Traveller question
Member
March 2026
Is Morocco welcoming for Jewish travellers, and is there Jewish heritage to see?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.

Traveller question
Member
March 2026
Is Morocco welcoming for Jewish travellers, and is there Jewish heritage to see?
Asked by a traveller planning a trip to Morocco. Here's the honest answer from one of our travel designers.
Amina
Travel Designer · StaffCultural Travel Designer
March 2026
Yes. Morocco has a remarkable, living Jewish heritage — centuries of history, restored synagogues, mellahs, museums and pilgrimage sites — and Jewish travellers are genuinely welcomed. There is an active community, the King protects the heritage, and Jewish-heritage tours are a respected, well-trodden way to travel here.
Morocco holds one of the richest Jewish stories anywhere in the Arab world, and I love planning heritage trips around it. For centuries this was home to a large and flourishing Jewish community, and although most emigrated in the twentieth century, the imprint is everywhere and it is cherished rather than hidden. The Moroccan constitution explicitly recognises the country's Hebraic heritage as part of its identity, the King has personally championed the restoration of synagogues and cemeteries, and a small but active Jewish community still lives and worships, particularly in Casablanca. Jewish travellers are welcomed warmly, and many tell me they were moved by how openly their history is honoured here.
The heritage you can actually visit is extraordinary. Every imperial city has its mellah, the historic Jewish quarter, and within them beautifully preserved synagogues — the Slat al-Azama in Marrakech, Ibn Danan in Fes with its restored interior, the lovely Beth-El in Casablanca. Casablanca is also home to the Museum of Moroccan Judaism, the only Jewish museum in the Arab world, which is a thoughtful, dignified place to understand the community's depth. Old Jewish cemeteries, carefully tended, sit in many towns, and guides who specialise in this heritage bring the streets and stones to life.
There is also a living pilgrimage tradition. Morocco has numerous tombs of revered tzadikim — saintly rabbis — that draw Jewish pilgrims from around the world, especially around the hillula gatherings, and these journeys are entirely normal and supported here. Kosher arrangements are very doable, particularly in Casablanca and Marrakech where the community and kosher catering exist, and with notice we can build a trip that keeps kosher comfortably. For a family tracing Moroccan-Jewish roots, walking the mellah their grandparents came from is often the emotional heart of the whole trip.
My honest, warm bottom line is that Morocco is not merely tolerant of Jewish visitors — it actively treasures and showcases its Jewish past, and welcomes those who come to connect with it. I pair guests with knowledgeable heritage guides, weave the synagogues, mellahs and museum into a broader Morocco itinerary, and handle kosher and pilgrimage logistics quietly in the background. Whether you come for ancestry, faith or simply fascination, you will find a country proud to share this chapter of its history with you.
Amina — Cultural Travel Designer, Serenity Morocco Tours. Answered March 2026.
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