Creator Bio
Samaw’al al-Maghribī
d. 1175
The son of a rabbi and poet from Fez, Abū Naṣr al-Samaw’al ibn Yaḥyā al-Maghribī was born in Baghdad and became a noted physician and mathematician. Although some of his scientific writings survive, it was largely Samaw’al’s conversion to Islam in 1160 and his anti-Jewish writing, in particular his Arabic polemical treatise, Silencing the Jews (Ifḥām al-yahūd), that brought him attention.
Content by Samaw’al al-Maghribī
Primary Source
Silencing the Jews: His Conversion to Islam
My father was called Rāb Yehūda Ibn Abūn and was of the city of Fās in Morocco; Rāb being a title, not a name, and its meaning—a Rabbi. He was the most learned man of his time in Torah studies, and…