Muhammad al-Muqri
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Muhammad al-Muqri (February 1851 – September 9, 1957) was a senior Moroccan official of the late 19th and early 20th century. He was an adviser and grand vizier to several sultans of Morocco, including under French colonial domination.[1]
Early life
Mohammed Al-Muqri came from a well-known family whose descendants successively held government portfolios in Morocco. They trace their lineage back to 16th and 17th century historian and statesman Ahmed al-Moqri who, coming from Tlemcen, had settled in Fes then in Marrakesh to serve under Saadi Sultan Ahmed Al-Mansur Al-Dhahabi. Ahmed al-Moqri was himself of Fassi origin since his family had emigrated to Tlemcen as part of the court of the Marinid Sultan Abu Inan Faris, when the latter conquered the city in the 14th century.
Mohammed al-Moqri was born in Fes (February 1851) to Abdesallam al-Moqri (1830–1903), who held the position of Lamin of Moulay Hafid, and a Fassi woman from the Zghari family.[2]
Career
He began his career in government during the reign of Mohammed IV of Morocco, the father of Hassan I of Morocco. During this period of time, al-Muqri went to the opening of the Suez Canal where he met with Emperor Napoleon III and Empress Eugénie. After the death of Hassan I, sultan, Abd al-Aziz seized the throne. At that time, Al Muqri was the country's representative to the 1906 Algeciras Conference at which Germany's demand for a say in Moroccan affairs was rejected in favor of France and Spain. In recognition of his efforts to resolve the Moroccan Crisis leading up to the international conference, Abd al-Aziz appointed al-Muqri as his Minister of Finance and in 1908, his Grand Vizier, a post he would hold on and off under each of the succeeding sultans until 1955. In 1909, the new sultan Abd Al-Hafid restored him to the post of Minister of Finance but promoted him to Grand Vizier in 1911. Al-Muqri resigned the post two years later, but was reappointed to it by Sultan Yusef, and was kept in the position by his successor, Sultan Mohammed ben Youssef, when he ascended the throne in 1927.
In 1953, when Mohammed ben Youssef was deposed by the French for nationalist agitation and replaced by his uncle, Moulay Mohamed Ben Arafa, the colonial authorities decided to keep al-Muqri in his position. Once independence was promised, Ben Arafa abdicated, and al-Muqri was chosen by colonial authorities to head the Regency, among other dignitaries such as Pacha Fatmi Benslimane, until the exiled Sultan Muhammad could return to the country and assume the throne.
Al-Muqri (sometimes spelled El Mokri) left politics in 1955, shortly before Morocco gained its independence. He died two years later.
After his death his residence in Rabat (known as Dar el Mokri) became an infamous location of detention and torture in the 1950s, 60s and up to the 1970s, during what was termed as the Years of Lead.
Family
Mohammed al-Muqri married three women (one Algerian and two Moroccan) with whom he had five sons and a daughter, all born during 1890–1900:[2]
- Taieb al-Moqri, Pasha of Casablanca and Minister of finance.
- Hammed al-Moqri (حماد), Khalifa of the Pasha of Fes
- Tahar al-Moqri, Pasha of Safi and head of the customs of Casablanca (studied in France)
- Mokhtar al-Moqri, Pasha and head of the customs of Tangier (studied in France)
- Thami al-Moqri, Minister of Finance and first agricultural engineer of Morocco.
- Leila al-Moqri, married Moulay Hafid then his brother Moulay Youssef.
Longevity claim
It is claimed that al-Moqri died at the reputed age of 112, according to the Guinness Book of World Records, or even of 116, according to other sources. Both figures are doubtful. There are no birth records or other evidence for these claims.[citation needed] It is rare to attain such an age and unheard of to be head of government at 110 or 114.[original research?] John Gunther's book Inside Africa (published 1955) says he was born in 1851: other sources list his birth year as 1854. Vermeren gives 1860.[2] The Britannica Book of the Year gives his birthdate as February 1841.
Notes
- ^ Jamil M. Abun-Nasr, A History of the Maghrib in the Islamic Period ed. Cambridge University Press, 1987 ISBN 978-0-521-33767-0, p.373
- ^ a b c Pierre Vermeren (2002). La formation des élites marocaines et tunisiennes Des nationalistes aux islamistes, 1920-2000. La Découverte. p. 211.