Moroccans fear fading community traditions during Eid Al Adha

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Moroccans fear fading community traditions during Eid Al Adha
By: Dakir Madiha
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A growing number of Moroccans believe the communal traditions associated with Eid Al Adha are gradually disappearing as urban lifestyles and economic pressures reshape how families celebrate the religious holiday. A recent reader survey found that collective practices linked to solidarity and neighborhood cooperation are now viewed as the traditions most at risk of fading away.

The survey showed that 42% of respondents believe “community support and shared preparations” have declined the most during Eid Al Adha celebrations. For decades, the holiday was marked by strong neighborhood ties, with relatives and neighbors helping prepare the sacrifice, sharing food, exchanging meat with families in need, and gathering across generations inside family homes.

Many respondents linked the decline of these practices to changing urban life. Increasing individualism, shrinking social interaction within neighborhoods, and changing family structures are transforming the way the holiday is experienced. Preparations that were once collective and social have become more private, faster, and in some cases outsourced to professional services.

The poll also revealed that 22% of participants believe families no longer celebrate Eid together as frequently as in the past. Rising living costs, professional mobility, and the geographic separation of relatives have reduced the frequency of large family gatherings that traditionally defined the holiday atmosphere in Morocco.

Another 22% pointed to the disappearance of traditional tanned skin carpets made from animal hides after the sacrifice. The practice once reflected household craftsmanship and a culture of reuse common in many Moroccan homes. Respondents said modernization and changing consumer habits have contributed to the decline of these domestic traditions.

Seasonal street activities linked to Eid were also mentioned among disappearing customs. Around 14% of respondents said they miss the “head grillers,” informal workers who roasted sheep heads in neighborhoods during the holiday period. Though less cited than other traditions, the response reflects nostalgia for the street scenes and temporary trades that once formed part of the Eid experience.

The survey highlights a broader cultural shift rather than a rejection of the holiday itself. Eid Al Adha remains one of Morocco’s most important religious celebrations, but many Moroccans increasingly associate the fading traditions with the loss of social closeness, collective rituals, and everyday community life that once surrounded the occasion.



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