The building, situated in the
Oasis neighborhood of Casablanca, covers 700 square metres and consists of a large multipurpose room and three exhibition rooms. Exhibits include paintings, photographs, and sculptures of Jewish life in Morocco. The exhibition rooms contain ritual objects, historic documents, costumes and jewellery from religious and family life, in addition to reconstructions of Moroccan synagogues. The museum also touts a collection of
Jewish Berber history, including costumes, jewellery
khmisa pendants. Visitors can also observe a reconstructed jewelry-making workshop, which was created using the workbench and tools of Jewish
silversmith Saul Cohen. A historic Moroccan document about the persecution of Jews in North Africa by
Nazi Germany and the
Vichy regime, commemorating the defeat of the
Axis powers in Africa, is the so-called
Megilat Hitler. This document was written by
Asher Ḥassin, a Moroccan Jew and Hebrew teacher, who lived through the horrors of the Vichy regime and wrote this scroll in the style of the biblical
Book of Esther. In January 2019, French-Moroccan opera singer
David Serero donated a large part of his Moroccan
Judaica art collection, the largest donation of Judaica artifacts donated to a Moroccan museum. One of the most notable items is the
preamble of Morocco's updated 2011
constitution, which cites Hebraic influences as a pillar of national unity. Museum director, Zhor Rehihil, was quoted declaring that, “the new constitution emphasizes both ethnic and religious pluralism in Morocco.”
Pictures of the museum collection File:One of the halls at the Moroccan Jewish Museum of Casablanca, Morocco.jpg|One of the halls of the Moroccan Jewish Museum, Casablanca File:One of the halls at the Moroccan Jewish Museum, Casablanca, Morocco.jpg|One of the halls of the Moroccan Jewish Museum, Casablanca File:One of the halls at the Moroccan Jewish Museum, Casablanca.jpg|One of the halls of the Moroccan Jewish Museum, Casablanca File:The Book of Deuteronomy, Debarim. Hebrew with translation in Judo-Arabic, transcribed in Hebrew letters. From Livorno, 1894 CE. Moroccan Jewish Museum, Casablanca.jpg|The
Book of Deuteronomy, Debarim. Hebrew with translation in
Judeo-Arabic, transcribed in Hebrew letters, 1894 CE File:A wall sign advising attendants of a Jewish synagogue on what to do during prayer. Moroccan Jewish Museum, Morocco.jpg|A wall sign advising attendants of a Jewish synagogue on what to do during prayer. File:Jewelry, once belonged to a Jewish family. Moroccan Jewish Museum, Casablanca.jpg|
Khmisa amulets, once belonging to a Jewish family File:Pair of anklets, silver molded, city style. Once belonged to a Jewish woman. Moroccan Jewish Museum, Casablanca.jpg|Pair of silver
anklets, once belonging to a Jewish woman File:Megillah, Megillat-Hitler, Moroccan Jewish Museum, Casablanca.jpg|
Megillah, so-called
Megillat-Hitler ==See also==