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Monday 30 January 2023

FUNERARY MONUMENTS IN THE COURTYARD & INSIDE THE CHURCH OF OUR LADY OF HOPE, VYPIN

   
Photograph: January, 2023
 
This church is situated in Vypin Island directly opposite to Fort Cochin. Tradition has it that the first church of Vypin was built in 1503 by the Franciscan Friars; the second in 1596, which was located in the south-east corner of the present cemetery; and the current sanctuary was consecrated in 1605 as a Parish Church under the title 'Nossa Senhora de Esperanca' (Our Lady of Hope) by Dom Andrea de Santa Maria (1588-1610), the Bishop of Cochin Diocese. Perhaps the earliest reference to a church in Vypin is from a letter written by the Jesuit priest, Fr. Gaspar Soeiro from Cochin on September, 1560, where he mentions of a church in an Island called Vaipim (Vypin) or Ilha Santa (Holy Island) belonging to the Franciscan Friars. This would indicate that the first Church in Vypin was built before 1560. The Portuguese also had a fortified residence of the bishop indicated as 'Caza do Bispo' in Vypin. At the time of the siege of Cochin (1662-63), the Bishop House was demolished and the Dutch built 'New Orange Fort' nearby, but the church was left unharmed. The long-standing tradition is that, to this Catholic church, the Dutch allowed the transfer of the holy relics and altar of the Portuguese St Francis church, after the latter was converted to a Protestant church. It is said that the Dutch permitted three altars together with their adjoining screens of St Francis Church to be removed to the Church of Our Lady of Hope in Vypin. The sacred items remained in Vypin church until they were shifted to the Indo-Portuguese Museum in 2000. 
 
The 16th century altar piece of the former Portuguese St Francis church displayed in the Indo-Portuguese Museum of Fort Kochi
The Portuguese altar piece from the 16th Century is carved in teak wood (?), painted in green marbling with vestiges of gold, and has a size of 334 x 300 x 156 cm (Pinto, Mendes M. H. et. al., Indo-Portuguese Museum, Bishop's House, Cochin. published by Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon, 2011). Photograph: January, 2023
 

Saturday 28 January 2023

TOMBS IN THE SO-CALLED MESHUCHRARIM SECTION OF THE PARADESI JEWISH CEMETERY-VIEWS FROM THE SOUTH AND THE WEST

For my earlier posts on the grave monuments of this once so-called subordinate Paradesi group, see here, here and here.

 VIEWS FROM THE SOUTH

THE PARADESI JEWISH CEMETERY-VIEWS FROM THE WEST

THE PARADESI JEWISH CEMETERY-VIEWS FROM THE SOUTH


VIEWS OF THE PARADESI JEWISH CEMETERY OF MATTANCHERRY FROM THE SOUTH & WEST DIRECTIONS

In the next few posts, I will upload photographs of the Paradesi Jewish Cemetery taken from the southern and the western boundaries, which I have not done yet. All the photographs from the southern side were taken on 2019 and the western boundary on 2023. Remember, the entrance to the cemetery is on the northern side and due to the tall boundary walls, it is difficult to obtain photographs of the graves, and you certainly need an elevated platform for the purpose. All the tombstones face the eastern direction, so when you are reading the inscriptions, you are actually facing the west, the direction towards Jerusalem. I have earlier uploaded photographs from the eastern side of the cemetery, from where the inscriptions are easily visible (see here). See also the links for more photographs under 'Mattancherry Paradesi Jewish Cemetery'.

