Wednesday 22 August 2012

CITED SOURCES-thanks

Adv. Prem Doss Swami Doss Yehudi. The Shingly Hebrews. Trivandrum: Sachethana, 2000.
Hunt, W. S. The Anglican Church in Travancore and Cochin 1816-1916. London, 1920.
Johnson, Barbara C. Jewish Women’s Songs from Kerala: Oh Lovely Parrot. Jerusalem: Jewish Music Research Centre, 2004.
Joshua, Isaac. The Synagogues of Kerala, unpublished, 1988.
Sassoon, David. Ohel David. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1932.
Waronker, Jay. Interview of Kerala office of the Department of Archeology staff, Trivandrum Kerala, 2005.
Weil, Shalva and Waronker, Jay. The Chendamangalam Synagogue: A Jewish Community in a Kerala Village, Kochi: not formally published, 2006.
Sassoon, David. Ohel David. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1932.
Waronker, Jay. Interviews of Elias “Babu” Josephai, Ernakulam India, 2007 and 2009.
Johnson, Barbara C. and Daniel, Ruby.  Ruby of Cochin:  An Indian Jewish Woman Remembers.  Philadelphia and
Jerusalem:  The Jewish Publication Society, 1995.
Joshua, Isaac.  The Synagogues of Kerala 70 CE to 1988, unpublished, 1988.
Segal, J. B.  The History of the Jews of Cochin.  London:  Vallentine Mitchell, 1993.
Spalak, Orpha.  The Jews of India: A Story of Three Communities.  Jerusalem:   The Israel Museum, 1995.
Adv. Prem Doss Swami Doss Yehudi.  The Shingly Hebrews.  Trivandrum:  Sachethana, 2000.
Sassoon, David.  Ohel David.  Oxford:  Oxford University Press, 1932.
Johnson, Barbara C. and Daniel, Ruby.  Ruby of Cochin:  An Indian Jewish Woman Remembers.  Philadelphia and
Jerusalem:  The Jewish Publication Society, 1995.
Salem, A. B.  Jew Town Synagogue.  Cochin, 1929 and Haifa:  Eliya Ben Eliavoo – Beit Eliahu V’leah, 1972.
Weil, Shalva.  India’s Jewish Heritage:  Ritual, Art, and Life-Cycle.  Mumbai:  Marg Publication, 2002/2006.
Adv. Prem Doss Swami Doss Yehudi.  The Shingly Hebrews.  Trivandrum:  Sachethana, 2000.
Hunt, W. S.  The Anglican Church in Travancore and Cochin 1816-1916.  London, 1920.
Johnson, Barbara C. and Daniel, Ruby.  Ruby of Cochin:  An Indian Jewish Woman Remembers.  Philadelphia and Jerusalem:  The Jewish Publication Society, 1995.
Sassoon, David.  Ohel David.  Oxford:  Oxford University Press, 1932.
Johnson, Barbara C. and Daniel, Ruby.  Ruby of Cochin:  An Indian Jewish Woman Remembers.  Philadelphia and
Jerusalem:  The Jewish Publication Society, 1995.
Joshua, Isaac.  The Synagogues of Kerala 70 CE to 1988, unpublished, 1988.
Sassoon, David.  Ohel David.  Oxford:  Oxford University Press, 1932.
Waronker, Jay.  Interview of Isaac Joshua, Ernakulam Kerala, 2009.
Charls Varghese Edattukaran , Mala

Lost Kerala Synagogues

According to local narratives, the earliest Jewish settlements in Kerala were located at Cranganore, Palur, Pulut, and Madai. In time, due to persecution first by the Moors in the twelfth century and later by the Portuguese with the Moors in the sixteenth century, or because of natural disasters, the Jews living in these early settlements shifted to more secure places a short distance to the south, where they were offered relative protection by the Rajah of Cochin. In the process, the earliest synagogues were abandoned and lost, and the next generation of buildings was built. None of these synagogues survives, yet through narratives and the Jewish folksongs sung by the women in Malayalam, some things are known about them.

The first synagogue built in the Cochin region predated the resettlement of the Kerala Jews en bloc in the sixteenth century as a result of Portuguese aggression. Dating from 1344 and attributed to Joseph Azar, it was located in a village called Kochangadi (near Mattancherry), now a part of the city of Kochi. It was most likely built when the Jews abandoned an area in or around Cranganore after the Perriyar River flooded. This synagogue in Kochangadi was apparently razed by the army of Tipu Sultan during the Second Anglo-Mysore War in the 1780s. The building was never rebuilt, and the Jewish community is thought to have moved to nearby Kochi no later than 1795. They carried with them the inscription stone verifying the fourteenth century date of construction and placed it in the Kadavumbagam Synagogue in Mattancherry. Today it can be found inset in the east wall of the courtyard of the Paradesi Synagogue in Mattancherry.

