[1] The Jewish cemetery of Marrakesh is Bet Moʿed leQol Ḥai (Hebrew: בית מועד לכל חי) or Miʿara (Hebrew: מערה) after the street where the entrance to the cemetery is located, Taoulat El Miara, was founded in the 15th century, although it is believed the area was used for burial of Jews since as early as the 12th century.
[4] it has separate sections for men, women and children, as per Jewish tradition, a Jew cannot be buried next to a person of the opposite gender that is not their spouse.
The cemetery has become a tourist site visited by thousands of Jews from all over the world come, including many Israelis of Moroccan origin.
[5][6] The cemetery is one of the largest in the country, covering approximately 2,800 dunams and it is located next to the Mellah of Marrakesh.
The cemetery has over 20,000 graves, with its left corner dedicated to around 6,000 children who died during a typhus epidemic in the 19th century; the tombs of the kohanim are painted in blue and located by its entrance[6] The cemetery is maintained by the Jewish community and by a guard who is there 24 hours a day.