Friday 27 January 2023

A LONE GRAVE MONUMENT IN THE COURTYARD OF THE PARADESI SYNAGOGUE OF MATTANCHERRY


The white arrow marks the position of the grave marker in the courtyard. Photograph: January, 2023
 
Earlier, I wrote about the tombstones in the courtyard of Paradesi synagogue, and if you have noticed, they are all currently preserved in the Paradesi Jewish Cemetery mounted against its northern wall. Therefore, during my recent visit to the synagogue, I was quite surprised to find a Hebrew inscription in the courtyard. The stone slab is placed near the north-west corner of the compound wall behind the synagogue. As walking through the courtyard is restricted, you can only observe the stone from the other end. Nevertheless, with a zoom lens, I managed to get some fine close-up shots of the inscription. To my surprise, it turned out to be a gravestone! Now, why was this particular funerary monument left at the synagogue compound while the remaining all were transferred to the cemetery? More importantly, who is this tombstone attributed to?
 
Luckily, the inscription is fairly legible and well preserved. The Zalman Shazar Centre has an inventory of 46 tombstones from the Paradesi courtyard, and accordingly, this particular gravestone belongs to Rabbi Haim Chalil, Son of Rabbi Shem Tov. The date of death is given as 15 Tammuz, 5450 (corresponds to 22 June, 1690), which by the way is the oldest in the lot. However, if you observe the inscription carefully, the second name is Belili (בלילי) and not Chalil (כליל), and also there is a letter missing after the ‘nun’ in the year הת"נ (5000+400+50), so the year of his death should be somewhere in the late 17th or early 18th century.

Was there a Haim Belili from the Paradesi community in the late 17th century? The answer is yes and there were at least two of them! The names appear in ‘Notisias dos Judeos de Cochim’ [News of the Jews of Cochin], the famous report of Mosseh Pereyra de Paiva, a Sephardic Jew from Amsterdam, who visited Cochin in November, 1686. In the list of the 23 heads of Paradesi families reported by de Paiva, we find -
1) B. Hacham (Rabbi) Haim Belilia-his great grandfather from Saffet (Safed, Israel)
2) B. Haim Belilia, Hazan (Minister) and skilled scribe-his great grandfather from Alepo (Aleppo, Syria)
(De Paiva, 1687; Koder, 1968; Schorsch, 2000)

Thursday 19 January 2023

AN EURASIAN FUNERARY MONUMENT IN THE COURTYARD OF THE 'CHURCH OF OUR LADY OF LIFE', MATTANCHERRY

 

The yellow arrowhead marks the position of the funerary monument.

This is another church of Portuguese origin in Cochin area where a British (or Anglo-Indian?) funerary monument is still preserved. The church located in Mattancherry near the 'Jew Town' is called the Church of Our Lady of Life [Igreja da Nossa Senhora da Vida (Portuguese) or 'Jeevamatha Palli'  (Malayalam)]. Its fame is also associated with the 'Coonan Cross Oath' or the 'Oath of Bent Cross' taken on 3 January 1653 in Mattancherry by the St Thomas Christians, a pledge that they will no longer obey the Latin Archbishop or any other Jesuits, nor accept the Portuguese dominance. 

A brief history of the 'Church of Our Lady of Life', Mattancherry-the official version:
i) The first church in Mattancherry was established c. 800 AD in the name of Virgin Mary, but was also known as Thoma Palli (St Thomas Church) or Irumesa Palli (Twin Altar Church)

ii) The 'Chapel of Holy Cross' (the modern Coonan Cross Catholic Church) was established by the Portuguese in 1550

iii) The Portuguese built a new church (2nd) replacing the St Thomas church and dedicated it to 'Our Lady of Life' (Nossa Senhora da Vida) in 1557

iv) After the Dutch destroyed the church in 1663, a 3rd was built on the same site and was blessed on 10 August, 1769 by the Bishop of Cochin, Clemente José Colaço Leitão 

v) When the 3rd church was burnt down by the Travancore insurgents (during Vettikola Pada) in December 1808, a 4th one was built and consecrated in the current location on 22 June, 1911 by the Bishop of Cochin José Bento Martins Ribeiro, and a cemetery was established at the old site 

vi) The 4th church was renovated and consecrated on 30 November, 2017 by the Bishop of Cochin Joseph Kariyil, which is the present-day worshiping place known as Jeevamatha Palli (Church of Our Lady of Life).

