Beginning in ancient Morocco, the film begins by describing the
Berber Jews. Jewish life in Morocco is shown with scenes of a wedding and a
bris. The head of a Berber village describes how the Jewish community was established in the village, and the narrative goes on to recount the details of the second wave of Jewish immigration from the
Iberian Peninsula following the
Spanish Inquisition. Various historians, government officials, and members of Jewish civic and cultural life in Morocco discuss the relationship between Berber Jews and the more recently arrived
Sephardic Jews, and place these into the context of the larger history of Morocco. Included is a discussion of the impact of French culture and schools on the Moroccan Jews during Morocco's tenure as a
French Protectorate. The film goes on to recount the effects of the
World War II political situation on the Moroccan Jews and the subsequent creation of the state of Israel, covering the different waves of immigration to Israel and the political and cultural situations of Moroccan Jewish arrivals, who reacted in various ways to their placement in Israeli frontier border settlements and the discrimination against them by
European Jews who held much of the power. Also discussed is the wave of
immigration to Canada, specifically
Montreal, with a segment on the distinct cultural reactions of the Moroccan Jews to a new life in the Canadian state. == References ==