Abstract
The Spanish Protectorate in Morocco has been discussed often as a colonial situation characterized by the strict separation between colonizers and colonized. In this article I show that, despite the existence of a rigid hierarchy between communities, we also found several social practices, like mixed relationships and religious conversions, in which some hundreds of Moroccan men and Spanish women broke the social barriers of the time. The main source to substantiate this argument is the documentation of the High Commissariat of Spain in Morocco and its records dedicated to conversions and mixed relationships. The colonial authorities, both Spanish and Moroccan, understood these practices as a real political problem that threatened the respective social classification models. To cross over social borders between colonizer and colonized meant a reversal of the "social order", so that the main agency for political control of the Protectorate, the Delegation of Indigenous Affairs, branded these practices in an archive of "Rarities" and labeled them as anti-patriotic and dangerous for the "race prestige", and initiated a policy of persecution of conversions, which otherwise was limited by several factors.
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Mateo, J. L. (2013). «Rarezas»: Conversiones religiosas en el Marruecos colonial (1930-1956). Hispania - Revista Espanola de Historia, 73(243), 223–252. https://doi.org/10.3989/hispania.2013.008
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