Monday 16 January 2023

EUROPEAN FUNERARY MONUMENTS IN THE ST. FRANCIS CSI CEMETERY, VELI, FORT KOCHI.

 

This is the current functional cemetery of St Francis CSI church in Fort Kochi. Remember, the same church maintains the Dutch Cemetery of Fort Kochi. This cemetery is located at a place called Veli, 2 km south of Fort Kochi. Like the Dutch Cemetery, this graveyard is also not open to visitors, and I understand it is only accessible during the funeral services. However, unlike the Dutch Cemetery, its boundary walls are shorter in height and the graves can be easily viewed from outside. You can still trace a few old tombs amidst several modern graves in the cemetery. The old tombs resemble the British monuments in the Dutch cemetery. According to the inventory given in Roberts and Chekkutty (Malabar II-Christian Monuments, 2017, pp. 136-145,), this is the 'old Protestant Cemetery'  which began in 1790, and it was called the "New Church Burial Ground" after 1855. The inventory has 103 graves, both Dutch and English, but the majority are from the British period. Out of the 103 graves listed, the oldest are for Jacob Wendelen Van der Sloot (d. 1739, age 60) and David Scale (d. 1788, age 68); 96 of them are dated from the 19th century; 4 from the early 20th century and one undated. The youngest grave monument is for Joseph Ethelbert Winckler (d, 15 September, 1913), the Port Officer who erected a memorial for the 'Great Fire of Cochin' (see my earlier post on the 'Pillars of the old Santa Cruz Cathedral'). 

However, some things do not add up in the inventory. For example, the first documented burial in the cemetery is reported to 1790, yet the inventory has burials dated from 1739 and 1788. The graveyard is called the 'Old Protestant Cemetery' without a location given, whereas the 'Old Dutch Cemetery' is wrongly placed in Veli (instead of Fort Kochi, see Roberts and Chekkutty, 2017, p. 145). In addition, the authors claim that the old protestant cemetery was restored through the Royal Dutch Embassy and the Archaeological Survey of India in 2012. Nonetheless, it is the 'Dutch Cemetery', where the Embassy carried out the restoration works, and the ASI is not involved in the protection of Veli cemetery. Also, there is some overlap between the names. For instance, in the inventory, the last burial of the cemetery is of Joseph Ethelbert Winckler (d. 1913), but this grave is in the Dutch Cemetery according to others (eg. T. W. Venn, 1947). Similarly, the list has the grave of Pieter Winckler (d. 1841), the grandfather of J. E. Winkler in Veli Cemetery, but his tomb is actually in the Dutch Cemetery (see my previous post).

Thursday 12 January 2023

FUNERARY MONUMENTS OF THE DUTCH CEMETERY IN FORT KOCHI

Photograph-October, 2022

In the previous series of posts, I wrote about the Portuguese funerary monuments in Cochin. We also saw Dutch and English funerary markers in St Francis church, but it is not the only site in Cochin where you find them. In the upcoming posts, I will briefly go through a few other places in Cochin area where the Dutch and the British graves are still preserved.

1) Dutch Cemetery of Fort Cochin
Like St Francis church, the Dutch Cemetery of Fort Cochin is a well known tourist spot. The 18th-century cemetery is only a walk-able distance (c. 300 m) from the St Francis church and has both Dutch and English graves. The tombs have no cross symbols, which is a rare phenomenon even in the protestant cemeteries of Kerala today. The graveyard is not open to the public, but the tombs are visible from the main entrance and the western boundary near the beach side. However, if you want to access the graves and properly  explore the epitaphs, you must enter the compound, and for that you need permission of the C.S.I. church authorities who manage the site now. The cemetery was established in 1724, but the oldest surviving tomb is dated from 1784 only. The site originally was the location of an orphanage and in old Dutch maps, the street was called Weeshuijsstraat (Orphanage Street). 

