LEARN MORE ABOUT WESTERN SAHARA

The original inhabitants of North Africa were berber nomads
called Bafour. Around the seventh century A.D., Muslim Arabs
began their invasion of North Africa coming from the East. Many
of these nomads were converted to Islam during this Arab
expedition to the Magreb.

In that period, two known tribes were living in what is the
actual Western Sahara: The Zenata and The Sanhaja. These tribes
rejected the Arab invasion; nevertheless, they embraced the
moral, religious and cultural precepts of Islam. It is in Islam
where the fundaments of the Saharawi identity reside. Under
Islam's influence the first unified movement of the population
was created. Later, it led to the creation of the Almoravids
dinasty.

At the end of the thirteenth century, another invasion, this one
of Arab Yemenite people known as Maqil, would give the
population of Western Sahara its definitive political and
cultural structure. The fusion of the Maqil and The Sanhaja gave
rise to a new ethnic group: The Moors.

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