-Muslim countries should obey his orders, adding that even
then obedience to the supreme leader is obligatory, whether they pledge
allegiance or not, because the pledge of allegiance does not have a role in the
legitimacy of the guardian.
It is clear from this that the matter is serious and that
the Shiite doctrine has a specific policy to achieve its geopolitical goals,
and Morocco comes in the context of the attempt to spread Shiism for the sake
of Wilayat al-Faqih.
Political alignment and creedal loyalty
Researchers on Shiite movements, including Egyptian researcher
Ali Rajab, asserted in a special statement that Shiism in Morocco is divided
into two parts. The first is creedal Shiism, which is the most dangerous and the
least in number. The second is political Shiism, which is the most prominent
and benefits mainly from the popular Moroccan position on the Palestinian issue
and the need to resist the Zionist entity.
Shiite missionaries are recruiting Moroccans by through
Iranian-supported TV programs like through Press TV, which airs in English and is
responsible for the dissemination of sectarian thought. Another channel airs
similar content in Spanish.
Spain and Latin America have closed these channels following
international sanctions against Iran.
The Apostolic Line website, run by Issam Ehmaidan, is the
main channel that expresses official Iranian positions towards national and
international events. The site Tangier Commission is known for its defense of
the theses of Kuwaiti Shiite Yasser Habib.
Web sites, forums and social networking sites are the main
channel for Shiites to attract Moroccans to the Shiite doctrine.
Rooting Moroccan Shiism
The rooting of Moroccan Shiism is a movement that can be
summarized in the writings of Idris Hani directed to the intellectual and
cultural sphere, which consider Morocco a Shiite country in terms of its
culture and identity because its history demonstrates this, including
expressions that speak of the celebration of Ashura.
One of his articles, entitled "Shiism as a
socio-cultural component of Morocco", Hani stated, "Morocco in my
estimation: Sunni in view, Shiite in action, Sunni in doctrine, Shiite in expression,
Sunni in picture, Shiite in essence, Sunni in doctrine, Shiite in culture,
Sunni in geography, Shiite in history, Sunni in judgments, Shiite in
compliance, Sunni in consciousness, Shiite in the unconscious."
Since the formation of the Arab Coalition to Support
Legitimacy in Yemen and the fight against ISIS, Quds Forces commander Qassem
Soleimani has recruited writers and media platforms to launch a campaign
against coalition countries, especially the Gulf states, and to play on the
differences between some of the coalition countries regarding Qatar's relations
with Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood. According to a special statement by Dr.
Mohammed Al-Bashari, the secretary general of the Shiite-rooted movement Muslim
Communities in Europe, the most prominent of these Moroccans is Bashir Al-Haimer,
whose articles defame the role of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates,
play on the strings of Moroccan bilateral relations, and comment on the results
of the Gulf, Arab and Saudi summits with his views. He said "The summit of
the Arab countries held in Saudi Arabia is a failure and its content is
successful as everyone agreed to fight against Iran. But the expressions are
more aggressive and hypocritical. The Iranian position in the Middle East is
nothing but a defense of the repeated attacks on Palestine, Syria and Yemen. I
opposed the text of the resolution against Iran and I think its position is
right."
Iranian arms in Morocco
The Al-Ghadeer Association in the city of Meknes, founded by
Moroccan Shiites, circulates the books and ideas of Hussein Fadlallah, Mohamed
Mehdi Shamseddine, Dr. Ali Shariati, Mohammed Baqir al-Sadr, and former Iranian
President Mohammed Khatami.
The Imam Shirazi Organization, a Shiite group previously
called the Shiite Authority of Tangier before 2012, is associated with Yasser
Habib, a sectarian extremist now living in London after Kuwait revoked his
nationality.
The apostolic current considers the cultural movement as an
entrance to building the political movement, while the latter is a tool for
change, and therefore the first is the foundation in the process of apostolic
construction. This current believes that it is necessary to engage in the logic
of political culture, meaning to approach political issues from a cultural
point of view, as well as in a practical way in the field by engaging in
political positions, in order to gain the experience that gives members of the
current the ability to act in the depth of civil and political society.