A few interesting facts about the Dutch Cemetery of Cochin:
The date of establishment-1724
The area of the cemetery-1500 sq.m (c. 37 cents)
The total number of existing funerary monuments-104
The number of funerary monuments with a visible Dutch script-13
The oldest surviving Dutch tomb-Johan Daimichen (d. 30 August, 1784)
The youngest Dutch tomb-Catharina Sara Smit (d. 15 November, 1820)
The largest Dutch tomb-Aletta Augustina Thiel (d. 20 November, 1784)
The best preserved Dutch epitaph-Johannes van Blankenberg (d. 2 April, 1794)
The oldest surviving English tomb-Charles Rolland (d. 1807)
The youngest English tomb-Joseph Ethelbert Winckler (d. 15 September, 1913)
The tallest funerary monument-English (unknown identity)
(Courtesy for the burial dates: sharedcemeteries.net and Roberts & Chekkutty, 2017).

There is a popular misconception that the Dutch Cemetery of Cochin is the oldest European cemetery in India (see here, here and here). Ironically, there are several cemeteries in India established by the Dutch in the 17th century (eg. Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh etc), so the 18th-century Dutch Cemetery of Cochin  is actually one of the youngest! Sir Charles Allen Lawson in 1861 (British and Native Cochin, p.26) writes: "Near to the Church (St Francis) is the old Dutch Cemetery, a small, square plot enclosed with high walls. The tombs flat,dome and pyramid shaped are occasionally diversified by broken pillars, urns and sarcophagi, all more of less blackened by exposure; the grass rank and wild here and there lost sight of among bushes of a beautiful orange-flowered weed that infests this part of India". Nothing much has changed in the cemetery even after several decades, but the paved path is a recent addition.

Wednesday 4 January 2023

REVISITING THE JEWISH AND CHRISTIAN ANGLES OF SAUDI -SOUTH OF FORT KOCHI

Freemason Hall of Cochin or Lodge Cochin

I get queries often regarding the lost Jewish settlements of Kerala. Saudi in Cochin is one of the most frequently asked sites, after I wrote a few years ago about the 'Lost Synagogue of Saude or Saudi (1514-1556)' . Most requests are about the name of the place, such as if it can be linked to Saudi Arabia. However, many would be surprised to learn that the name “Saudi” used here has in all probability a Portuguese Christian than an Arab Muslim connection. Saudi is derived from the Portuguese word, "Saúde" which means health. The Portuguese had a 16th century church named "Nossa Senhora de Saude" (Our Lady of Health) here and hence the name of the region. The modern Roman Catholic church in Saudi is also named after "Our Lady of Health". The original Portuguese church does not exist and it is believed to be destroyed by the sea. As per traditional accounts, the Portuguese church was located around 3.5 miles west of the present-day church. The first church in the current location was established in 1804 only. According to certain local traditions, the St Thomas Christians had a 9th-century church in Saudi before the Portuguese arrived, the humble structure made of wood and stone was also carried away by the sea, and if so, the one founded in 1804 was the third church. This church underwent several renovations over the course of time, such as in 1966, side wings were added to the sanctuary and the main altar was refurbished. The current modern church in Saudi is consecrated in December, 2006. 

Early Records on Saudi

Are there any historical records for the existence of a church or place called Saudi in Cochin during the Portuguese or the Dutch periods? One of the earliest references I have come across is from the accounts of Urbain Souchu de Rennefort, an agent of French East India Company, in his “Histoires des Indes Orientales”, published in 1688, the site appears as “Nostra Seignora de la Sauda”, a mazure (hovel?) near the sea coast. In the Memoir of Governor Adriaan Moens written in the year 1781 (“The Dutch in Malabar”), he lists 20 Latin churches and chapels subjected to the VOC (the Dutch East India Company), the church of “Senhora de Saude” and its chapel was one among them. Francis Day (1863) reproduces Moens' list in "The Land of the Permauls", but he quotes the church as “Senhora de Sande”. In 1781, when Moens handed over charge to his successor Van Angelbeck, he enumerated 69 gardens and pieces of land as the property of the Dutch, one among them was at Senhora de Saude, containing 1,222 fruit-bearing coconut and other trees, 29 Parras of cultivated land (c. 7 acres).

