The Amazigh of Southern Morocco
Guardians of an ancient civilisation — their language, land, and living traditions survive in the valleys and deserts of the deep south.
Long before recorded history gave the African continent its modern borders, a people known as the Amazigh — often called Berbers — were already shaping the mountains, plains, and deserts of North Africa. In southern Morocco, this civilisation did not simply survive the millennia; it flourished, adapted, and continues today with extraordinary vitality.
Who Are the Amazigh? A People Before Borders
The Amazigh are the indigenous people of North Africa, with a presence stretching from the Canary Islands in the west to the Siwa Oasis in Egypt, and from the Mediterranean coast down to the Sahel. In Morocco, they form the oldest continuous population, predating Arab, Roman, Phoenician, and Vandal presences by thousands of years.
The term "Berber" — still widely used in tourism and academia — is actually a Greek and Latin exonym meaning foreigner or barbarian. The people themselves prefer Amazigh (singular) or Imazighen (plural), which translates as "free people" or "noble men of the earth" in Tamazight, their language.
Note on terminology: Many travellers search for "Berber people Morocco" or "Amazigh culture." Both terms refer to the same people; this article uses Amazigh primarily out of respect for cultural self-identification.
The South of Morocco: Amazigh Heartland
While Imazighen are found across Morocco, the southern regions hold some of the most historically significant and culturally vibrant Amazigh communities in the world. Three areas stand out:
The Souss Valley (Sous-Massa Region)
Stretching from the High Atlas to the Atlantic, the Souss Valley is home to the Chleuh (Ishelhin) Amazigh, speakers of Tachelhit — the most widely spoken Amazigh dialect in Morocco. The city of Agadir is its modern gateway, but ancient towns like Taroudant, surrounded by its ochre ramparts, better capture the spirit of Soussi civilisation. The valley's argan trees — tended almost exclusively by Amazigh women's cooperatives — produce the famous argan oil now exported worldwide.
The Anti-Atlas Mountains
South of the High Atlas rises the Anti-Atlas, a rugged landscape of rose-coloured granite, prehistoric rock carvings, and centuries-old agadirs (collective granaries) carved into cliffsides. Villages like Tafraout sit in valleys painted in extraordinary pink and ochre tones. The Amazigh communities here have maintained architectural and agricultural traditions that date back millennia.
The Drâa Valley and the Pre-Sahara
Following the Drâa River south from Ouarzazate towards the dunes of M'hamid el-Ghizlane, travellers enter a world of ksour (fortified villages), kasbahs, and palmeries. Here, Amazigh communities coexist and intermingle with Arab and sub-Saharan cultures, creating a uniquely layered civilisation at the edge of the Sahara.
Tachelhit: A Language Carved in Stone
Language is the soul of Amazigh identity. In the south of Morocco, Tachelhit (also spelled Tashelheit or Shilha) is the dominant Amazigh dialect, spoken by an estimated 8 to 14 million people — making it one of the most-spoken indigenous languages in Africa.
Tachelhit is part of the broader Tamazight language family, which uses its own writing system called Tifinagh — an ancient script with origins in the Libyco-Berber inscriptions of antiquity. Since 2003, Tifinagh has been taught in Moroccan public schools following Tamazight's standardisation by the Institut Royal de la Culture Amazighe (IRCAM).
To speak Tachelhit is to carry ten thousand years of memory in your mouth. Every word is a root that grows deep into the Atlas earth.
— Traditional saying paraphrased from southern Amazigh oral poetry
In 2011, Morocco's revised constitution recognised Tamazight as an official language alongside Arabic — a landmark moment for Amazigh cultural rights after generations of marginalisation.
Living Traditions: Art, Music and Crafts
Amazigh culture in the south expresses itself through a dazzling array of artistic and material traditions, many of which have been preserved over centuries with remarkable fidelity.
Textile and Carpet Weaving
Southern Amazigh women are master weavers. Hanbel rugs from the Souss, Beni Ourain carpets from the Atlas, and kilim flatweaves from the Drâa Valley are now sought by interior designers worldwide. Each carpet tells a story — geometric symbols encode fertility, protection, and identity.
Jewellery and Silversmithing
Amazigh jewellery from the south is bold, heavy, and deeply symbolic. Fibulas (large triangular brooches), tiznit-style collars, and Souss amber necklaces combine silver with coral, enamel, and semi-precious stones. The city of Tiznit, in the southern Souss, is the historic capital of Amazigh silversmithing.
