Paravur Jewish Cemetery. The yellow box marks the area of the new graves [N1, N2 and N3] discovered. The modern graves are marked 1, 2 and 3.I have been to the Jewish Cemetery in North Paravur a couple of times, but never made an attempt to enter the compound as it is always found locked and heavily overgrown. Moreover, the cemetery is known to have only three modern graves [all from the late 20th century]. Despite the overgrowth, these graves are properly visible from outside and there was no need to enter inside risking one's safety. The graves belong to [from the entrance to right side]: 1] Abraham Kadavil, d. 1978, age 74; 2] Shemvun Hai, son of Meir, d. 1979, age 93; and 3-Ebyathar Sabat, son of Elijah, d. 1995. The last time I was at the cemetery was in November, 2019. I have uploaded a detailed report on the cemetery and the graves inside with several photographs in my blog HERE.
Recently, I received a tip from Yehuda Pava who was visiting Kerala for the first time from Israel. He found the Paravur cemetery unlocked, freshly cleaned-up, and more importantly with additional graves and a Hebrew tombstone deeply buried underground! This was new information to me as I have not come across any reports suggesting more than 3 graves in the current cemetery. The cemetery is usually covered with a thick carpet of vegetation, so it was not easy to examine the structures hidden beneath the overgrowth.
Upon reaching the site, we were lucky to find the cemetery not only open and cleared out of the dense vegetation, but also the leftover plant debris and residues burnt. The whole plot was therefore clean enough to easily detect any structural elements protruding outside the ground level. There were clear traces of laterite stone outlines for three graves [see N1, N2 and N3] between the tombs of Shemvun [2] and Ebyathar [3].
New graves [N1, N2 and N3] identified in the Paravur Jewish Cemetery

The incomplete inscription on the gravestone of Sarah bat Elijahu [N1]
The grave [N1] immediately after the tomb of Shemvun [2] has a granite tombstone buried deeply under the ground facing the west. We managed to retrieve the first 4 Hebrew lines:
הציון הלז
של מרת שרה בת
כה"ר הגביר אליהו
נ"ע שנפטרה
This can be translated as “This marker belongs to Sarah, daughter of honored respectable Rabbi Elijahu [Elijah], who was deceased on….” The details of of her burial date remains concealed below the ground and it would require the tombstone to be pulled outside completely. Looking at the texture of the granite and the style of the Hebrew engravings, there is no doubt that the grave is much older than the late 20th century funerary monuments. The curved tombstone apex resembles the headstone of Yoseph Abraham [d. 1882] displayed in the courtyard of the Paravur synagogue. As of now, I cannot confirm if the two tombstones kept at the Paravur synagogue’s courtyard were brought from the Paravur Jewish cemetery. One of the staffs at the Paravur synagogue however says that they were introduced from Chendamangalam! The other two graves [see N2 and N3] have no tombstones [probably lost or caved-in], but their borders are clearly marked with the unplastered laterite stones

There are no visible traces of other graves or tombstones in the cemetery, but I believe more could be hidden beneath the current ground level. The discovery of these graves at least confirms that the present Jewish cemetery in Paravur is much older, and has burials that can be dated certainly before the late 20th century. The narrow long rectangular plot sharing boundary with cemetery is also cleared out of vegetation and remains empty. Most probably, it too was part of the original Jewish cemetery, but later sold out after the Paravur Jews left India.
Tombstones of the late 20th century graves in the cemetery
1] Abraham Kadavil, d. 1978, age 74; 2] Shemvun Hai, son of Meir, d. 1979, age 93; and 3-Ebyathar Sabat, son of Elijah, d. 1995.
Tombstones displayed in the Paravur Synagogue Courtyard
1] Left- Yosef Abraham [1882] and 2] Right-Beniya Elyahu
The plot adjacent to the Jewish Cemetery, Paravur
All photographs uploaded in this post were taken on February, 2026.

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