Beginning in the fourteenth century and continuing into the mid-1800s, the Kerala Jews, according to local narratives, also built small synagogues at Muttam, Tir-Tur, Saudi (or Southi), Palur, and in Kochi’s Fort district. A short distance to the north of Kochangadi and not far from Allepey to the south – a place known to tourists for its picturesque backwater boat tours – is Muttam, a village where a small enclave of Jews once existed. The settlement, located midway between Uppala and Kumbala in Kasaragod district, gets its name, “_____,” from the Malayalam phrase meaning “front of the house which is spread with mud.” However, the small Jewish community of Muttam seems to have been so persecuted by the armies of Tipu Sultan in the late eighteenth century that they were never able to recover, and the synagogue was ultimately closed.

The synagogue at Palur, a village south of Ernakkulam in the eastern part of Trichur district, was destroyed long ago, yet it is mentioned by the Dutch Jewish traveler Pereya de Paiva during his travels to the area in 1685. Palur’s synagogue is also referenced in a Jewish Malayalam folksong. The song, sung only by the women, reveals that the first Jews arrived in Palur, and theylater fled to Cranganore. Some of the Palur Jews found peace only when they came to Kochi, where the rajah befriended and protected them. Perhaps the families who had formed the Kochangadi Synagogue in 1344 had come from Palur after that colony had been destroyed. There is a Sefer Torah case ( case or rinom??) rimon (ornament) from the Palur Synagogue that can be found today in the synagogue in Nevatim, near Be’erSheva, Israel where some Kerala Jews resettled in the 1950s and currently have a museum about their cultural heritage.

Just to the northwest of Kochi, on a small island in the bay called Tir-Tur that was once owned by a wealthy Paradesi trader by the name of Ezekiel Rahabi, was the site of another Kerala synagogue. It was built in 1750 or 1756 for the few dozen Jewish families living there. The Rahabi Family had fields on the island, which they used during the summer months as a retreat. According to local narrative, Rahabi settled ten Jewish families there to make sure that there was a minyan (quorum), although the congregation could have been larger. It had closed by 1761, when the Jews left for Kochi and other towns. Another source claims that the Tir-Tur Synagogue was abandoned because the Jews were fleeing from Tipu Sultan, with the result thatthe small congregation left the island. At that point the building was sold to the Chief Minister of Cochin.

Another Kerala synagogue dating from 1514 once existed at Saudi, which is the part of current-day Kochi located to the most northerly point of the city’s mainland “finger” peninsula. This building existed until 1556, yet services were rarely held there.

At one time a synagogue, the Tekkumbagam, stood in the Mattancherry area of Kochi on Synagogue Lane in Jew Town, very near the Paradesi Synagogue on the same, or west side of the street. A former leader of the Paradesi Jews, S. I. Hallegua, claimed (wrote?) that construction of the synagogue began in 1647 during Portuguese colonial rule and was completed by the Mudaliyar (high leader of Kerala Jews) Jacob Castiel in 1687 on property owned by Paradesi Jews. It is unclear whether the building was ever altered or renovated during its long history., It was in continuous use for about three hundred years. In 1955, most of the congregation immigrated to Israel,During Jewish holidays and life-cycle events such as Shimhat Torah and wedding ceremonies, all the Jews living in Jew Town, from both the Malabari and Paradesi communities visited the Tekkumbagam Synagogue as well as the two other synagogues in Jew Town, the Paradesi and Kadavumbagam.

When the Tekkumbagam Synagogue congregation left India for Israel, the propertywas turned over to the Paradesi community in Jew Town. The former synagogue sat for some time, and was eventually purchased by a Paradesi Jew. Despite community misgivings about tearing down a building that once served a religious function, a perceived bad omen among many Indians, it was demolished to make room for a private residence. Today the two storyhouse with its white exterior stands unoccupied.

At Fort Cochin, Jews known in the community as Meshuhrarim (the Hebrew word means “freed people”, and it is understood to refer to freed or converted slaves), , are believed to have initiated the building of a Jewish prayer hall in 1848. This was in response to their failed effort to secure equal rights and standing within the Paradesi community. As an act of protest, they formally separated and organized their own congregation. Its leaders, along with others, are said to have come down with the plague some time thereafter, so the building remained incomplete, and religious services were never held there. After these deaths, the remaining community are said to have returned to their former synagogue in Mattancherry.

Tekkumbagam Synagogue, Ernakulam




LOCATION

Kerala’s Malabari Jews have lived in Ernakulam on the mainland of Kochi for centuries. While today there are only a handful of them still residing in this area of the city as a result of the community’s mass immigration to Israel beginning in the mid-1950s, they were once an integral part of Ernakulam.  Over the years, the productive and hard-working Malabari Jews pursued a number of professional occupations and trades. Along with fishing and petty trading, many were merchants who ran small private businesses along the narrow and congested streets in the market area, and these shop owners devised their own secret pricing code that incorporated Hebrew. The Jews in Ernakulam for years maintained two synagogues and a religious school.