Another resource to look for is the old maps of Cochin, especially from the 17th and 18th centuries. In these maps, we find churches marked in the south coastal belt of Fort Cochin. The following is the region of Cochin I extracted from a large Map of Malabar extending from Cranganore (Kodungallur) to Coylang (Kollam). The Dutch Map (NL-HaNA_4.VEL_229) dated 1687 is facsimiled in Grand Atlas of the East India Company volume I pp.  31 and 126-128.  Here you can see four churches arranged in the following order from North to South: 1-St Joan (St John), 2-Nossa Senhora da Saude (Our Lady of Health), 3-St Louis and 4-St Iago (St James). The map is therefore a strong evidence for the existence of the Portuguese Saudi church in the 17th century. In some other maps, fewer churches (2-3) are depicted (NL-HaNA_4.VEL_882.2; NL-HaNA_4.VEL_884), or the 4th church is dedicated to St George instead of St James (NL-HaNA_4.VEL_883), but in all of them the church of Saude appears.

A Map of Cochin in 1687. Extracted from the Dutch Map, NL-HaNA_4.VEL_229

Antiquities of Saudi Church

Today, none of these early Portuguese churches exist, the structures built in present locations are of relatively recent origin. We know for certain that a church existed in Saudi at least in the 17th century, but there is little left in the modern Saudi church from the Portuguese era. In the previous post, we saw two tombstones in Portuguese script, but they are from the early 19th century. The Silver Jubilee Souvenir of Alleppey Diocese (1977) mentions of a Portuguese inscription in front of the altar, but no such tablet exists today. The beautiful 6 ft tall statue of the Virgin holding Infant Jesus is perhaps the only relic from the Portuguese era preserved in the church, however, according to Bernard (History of Fort Cochin, 1995) it was discovered accidentally from the Santa Cruz Maidan (Playground) in Fort Kochi by the British in 1901. 

INTRODUCTION

The monotheistic religions: Judaism, Christianity and Islam arrived India much before they reached the West. For instance, it is widely believed that Christianity reached the subcontinent only after Portuguese, the first European colonists arrived India in the 15th century. However, long before Christianity reached many parts of Europe, it came to India. According to strong, continuous and unanimous traditions among the ancient Syrian Christians of Kerala, Christianity was introduced to India by St: Thomas, the Apostle of Jesus Christ in 52 AD, who established seven churches in Kerala. Contrary to popular belief that Islam came to India through the 11th century Muslim invasions in the northern parts of the country, it first arrived Kerala via the Arab merchants from 7th century onwards at the earliest. Similarly, Judaism the oldest continuously practiced monotheistic religion has an Indian presence from very early times. If traditional accounts are to be accepted,India had a Jewish colony from the time of King Solomon (10th century BC)! Most importantly, all the three religions trace their arrival in India to the Malabar region of Southern India which is currently the modern State of Kerala. Since ancient times Kerala has been the center of the Indian spice trade where Greeks, Romans, Jews, Arabs and Chinese came for grabbing their part of share. To be specific, the first Jewish, Christian and Islamic settlements of India claim their origin to a place called Cranganore (modern Kodungallur) in Kerala.