The first public output of the apostolic current was through
the establishment of its official website in January 2012. This step came after
its members in eastern Morocco and the city of Tangier attempted to establish
associations subject to the law of public freedoms.
The site also issued a number of statements, such as a
statement calling on the Moroccan government to "protect the Moroccan
Shiites in Brussels" following the death of Abdullah al-Dahdouh, who was
killed in Belgium in 2012. The apostolic current managed to hold his funeral,
which saw a clear departure from the Maliki jurisprudential school.
Many Moroccan Shiite leaders are also politically active
through national parties.
The Islamic Front for the Liberation of Marrakech was
established by Rabat Cherkaoui and publishes Khomeini publications and books in
Morocco.
Idris Hani, member of the Social Democratic Movement in
2015, was one of the founders of Ennahda and was preparing his sectarian paper
in 2005 before he withdrew from it and joined his new party.
In 2015, some Shiite figures tried to join the United
Socialist Party, but parties within the party were reluctant to take this step,
especially with the ambiguity of some Shiite elements in Iran.
Bashir al-Haimer is a leader in the Socialist Union of
Popular Forces, which has the task of mobilizing to improve Iran's image among
Moroccans.
Mohammed Marouani, one of the historical faces of the
Shiites of Morocco, was the first nucleus of the Shiite movement in Moroccan
universities, penetrating the student union.
Belgium is the capital of Moroccan mourners
The Iranian embassy in Belgium plays a major role in
financially supporting Shiite associations to funnel funds to Moroccan
immigrants. Since the early 1990s, the embassy has been providing regular
monthly financial assistance to young Moroccans arriving in Belgium and
encouraging them to have temporary marriages that enable them to obtain
residence papers.
The number of Shiites in Belgium alone is estimated at 30,000
Shiites from various Muslim communities, especially from Lebanon, Iraq, Syria,
Iran, Turkey and Morocco. They are mostly based in Brussels and Antwerp.
Unofficial reports say that Moroccans top the list of Shiites in Belgium,
numbered at about 20,000, according to figures of associations concerned with
the conditions of Moroccan Shiites in Belgium.
Hundreds of Moroccans converted Shiism in the early 1980s
following the Iranian Revolution, according to data published by the Moroccan
newspaper Sabah. Most of them live in Brussels and its suburbs.
With the support of Iranian authorities, the Shiite
Moroccans were able to establish two institutions, namely the Rida Foundation
and the Rahman Foundation. They were also able to obtain a spokesperson to deal
with the official bodies, whether the Moroccan embassy in Belgium or the
Belgian government.
Brussels is the first city in terms of Shiite propagation
activity in Belgium, where there are various Shiite organizations, including
the Shiite Islamic Cultural Center of Ahl al-Bayt, Beirut Library, and Moroccan
Hadi Association, as well as Shiite mosques, including a mosque for Shiite
Turks, which is attended by many Moroccans. Meanwhile, the Zahra Association
and Al-Ghari Association are located in Antwerp.
These Shiite associations and centers organize various propagation
activities, especially during Ramadan and weekend gatherings, as well as the
celebration of Shiite events and Husseini rituals, along with a series of
lessons and speeches promoting Shiism.
One of the Moroccan Shiite leaders in Belgium is Ezzedine
Laghmeish, a graduate of the Moroccan University. He is currently the cultural
official of the Reza Mosque in Brussels, a mosque that had previously witnessed
the killing of its Moroccan-born imam, Abdallah Dahdouh, by an extremist who
was said to be Salafist.
The Netherlands also has a number of Shiite institutions,
including the Dutch Shiite Parliament in Rotterdam, the Islamic Cultural Center
of Utrecht, the Ahl al-Bayt Center in the city of Elmira, the Kawthar Cultural
Foundation in Daenhach, and the Fatima-Zahra Foundation in Amsterdam. The
Shiites also have a number of mosques throughout the country, while the
situation is similar in Germany.
There are currently more than 300,000 Muslims living in
Denmark, according to estimates by some specialists. Most of them come from
Syria, Iraq, Morocco and Turkey. There are Shiite centers active in Copenhagen
and other cities throughout country.