Ahwach and Rways: Music of the South
The Ahwach is perhaps the most spectacular musical tradition of the southern Amazigh — a collective performance involving dozens of men and women in antiphonal call-and-response song, accompanied by hypnotic bendir (frame drum) rhythms. Equally celebrated is the tradition of Rways, a form of Tachelhit sung poetry performed by traveling bards (imdyazen) who once carried news, wisdom, and satire across the mountains.
- Carpet weaving — geometric symbols woven as language
- Silversmithing — fibulas, amber, and tiznit jewellery
- Ahwach — collective ceremonial music and dance
- Rways — Tachelhit oral poetry tradition
- Tadelakt — ancient lime plaster architecture
- Argan oil — women's cooperatives
Spirituality, Festivals and the Amazigh Calendar
The majority of Amazigh in southern Morocco are Sunni Muslim, and Islam has been woven into their cultural identity for over a thousand years. Yet pre-Islamic cosmological beliefs and seasonal rituals have not disappeared — they have merged and adapted, creating a spiritual life of great depth and syncretism.
The Amazigh New Year — called Yennayer — is celebrated on January 13th, marking the start of the Amazigh agricultural calendar. In 2023, Morocco officially recognised Yennayer as a national holiday. Moussems — annual pilgrimage festivals at the tombs of local saints — remain central to religious and social life, combining Sufi ceremonies, market fairs, horse fantasia displays, and music gatherings.
Architecture: The Kasbah and the Agadir
Few architectural traditions in the world are as visually arresting as the ksar and kasbah tradition of southern Morocco's Amazigh communities. Built from pisé (rammed earth) and decorated with geometric reliefs, these structures rise from the desert floor like natural formations.
The Aït Benhaddou ksar near Ouarzazate — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — stands as the most famous example. Equally remarkable are the agadirs of the Anti-Atlas: collective granaries built into cliffsides, representing one of the world's earliest forms of cooperative resource management.
Travel tip: The Drâa Valley road (Route N9) from Ouarzazate to Zagora passes through spectacular ksar country. Villages like Tamnougalt and Agdz offer authentic encounters with living Amazigh kasbah communities — less touristed than Aït Benhaddou.
The Amazigh Today: Identity, Revival, and Challenges
The 21st century has brought both renewed pride and continued challenges. The 2011 constitutional reform achieved landmark recognition of Tamazight as an official language. Today it is taught in schools, broadcast on national television via Tamazight TV, and used in public signage alongside Arabic and French.
Yet economic disparities persist. Rural Amazigh communities in the High Atlas, Anti-Atlas, and Drâa Valley frequently lack adequate access to healthcare and quality education. At the same time, a vibrant Amazigh youth culture has emerged — blending Tachelhit rap, Tifinagh tattoos, digital activism, and renewed interest in traditional crafts.
Visiting Amazigh Country in Southern Morocco
For travellers, the Amazigh south offers some of the most rewarding experiences in all of North Africa — but meaningful engagement requires respect and intention.
Best Times to Visit
Spring (March–May) and autumn (September–November) offer the most comfortable temperatures. The Rose Festival in Kelaat M'Gouna (late April/early May) and the Moussem of Sidi Ahmed ou Moussa in Tafraout are exceptional cultural events.
Ethical Travel Practices
Support Amazigh-owned cooperatives directly. Learn a few Tachelhit phrases — azul (hello), tanmirt (thank you). Hire local Amazigh guides rather than operators based in major cities.
We are not a museum exhibit or a tourist attraction. We are a living people. Come to know us, not just to photograph us.
— Fatima Oufkir, Amazigh cultural advocate, Taroudant
Conclusion: The Enduring Flame
The Amazigh of southern Morocco represent something increasingly rare in the modern world: an ancient people who have survived conquest, forced assimilation, and cultural erasure — and who continue to speak their own language, weave their own symbols, sing their own songs, and define themselves on their own terms.
To encounter their culture — whether in the silver-hammered workshops of Tiznit, the drumming circles of an Ahwach in the Souss, or the pink-granite solitude of the Anti-Atlas — is to understand that deep time is not abstract. It lives in hands, voices, and stone.
The Amazigh are not a remnant. They are a continuation.
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