Much has been written on Indian Jews, their unique culture and traditions. Among the three major Jewish communities in India, the “Kerala Jews” popularly known as“Cochin Jews” are the most ancient followed by the “Bene Israel” of Maharashtra and the “Baghdadi Jews” of West Bengal. Recently two more communities have claimed Jewish ancestry viz. “Bene Menasheh” (1970s) from North East India and “Bene Ephraim or Telugu Jews” (1980s) from Andhra Pradesh. A small population of Jews had migrated to India during the Mughal, Portuguese, Dutch, French and British rule as well. Perhaps the Jewish refugees from Hitler’s Anti-Semitic Europe were the last Jews to arrive India. In other words, Jews weren’t a single emigration to India. At different times they arrived and settled peacefully in India where they never experienced any anti-Semitism from the native Indian community. Although Jews supposedly reached Kerala as early as 1st century AD, there were many different waves of emigrations later as well. Gradually, Jews of Kerala became organized into three distinct groups, but the different communities interacted very less among themselves. 1) Malabari Jews: the largest and most ancient group considered to have arrived in India as merchants during the period of King Solomon (1000 BC). 2). ‘Paradesi’ (foreigner) Jews: the second largest and recent group (from 16th century onwards) who migrated mainly from Egypt, Iraq, Syria, Iran, Spain and Germany. 3). ‘Meshuhararim’ (released): the smallest group believed to be the slaves held by both Malabari and Paradesi communities who were converted to Judaism and later on released from their status as slaves. The Malabari Jews were called the ‘Black Jews’, the Meshuhararim-the ‘Brown Jews’ and the ‘Paradesi’-the ‘White Jews’-terms considered derogatory and racist today. The arguments on who came first and who are more pure were often fought vehemently and each sect defended their claims. The Jewish population of Kerala numbered 2,400 at the height of their “mass” emigration to Israel in 1954. Today (2011), less than 40 Jews remain in Kerala-9 Paradesi Jews comprising of 6 women and 3 men; and less than 30 Malabari Jews.

In a strong caste-based Indian society, fair skinned Paradesi Jews managed to win a privileged position although they were a minority and newly arrived. Their European background, influence and wealth managed to push the majority of relatively poor Malabar Jews into an inferior position in colonial India. Unfortunately, even today for many in the west and to a great extent in India too, the existence of Kerala’s ancient Malabari Jewish community and their heritage is far unknown. The famous Paradesi Synagogue in Cochin is perhaps the only monument that comes into the mind of many as far as Judaism in Kerala is concerned. Often mistakenly acclaimed to be the oldest (built 1568) synagogue in British Commonwealth, the Paradesi Synagogue however, is the only functional one in Kerala today (2011). Did the Jewish community of Kerala leave anything more than this famed synagogue? The answer is a big yes. Judaism in Kerala is not only about the Paradesi Jews of Cochin and their synagogue in Mattanchery. In fact, the Malabari Jews have seven synagogues and six cemeteries, and several aretfacts and monuments that are also part of Kerala’s rich Jewish heritage! This does not include the few existing Jewish homes and the many earlier Jewish residences converted into non-Jewish owned business buildings and private villas.

This blog will be an attempt to help people both inside and outside India to locate and learn about the known Jewish monuments of Kerala, that include synagogues, cemeteries and former Jewish residences. It will be equally pictorial and textual in format. One of the objectives of this blog is to help people in identifying all known Jewish monuments of Kerala through maps and photographs. Their left out synagogues and cemeteries are the physical landmarks that still stand in testimony to the vibrant and glorious heritage of Jews who claim at least 2000 years of strong and continuous bond with India. The big question is about the accessibility and identification of these monuments. Some of the cemeteries for example are so overgrown with weeds and turned into garbage dumping yards that even the locals have no clue about their existence. Most of the sites have no sign boards or maps available to pin point their exact location. The information from internet and other sources are also limited or at times misinformed when locating the monuments are concerned. I will try to get as many photographs as needed to help people understand these monuments and the blog will not be confined to the heritage of Paradesi Jews alone. For those synagogues that are disputed properties or lie in ruined state and are not accessible for the public I will only add photographs of the exterior. Some of the original Jewish artifacts from Kerala are preserved in Israel and what left here are the duplicates. In such cases, I will trace and append online links having the original photographs. Regarding the dates associated with the history of ‘Kerala Jews’, I have tried to incorporate the most popular views and need not always be the scholarly accepted ones. I shall be much glad if any one can contribute or provide details of additional monuments, sites or artifacts you think can be classified as part of Jewish heritage of Kerala.