Today these synagogues, the Kadavumbagam and Tekkumbagam, are no longer functioning, yet they still stand as testament to the area’s once vibrant Jewish presence. They were built in the heart of the market district within a few minutes’ walk of one another. Standing on the north side of Jew Street between Market Road and Broadway and just to the west of a landmark mosque, local tradition relates that the Tekkumbagam Synagogue gets its name from an earlier Jewish house of prayer built in Cranganore.  That synagogue was believed to have been located on the southern edge of town – tek referring to south and bagam meaning side in the local Malayalam language.

HISTORY

A Malabari Jewish narrative goes that the Tekkumbagam Synagogue was constructed in 1200 after some of the community, seen as competitors in the lucrative spice industry, were forced out of Cranganore in 1154 by the powerful Moors. They settled in Ernakulam since the Rajah of Cochin offered them friendship and relative protection (Joshua:  1). A sign posted a few decades ago by the Association of Kerala Jews over the entrance to the synagogue property makes claim to this early thirteenth century date. Over the years, the story continues, the synagogue was periodically rebuilt.  Another narrative contends that during the time of the brutal Portuguese conquest of Kerala in the mid-sixteenth century, the Jews living in and around Cranganore were persecuted and some perhaps even hung. The Rajah of Cochin, a tolerant and sympathetic man, intervened as best he could to defend the Malabari Jewish community which sought safe haven in Ernakulam. In appreciation, according to this legend, the Jews asked the Rajah what they could do in return for him, and he replied that he wanted a bell. Some of the Jews broke into the Portuguese headquarters at night and stole its large bell.  It was brought to the Rajah’s palace in Mattancherry and quietly left outside on its grounds.  The next morning, the Rajah woke up to find the bell, and the Jews became known as the “bell thieves.” As a token of his appreciation, the Rajah gave the Jews land for building in the center of Ernakulam. Soon thereafter, a synagogue was built in 1580 (Sassoon:  577).

Whether it was this late sixteenth century building or a later one that was rebuilt on the same site, a small synagogue was replaced in the 1930s to make room for the extant structure. Despite dating to this period of international modern architectural influences, the Tekkumbagam Synagogue was constructed in a traditional way faithful to the local vernacular genre. 
The Tekkumbagam Synagogue’s history from the late sixteenth into the modern era may be hazy, but certain things about it are known. A narrative reveals that the synagogue was modeled after the one in Parur, a building that was damaged and rebuilt many times, leaving the specific precedent unclear. One old Malabari Jewish folksong sung by the women of the community in Malayalam focuses on the architecture of Tekkumbagam Synagogue. Although the date of its composition is not known, the architectural details described in the song are of the synagogue that was the immediate predecessor of the current building. The black floors that existed in the old Tekkumbagam Synagogue, for example, were a distinctive feature of traditional Kerala architecture. (Johnson:  45). These floors, used only in special applications such as in rooms of the Rajah of Cochin’s Dutch Palace in Mattancherry, looked like polished black marble, but were a mixture of burned coconut shells, charcoal, lime, sugar cane or other plant juices, and egg whites.  

Soft sand once carpeted the outdoor space surrounding the synagogue and framed by property walls. The folksong about the synagogue mentions a decorated threshold of polished granite stone. The hard stone is a significant material in Kerala architecture since it has always been comparatively rare to the region and difficult to quarry. It was thus relegated to key parts of important buildings such as palaces and temples.   The granite would be used at the basement to make use of its strength and durability, and on walking and touching surfaces to maintain the highest level of cleanliness. Since purity is a key element of the Hindu religion, the hardness of the granite made these contact areas more resistant to contamination. That granite was used at the threshold of Tekkumbagam Synagogue is also noteworthy since it marked a physical boundary between the contaminated and profane world on the outside with its dirt roads and the more clean and sacred zone within. Although the granite did not continue into the courtyard space of the synagogue, another special material was used. A fine, pure, and prized charol sand taken from the local river bed was spread over the courtyard space, thus creating a distinct sense of place (Johnson:  44; Joshaua, interview by author, Ernakulam Kerala, 2009).

