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Argentina and Morocco share a historical thread that most travellers overlook: Andalusia. For Argentine travellers, visiting Morocco is an encounter with a shared past — one filtered through a completely different geography of kasbahs, dunes, and mountain oases.
MSITravels arranges a private airport pickup at Casablanca (CMN) or Marrakech (RAK) the moment you land. We build Day 1 around your arrival time so jet lag is never wasted.

Argentina and Morocco share a historical thread that most travellers overlook: Andalusia. The Spanish spoken in Buenos Aires carries echoes of Andalusian dialect; the courtyard architecture of historic Córdoba and Tucumán reflects Moorish influence; and Argentina's significant Arab diaspora — among the largest in the Americas, mainly from Lebanon and Syria but also from Morocco — has long maintained a cultural thread with North Africa. Morocco itself is, in many ways, the most complete surviving legacy of the civilisation expelled from Andalusia in 1492. The medinas of Fes and Marrakech were built in the centuries that followed the Reconquista, by refugees carrying Andalusian architecture, music, and cuisine into North Africa. For Argentine travellers, visiting Morocco is an encounter with a shared past — one filtered through a completely different geography of kasbahs, dunes, and mountain oases. Flights from Buenos Aires Ezeiza (EZE) connect to Morocco via Madrid (Iberia) or Paris (Air France) in 14–16 hours. Argentine passport holders enter Morocco visa-free for 90 days. MSITravels designs Spanish-language friendly private tours for Argentine guests.