Being also a photoblog, I will be concentrating more on the photographs taken from various Jewish monuments in Kerala. Not many sites are available online that go deep into the structural and historic details of these heritage units with photographs. However, we are lucky to have a few very enlightening resources. The“Friends of Kerala Synagogues 2011”(Prof. Jay A. Waronker, USA; Prof. Shalva Weil, Israel; Marian Scheuer Sofaer, USA; Isaac Sam, India and Tirza Muttath Lavi, Israel) maintain an excellent site on the synagogues of Kerala. I strongly recommend anyone interested in ‘Jewish synagogues of Kerala’ to go through their highly informative links. Whenever, I refer to their site, it will be acknowledged as ‘www.cochinsyn.com’. The other very important site I recommend is the beautiful photo collection by Jono David in his Ha Chayim Ha Yehudim Jewish Photo Library’. He has photographs from many Jewish monuments of India. Although he has got wrong one of the synagogues (Mattancherry Kadavumbagam Synagogue) the site has largely helped me to identify the Jewish cemeteries in Kerala.

JEWISH MONUMENTS & ARTIFACTS OF KERALA

The most important Jewish heritage structures in Kerala are the synagogues (Juda Palli in Malayalam), cemeteries and residences.

A. Synagogues

Today, there are 35 synagogues in India and 7 of them are in Kerala. The architectural style of Kerala synagogues differs from those in the west. These synagogues are strongly influenced from earlier Hindu religious buildings on its design and construction. They are characterized by high slope roofs, thick laterite-stoned walls, large windows and doors, balcony and wood-carved ceilings. A Kerala synagogue consists of a ‘Gate House’ at the entrance that leads through a Breezeway to the Synagogue Complex. The synagogue complex is made of a fully enclosed Azara or Anteroom and a double-storeyed sanctuary-the main prayer hall. Inside a typical double-storeyed sanctuary of a ‘Kerala Synagogue’ are:

1) A Tebah/Bimah: Located at the center of the sanctuary, Tebah is usually an elevated wooden platform or pulpit from which Torah, the holy book of Jews is read. 2) A Heichal (Ark): Represents the altar. It is a chest or cupboard in the synagogue where the Torah scrolls are kept. It is usually carved intricately and painted/gilded with teak wood. Unlike in the European Synagogues, where the ark is placed on the eastern wall, the synagogues in Kerala have the arks on the western wall facing Jerusalem. 3) A Balcony/Second Tebah: It is unique to the synagogues of Kerala. The balcony has two portions one for men and the other for ladies. Women’s seating area is placed directly above the azara. 4) A Staircase: Leads to the balcony and is generally spiral in shape and made of wood. At times there are two staircases, one for men from the main hall inside the synagogue and the other for the ladies from a staircase room outside the synagogue; 5) A Jewish School: Is actually a classroom for Jewish children usually located behind the women’s section on the first floor.

B. Cemeteries

Resting place of ancestors means a lot to the Jewish community. Sometimes they even carried tombstones from their old settlements while migrating to a newer place. The oldest Jewish tomb in India (dated 1269 AD) preserved in front of Chendamangalam synagogue is one such transferred from Kodungallur. Unlike Christian tombs in Kerala with Malayalam and English engravings, the Jewish graves have mostly Hebrew inscriptions. The Jewish year can be converted into modern Gregorian date if one can read the Hebrew letters. ‘Reading Hebrew Tombstones’ is an interesting site to read the Jewish tombs.