In the mid 1930s, the Kadavumbagam Jewish community decided that the synagogue at that time, in unstable condition and deteriorated, needed to be completely rebuilt, and a larger building was needed. The new sanctuary building as planned was to be the largest of synagogues in Kerala. Some work on the project began in1936 or slightly later, yet construction was halted in 1939 when word of Hitler’s invasions in Europe reached Kochi.  There was even concern that the city would be bombed during World War II, and some Jews left Ernakulam temporarily for outlying small communities where fellow Malabari Jews resided. Construction was never resumed in the period that followed, due to social and political changes. A year after Indian Independence in 1947, the State of Israel was established, and Malabari Jews began to leave Kerala for Israel by 1955.  With its population in decline, the remaining community determined that there was no need to complete the final phases of the project, which lacked the finished trim work, fabrication of the intended heckal and tebah, certain intended liturgical fittings and furnishings, and an exterior stair to the women’s gallery.  Enough of the work had been completed, however, that it could be used by the diminished congregation. 

It is possible that the pre-1939 Tekkumbagam Synagogue had a gatehouse and connecting breezeway later were part of a larger compound which included more land to the east. Although today there is a wall to that end of the Tekkumbagam Synagogue’s courtyard, and just beyond is non-synagogue-owned land and buildings, the congregational property may have extended farther originally. The synagogue could have been approached through some type of north-south connecting path linked to the main east-west roads, in a more traditional way via a gatehouse and connecting breezeway.  While the exact architectural and planning details of any earlier building configuration – gatehouse, breezeway, and sanctuary – will unlikely be confirmed, this synagogue model had been in place in Kerala for so long that it seems probable that the old Tekkumbagam Synagogue had followed it.

The building currently standing follows the usual pattern for Keralan synagogues: an azara, or anteroom followed by the large double height prayer space on the ground floor, and a balcony with second tebah on the upper level that is adjacent to the women’s seating area placed directed above the azara. Since an intended exterior stair leading up to the women’s seating area was never realized, Tekkumbagam Synagogue has two interior stairways:  one from the prayer space to the balcony, and another from the azara to the women’s area directly above

CURRENT STATUS

The Tekkumbagam Synagogue, owned by the Association of Kerala Jews, has been closed as a synagogue for the past decades, although in fairly recent years it served as a gathering hall for community events. Today it stands mostly unused behind locked gates, and access to the building needs to be prearranged through the Association of Kerala Jews. To contact them, speak to the caretaker of the nearby Kadavumbagam Synagogue, Elias “Babu” Josephai.

The yellow building, with some delicate woodwork along its roof lines, is identified by a heritage plaque at the street installed by “The Friends of Kerala Synagogues” in 2009. Once inside the synagogue compound, caution should be taken when walking around the overgrown grounds, which includes a well and second gate and passage opposite the one visitors use

Parur Synagogue




LOCATION

Parur is a typical low-rise Kerala small town with a population of just under 40,000 located eighteen miles (twenty six km) north of Ernakulam, twenty six miles (forty one km) to the north of Mattancherry, a few miles to the southeast of Cranganore, and two miles (three km) from the synagogue in Chendamangalam just to the north. The town can be reached via an easy drive from Kochi along the narrow and busy north-south main road (#14) linking a string of towns and villages throughout the length of Kerala.  The most popular option for tourists is to hire a car and driver to get there, although there is excellent, frequent, and inexpensive public bus service from the station in Ernakulam directly to the center of Parur.  From there, it is possible to hire an auto-rickshaw outside the station to get to the synagogue within a few minutes or, with time permitting, to walk.  Locals can direct you to Jew Town.  

In Parur, a visitor approaches the synagogue from Jews Street, which is today a minor and crudely paved straight road that runs north-south. This quiet street is located a short distance from the center of town to the southeast where the town hall, government buildings, rows of small shops and businesses, and bus terminal are located. The length of Jews Street can be walked in a few minutes, and is today lined with one to two-story homes and a few small businesses. Many of these structures are surrounded by dense ground coverage and towering trees.  In recent decades, the composition of buildings along this street has changed. Many of the pre-twentieth century traditional Kerala structures have been pulled down, forever altering the established vernacular aesthetic of historic Jew Street.  A handful of lots now sit empty or have been replaced with nondescript modern houses and small commercial structures that are constructed of concrete and are flat roofed. 

Set on both sides of Jew Street at the south end, or the direction approached from the town center, is a pair of cylindrical ceremonial posts made of chunam (polished lime plaster) over local laterite stone with conical tops. These columns, set on plinths, frame the road and announce the beginning of Jew Town. A few years ago the one to the west was damaged, and its pieces were strewn about or lost, although a plan to have it rebuilt was carried out in 2010. The opposite boundary of Jews Street dead ends at a picturesque tree lined canal, which was once just east of a stop on an active jetty.  For years, small boats ferried passengers and all sorts of wares to and from Jew Town and the adjacent market just to the west, but the area is now far quieter.  These physical end points – the twin pillars and waterway – for years defined Jew Town not as a ghetto but a small and thriving neighborhood known to and recognized by the local Hindu, Jain, Muslim, and Christian communities.

