Salomon Benaïoun | |
---|---|
Born | 1867 |
Died | 1921 |
Nationality | Moroccan |
Salomon Benaïoun (Arabic: سليمان بن حيّون Sulaymān bin Ḥayyūn,[1] Hebrew: שלמה ן' חייון Solomon Ben Hayun; 1867-1921)[2] was a Moroccan Jewish printer and journalist born in Oran in Algeria,[3] whose family originally hailed from Tetouan.[4] He moved to Tangier at the invitation of Haïm Benchimol (1834–1915), an important businessman and collaborator with the French.[3][5]
He studied printing in Paris.[2] He invested in modern printing equipment, which he sent to Tangier where he established the French Printing House on Qadi Street.[2] He also had a photography studio.[2]
He started the newspapers Kol Israel (1891),[6] Mébasser Tov (1894-1895), and Moghrabi (1904),[3] though these periodicals were short-lived.[7] Benaïoun also founded el Horria / La Liberté (1915-1922), which covered Jewish interests in Morocco in two different editions: one in Judeo-Arabic and one in French.[7][8]
He also owned Maṭbaʻat Sulaymān bin Ḥayyūn.[9]