C. Jewish Residences

Today, most of the early Jewish homes sold to non-Jews are substantially modified or refurbished. However, there are a few features that still make them identifiable. Sometimes you can trace Jewish symbols like Menorah (candlestick) and Magen David (Star of David) on the walls, windows and roof tops. For example, a few residences in Mattancherry still maintain the Star of David (Magen David) despite being converted into shops or warehouses. The best way to locate the home of a residing Jew is to look for the Mezuzah on the door post. Nailed to the doorpost of a Jewish home, Mezuzah is a small container made of wood, plastic or metal having a piece of parchment with the most important words from the Jewish Holy Book, Torah. It is customary among religious Jews to touch the mezuzah on entering or leaving the home. A few homes in the Synagogue Lane of Mattancherry with mezuzah are the residences of the remaining 9 Paradesi Jews.

The Jewish monuments and artifacts I will be discussing in this blog are:

I Synagogues

1. Pardesi Synagogue, Mattancherry (1568)

2. Kadavumbagam Synagogue, Mattancherry (1130 or 1539)

3. Thekkumbagam Synagogue, Mattancherry (1647, only the building site known)

4. Kadavumbagam Synagogue, Ernakulam (1200)

5. Thekkumbagam Synagogue, Ernakulam (1200 or 1580))

6. Paravur Synagogue (750 or 1164 or 1616)

7. Mala Synagogue (1400 or 1597)

8. Chendamangalam Synagogue (1420 or 1614)

(The various speculated dates of establishment in parenthesis are taken from www.cochinsyn.com, coutesy Prof. Jay A. Waronker)

II Cemeteries

1. Pardesi Jewish Cemetery, Mattancherry

2. Malabari Jewish Cemetery, Mattancherry

3. Old Jewish Cemetery, Ernakulam

4. New Jewish Cemetery, Ernakulam

5. Paravur Jewish Cemetery

6. Mala Jewish Cemetery

7. Chendamangalam Jewish Cemetery

III Jew Streets

1. Jew Street Mattancherry (Jewish residences with Mezuzah and Magen David)

2. Jew Steet, Ernakulam (today all shops in non-Jewish hands)

3. Jew Street, Paravur (Twin Pillars)

4. Jew Street, Mala (Gate House and Breezeway of synagogue turned into shops)

5. Jew Street, Chendamangalam (used to be a Jewish Market or Judakambolam)

6. Jew Street, Calicut (identified in July 2011 as Jootha (Jew) Bazar)

IV Other Monuments & Artifacts

1. Tomb of Sarah (1269 AD), Chendamangalam

2. Kochangadi Synagogue Corner-stone, Mattancherry

3. Jewish Children’s Play Ground, Mattancherry

4. Clock-Tower, Mattancherry

5. Sarah Cohen’s Embroidery Shop, Mattancherry

6. Jew Hill/Judakunnu/Jewish Bazar, Palayur

7. Jew Tank/Judakkulam, Madayi

8. Koder House, Fort Kochi

9. Grand Residencia, Fort Kochi

10. Jewish Summer Resorts, Aluva

11. Jewish Copper Plates, Mattancherry

12. Syrian Copper Plates, Kollam

13. Torah Finial, Palayur

V Lost Jewish Colonies

1. Kodungallur (Thrissur)

2. Palayur (Thrissur)

3. Pullut (Thrissur)

4. Kunnamkulam (Thrissur)

5. Saudhi (Ernakulam)

6. Tir-tur (Ernakulam)

7. Fort Kochi (Ernakulam)

8. Chaliyam (Kozhikode)

5. Pantalayani Kollam (Kozhikode)

9. Thekkepuram (Kozhikkode)

10. Muttam (Alappuzha)

11. Kayamkulam (Alappuzha)

12. Dharmadom (Kannur)

13. Madayi (Kannur)

14. Quilon (Kollam)

15. Pathirikunnu, Krishnagiri (Waynad)

16. Anchuthengu (Thiruvananthapuram)