HISTORY

Parur, the largest of Kerala’s synagogue compounds and is the most architecturally distinctive of the seven extant buildings, is truly worthy of a visit from Kochi. In the mid-1950s, most of the congregation immigrated to Israel, and the synagogue has not been an active place of worship since mid-1970s.  The building and property were not adequately maintained for the next thirty years, yet it represents the most complete and elaborate example of a Jewish house of prayer incorporating the many influences of building design and construction from this region of India. As its architecture was also shaped by various Jewish building traditions, a distinct and remarkable style of synagogue architecture can be experienced at Parur. 

According to the late twentieth century writings of the Dravidian Judaist historian Adv. Prem Doss Swami Doss Yehudi, Parur is home to one of the earliest enclaves of Jews in Kerala, settled many centuries ago by a small group of families. Yehudi believes that first synagogue may have been built in 750, a particularly early date that has not been substantiated, and then rebuilt in 1164 after the first building was destroyed (Yehudi: 90). This mid-twelfth century date, following the period of Moorish persecution of the Jews in Cranganore and their eventual shift south to Parur where they could be afforded relatively protection by the tolerant Rajah of Cochin, is the one David Solomon Sassoon supports in his documentation on Kerala’s synagogues (Sassoon:  578). As a result of Sassoon’s work, the 1164 date is the one commonly mentioned in later literature on the Kerala Jews, including by J. B. Segal, a notable historian of the Kerala Jews (Segal:  12).  This structure fell into disrepair, and another was erected on the same site in 1616 according to its building inscription, a rectangular stone slab with Hebrew text that can still be seen inset in one of the exterior walls within the synagogue compound. Due to the difficulty of the inscription text, some sources use the date 1614, while others indicate it was 1621.
According to local narratives, it is believed that the ner tamid (the light that always burns) once hanging near the heckal (ark) in the 1164 synagogue was transferred to the seventeenth-century building.  According to this legend, the Jews of Parur were so rich and proud that they offered incense on a local altar in the public market immediately to the west of the synagogue. For this act of hubris, since their behavior seemed to recall a religious ceremony only reserved to the ancient Temple in Jerusalem, they were stricken with the plague. Their synagogue fell into disuse, and the ner tamid was hung out on the street as a sign of contrition. It was seen there nearly two hundred years later by an English observer (Segal:  12).  
Prem Doss Swami Doss Yehudi recounts the same folk tale, adding the detail that the altar of incense placed by the Parur Jews in the street square had the same dimensions as one at the ancient Temple. Yet their effort to burn incense was thwarted, and the community was devastated by a pestilence. The onslaught was so sudden that it was interpreted as a punishment from heaven for their attempt to mimic or belittle the sacred rites of the Temple (Yehudi:  89). Ruby Daniel, a Cochin Jew born in Kerala in 1912, recalled a different version of this legend. According to Daniel, when she was young there were still a few wealthy Jewish families living in Parur. The town had a thriving Jewish community living in some blocks of the town, but at one point back in history there was a great epidemic that could not be stopped.  The rabbanim, or men versed in Jewish law, were so bold that they set out to burn ketoret, or incense, as the Israelites did in the wilderness of Sinai when they were affected by an epidemic.  Yet the rabbanim could not obtain, or they were unclear about all the necessary ingredients mentioned for this ritual in the Hebrew Bible, so they used whatever was locally available. As soon as the incense was lit, hundreds of people died. They should have heeded the warning which is read twice every morning in the Shaharit service:  “If any ingredient is missing, it will be death.” (Johnson:  127)

