Si Amar U Said Boulifa ( – 8 June 1931) was an Algerian Kabyle Berberologist and teacher.
Si Amar U Said Boulifa ( – 8 June 1931) was an Algerian Kabyle Berberologist and teacher.
== Biography == Boulifa was born around 1865 in Adni village in the Irjen tribe, within the Kabyle tribal confederation of At Iraten in Greater Kabylia. His family, the Aït Belkacem ou Amar (), are a modest marabout family (hence the "Si" of his name). Boulifa is his patronymic name in the French Civil Register. His father, Amar, left him an orphan very young. But, lucky enough to be related by his mother to the At Ameur, Tamazirt's powerful family of Caids. Si Moula, his maternal uncle, thus sent him to the first arabic-french school opened in Kabylia (at Tamazirt, in 1873), for which candidates were then rare. This combination of circumstances will be decisive for the rest of his life since he quickly committed to the career of teacher, the only way of promotion that could then be offered to a young Kabyle of modest origin. After some years, he was appointed as moniteur adjoint at Tamazirt. From 1890, he started instructing Kabyle lessons at the École Normale Supérieure de Bouzaréah, then after an internship in 1895 at the same institution he became an instituteur adjoint. In 1901, he was appointed as a répétiteur of kabyle at the School of Letters of Algiers. In late 1904/1905, he took part in the Segonzac mission in Morocco from where he brought back his Textes berbères de l’Atlas. In 1905, he participated in the 14th International Congress of Orientalists in Algiers with a communication on the Qanun of Adni.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).