Léon Sultan
Léon Réne Sultan was a French-Algerian lawyer and founder of the Communist Party of Morocco.
Background
He was born to an Algerian Jewish family—one of 8 children—in Constantine, Algeria in 1905. He was technically a French citizen due to the Crémieux Decree. His father worked at the military factories in the city.Career
He studied at the College of Law of Algiers, then from 1925 to 1929 practiced at his own law office in Constantine. In 1929, he moved his practice to Casablanca, Morocco, where he joined young socialists and socialized with the city's Muslims as well as Jews. He was fluent in Arabic and French.He was disbarred by the antisemitic French Vichy regime.
Communist activity
In 1936, communist activity was legalized by the Popular Front government in France. A branch of the French communist party was established in Morocco and based in Casablanca, and Léon Sultan served as its secretary. It wasn't big, and it was made up almost exclusively of intellectuals. Léon Sultan wrote articles for the Clarté, a weekly journal published by the group. In 1939, the French communist party as well as its Moroccan branch were banned for Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.In 1943, communist activity resurged in Morocco, and Léon Sultan served as the first general secretary of the Communist Party of Morocco.
He died in June 1945, and Ali Yata assumed leadership of the party.