David Yaacov (Jacob) Castiel, the fourth mudaliyar (community leader) of the Kerala Jews, was responsible for bringing the rebuilding of the Parur Synagogue to fruition in 1616. This is confirmed by the building’s Hebrew dedicatory inscription. According to a local Jewish song in Malayalam written by an anonymous Jewish poet to honor the synagogue, a fire damaged the building around 1662, and it was refurbished (Segal:  36). This blaze was likely set by the Portuguese since they by then had laid claim to this part of Kerala and burned Paradesi Synagogue in Mattancherry about the same time. For more than one hundred and twenty years, the renovated synagogue served the congregation until they experienced another dark period.  When Tipu Sultan from Mysore and his armies invaded South Malabar in 1783 during the Second Mysore War and took possession of the region, he aggressively and ruthlessly promoted the rise of Muslim rule in South India. Over the next seven years, the fanatical Tipu Sultan was responsible for the destruction of literally thousands of non-Muslim religious buildings, which included Hindu and Jain temples, churches, and synagogues. He also tortured and forced the conversion of followers outside his faith. He killed those that resisted or refused to convert. It was during this period that the Parur Synagogue was attacked and heavily damaged, and some of its members were murdered (Johnson:  127).  
A Church of England missionary Rev. Thomas Dawson, stationed in Cochin beginning in 1817, wrote about the Jews in Kerala.  He visited Parur and its synagogue during his tenure in the area.   His observations were accounted by W. S. Hunt:
"The chief of Mr. Dawson's interests was evidently the Jews.  Their condition was calculated to excite compassion.  Recently decimated by smallpox, and, only a few years before, the victims of Tipu's ferocity, they were despised by the rest of the community and were, for the most part, ignorant and degraded.  He visited each place in which they lived.  At Parur he found them using the porch of their synagogue for their services, the rest of the building having been destroyed by Tipu; at Mala and Chankotta their synagogues were in ruins from the same cause.  He found that the White Jews had no dealings with the Black Jews and that all alike were separated form the Gentiles.  He computed their strength in 1529 and they had seven synagogues." (Hunt:  153)
Dawson’s observation seems to confirm that even after the passing of more than a quarter of a century the synagogue had yet to be rebuilt or repaired. By 1790, the Third Mysore War marked the doom of Tipu Sultan.  He had to surrender his territories one by one, and by 1792 he ceded the kingdom of Malabar to the British authorities. Once this formidable menace to the Jews of Parur had been wiped out, as the British were tolerant of the Kerala Jewish community, it is a mystery why the synagogue took so long to rebuild. The Parur Jewish community seems to have been generally prosperous before Tipu Sultan’s arrival, so it might have been expected to revive again after his defeat.Yet during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the Parur Jewish community had declined in numbers and became less prosperous. Dawson’s particularly bleak account asserts that they had undergone years of hardship and health issues, and that in the early years of the nineteenth century they were facing discrimination and difficult times. These factors could certainly explain why the rebuilding of a proper synagogue took so long. For this reason or any other, based on Rev. Dawson’s short passage, most of the structure as it stood in the twentieth century (with the possible exception of the gatehouse, which Dawson seems to have identified as the porch) could date no earlier than the second decade of the nineteenth century.

When Parur’s current synagogue was reconstructed on the same site as the previous building, it was built in the centuries-old Kerala tradition using locally quarried by hand ashlar laterite stone blocks for its load-bearing walls that were veneered in chunam plaster. These walls, very thick, were punctured by deeply-revealed doors and windows. Despite the memory of seventeenth century Portuguese aggression against the Kerala Jewish community, the synagogue at Parur incorporated Portuguese-colonial detail, such as the fan-like alette decoration, swirling rope patterns, circular vents, or heavily revealed bands of trim on its wall surfaces. How much of these details drew from the 1616 synagogue or from the overall rooted design traditions of the area will likely never been known. With its locally cut wood roof framing exposed at its deep eaves in response to the heavy annual monsoons, flat profiled clay roof tiles covering its pitched surfaces, and carved wood gablet ends for ventilation, the Parur Synagogue is an archetypical example of the vernacular Kerala style. As with other Kerala synagogues, it is made up of not one building but a collection of parts forming a compound. Among all Kerala synagogues, Parur is notable for having the greatest number of connected and consecutive pieces which have survived fully intact, albeit rotting and crumbling before the recent government renovation. Over time, other Kerala synagogue compounds have lost some of their pieces for a variety of reasons or they tended to have a fewer or a more compact collection of spaces.  

Unique to the synagogue at Parur is the way its parts are formally arranged and linked in a highly axial, extended, and ceremonial fashion. Of all Kerala’s extant synagogue buildings, the one is Parur has the longest procession: from the street, through the gatehouse, out into a walled outdoor room, past a foyer flanking by twin storage rooms, along a narrow columned breezeway, into the azara that is followed by the sanctuary with its low balcony that spills into a double-height space containing the central tebah and finally its to the heckal as the termination point. A similar organization can also be seen in some historic Hindu temples of Kerala and at various other religious buildings in the immediate region, including Syrian Christian and Catholic churches or mosques. As a local building type, there is little doubt that these buildings belonging to the larger religions influenced neighboring synagogue architecture or were representative of a way of building that included other faiths. The influence of secular design traditions is also obvious here in the ways the same materials and construction techniques, ones used for ages in Kerala, were utilized and expressed.  To note are also the broad similarities shared between the Parur Synagogue and the ritual linking of spaces that existed in the Court of the Temple in Jerusalem, and the use of terminology identical to these ancient sacred Jewish places

CURRENT STATUS

For the past few decades, the Parur Synagogue was not used as a house of prayer, and the marginally-maintained building slowly deteriorated. In recent years, its condition became so serious that there was concern for its structural survival. Both the few remaining Kerala Jews and sympathetic outsiders recognized that the building needed intervention for some time, yet no formal effort to save Parur synagogue came to fruition. The Kerala government is fortunately now renovating the building, paying close attention to its architectural and cultural heritage. In response to domestic and international interest, the popularity of the restored synagogue in nearby Chendamangalam which opened as a museum in 2006, and local recognition of the cultural importance of historical architecture and natural spaces in general, the State of Kerala with support of the government of India in 2009 embarked on a long term plan called the Muziris Heritage Site. This undertaking is being coordinated by several government divisions, particularly the Kerala Department of Tourism and Department of Archeology.  It gets its name from the ancient port city, a place where Kerala’s Jews are believed to have originally settled many centuries ago and which they called Shingly. The Muziris archaeological site will be one of the highlights of the impressive effort of protecting, restoring, and sustaining more than thirty other natural and built sites that will be sensitively linked by existing canals, bike paths, and roadways within the central region of the state of Kerala.  Among the first of the sites to be restored is the Parur Synagogue. 

During the spring and summer months of 2009, the Kerala government negotiated with the Association of Kerala Jews to assume ownership of Parur Synagogue while the Jewish community maintained a right of use.  Once these details had been worked out, the restoration effort formally began in April 2010, and work is scheduled to be completed by the middle of 2011. According to the State of Kerala Muzris Site Project plan, the Parur Synagogue will not only be properly brought back to form along with a permanent on-site exhibition on its history with academic contributions from  an international team of scholars, but it will be linked with a number of other important Kerala cultural sites, both religious and secular.  The synagogue will in turn be placed into context with various centuries-old traditions and customs of the people of Kerala so as to protect and preserve the state’s heritage. 

For anyone fortunate enough to visit the former Parur Synagogue during the exciting restoration period running into the first part of 2011, the building should be open during regular working hours except for Sundays.  Seek out one of the project coordinators or associates on site to show you around

Paradesi Synagogue



LOCATION

The world-renowned Paradesi Syngagogue, first built in 1568 and reconstructed in part and enlarged over the years, can be found in the Mattancherry area of Kochi. The road that it was built on came to be known as Jew Street or Synagogue Lane, and the surrounding neighborhood as Jew Town.  The Rajah of Cochin generously allotted the community land in Cochin da Cima, or Upper Cochin, next to his own palace (now a city museum) and an adjacent small Hindu temple to service himself and his royal family.  The synagogue, today the only functioning one in Kerala, was erected for a congregation whose core had migrated from Cranganore to the north of Kochi where they were then joined by a larger group of relative newcomers from Europe and Western Asia.  The diverse influx of Jews to Mattancherry led to its designation as the Paradesi, or Foreigners’ Synagogue.

HISTORY

By the early years of the sixteenth century, there was already a flourishing Jewish community in Kochi composed mainly of Malabari Jews.  Within half a century, the city’s Jewish community had expanded considerably through the arrival of refugees from the Portuguese religious persecution of Jews locally from Cranganore and farther a field originating from Spain and Portugal. To serve this growing congregation, the Paradesi Synagogue was constructed in 1568 by Samuel Castiel, David Belila, and Joseph Levi.

The Kerala Jewish community had the protection and friendship of the Rajah of Cochin, but was still exposed to the enmity of the Portuguese, who had established a trading post in Fort Cochin in the sixteenth century. The Portuguese attacked the Jews again in 1662 since they had sided with the Dutch in a skirmish for control over local territory.  This was the result of attempts by the Dutch in 1661-62 to challenge the Portuguese for the European supremacy in South India. In February 1661, the Dutch took the fortress at Palliport near Cranganore, in December they captured Quilon, and a month later Cranganore fell into their hands. They next laid siege to Cochin.  The Portuguese, however, defended Fort Cochin to all means, and in March 1662 the Dutch withdrew for Ceylon. With the Dutch defeat, the Portuguese took revenge on the Jews. The Paradesi Synagogue was set on fire and partially destroyed. It is believed that other Kerala (Malabari) synagogues were attacked and damaged by the Portuguese forces as well.  The Jews gained security again once the Dutch were finally able to oust the Portuguese in 1665 and take control for the next one hundred and thirty years. The Paradesi Synagogue, which had been in derelict condition during the period of Portuguese hegemony, was then repaired. 

The Paradesi Synagogue is a grouping of white washed and painted thick-walled chunam (a polished lime plaster) over laterite (a soft reddish-brown local stone) structures with pitched roofs featuring deep eaves to avoid damage from the annual monsoons, wooden lattice screens and enclosures, pronounced gablets (where hip and gable roofs intersect), exposed rafters, flat wall surfaces, clay tiled roofs, shuttered windows and clerestories, cusped arches at the sanctuary building’s entryway, a decorated tray ceiling within the sanctuary, and understated and limited detail.  The synagogue is a tight complex featuring a series of rooms and passages linked or surrounded by outdoor spaces.  

The Paradesi Synagogue sits at the north end of Synagogue Lane, a narrow street lined on both sides with houses that were once Jewish owned and occupied; as of 2010 only ten Jews reside in this neighborhood. Many of the former Jewish residences are now Muslim owned, and several operate as souvenir or antique and curio and shops on the ground level, creating a true tourism zone.  After a slight bend in the road, Synagogue Lane abruptly dead ends at the synagogue property. From this point, however, one see very little of the Paradesi Synagogue compound. Nearly all of it is hidden behind tall, mostly solid walls. The only hint of the synagogue standing on the lane is the clock tower directly ahead. That three-story structure, nearly square in plan, with a gabled clay tiled roof capped by a cupola, is most prominent and photographed feature of the Paradesi Synagogue compound.  On first impression, based on its strategic position and height, many believe this to be the synagogue’s prayer space, but the free-standing sanctuary is located to the west and not seen at all from the street.  

The Paradesi Synagogue’s three-story clock tower is not original to the compound but was erected nearly two centuries later.  Dating from 1761, it was built under the direction of Ezekial Rahabi, a leading figure of the Kerala Jews at that time and the representative of the Dutch East India Company. The clock tower is sometimes labeled as fully Dutch, although it is better described as an Indo-colonial design and does not represent a distinct and pure style.  As with many other colonial period buildings throughout India, the clock tower incorporates local design and construction elements such as the thick laterite stone load bearing walls veneered in chunam, then fused with various colonial influences popularized by both the Portuguese and Dutch, such as the brackets, clay roof tiles, and cupola details.    

The clock tower’s façades along three sides feature clock faces at the uppermost level. The tower’s massing is covered by a gabled clay tiled roof supported by wooden brackets. The roof is then crowned by an open cupola in the form of a small widow’s walk that is capped by another gabled roof also with deep overhangs. Here copper, an indigenous material used in other local buildings including some roofs of smaller Hindu temples, is the finished roofing material. A finial featuring two spherical copper balls, filigree, and a metal mast and flag resembling a weather vane rests on the apex of the copper roof. The square cupola includes four rounded-arched openings set within a painted wooden structure with quoins at the four corners. A solid rail fills in the lower section of each of the arches. On the surface of cupola is an inscription in Hebrew indicating that it was constructed in the year 1761. There used to be a bell within the cupola which would be rung every day except on the Sabbath (when Jewish law forbids the ringing) to call the Jews to prayer.  In 1986 the bell stopped working, the community never had it repaired, and it was removed a short time later. There was an attempt to bring the bells back when the clock tower was restored in 1998-99 through the World Monuments Fund, but the effort was unsuccessful.

The clock tower has three existing dials; they are made of teak and painted blue. To the north, facing the maharajah’s place, the characters are Malayalam; to the south, viewed from Jew Town, they are Roman numerals; and to the west, from the synagogue side, Hebrew letters are used.    According to I. S. Hallegua, a member of the Paradesi Jewish community, it is likely that there once was a fourth dial on the east side, facing the water, with numbers (Weil:  43). The only existing pointer is on the Roman dial and is made of copper.  The clock mechanism, operated via heavy stones, pulleys, and gears, worked until the early 1940s, and there was never a serious effort to repair or replace the mechanism.  From that point, the non-working clock faces began to deteriorate, and by the 1990s they were in poor condition. Like the bell, there was a plan to bring the clock back to working order when the clock tower was being stored in 1998/9, but the work was too costly.

The entrance to the synagogue compound is not through the narrow doors at the clock tower’s base, but along the adjacent wall to the west along the street.  Opposite to the east, accessed via large and heavy iron gates, is a walled grassy outdoor area that was once used as a playground for Jewish children living in the neighborhood and attending school here.

The synagogue compound is laid out as a cluster, with spaces built or linked around a series of small indoor and outdoor rooms. Entering the synagogue, the visitor goes through a gradual progression from secular life to the sacred domain, finally reaching the sanctuary proper and lastly the heckal (ark). Yet, in contrast to the synagogues at Ernakulam-Kadavumbhagam, Parur, or Mala when they were intact, the journey to the sanctuary is not straight and flowing, but a bit contorted, with tight turns. Along the way are places for ritual practice, community purposes, and Jewish education. The first space to be entered from the street is the tallam, a rectangular gatehouse space. Today this small room functions as an office where tourists purchase their entry tickets, but its intended purpose was as a transition zone from inside to outside, where synagogue meetings were once held, and for a staircase leading up to the women’s seating area and the educational spaces within the clock tower.  From the tallam, the visitor makes a tight turn and passes through a narrow opening leading to a choice of spaces. Ahead, although not on a direct axis, is a short corridor that connects to a small room that was originally intended as a storeroom.   In the late 1960s, the members of the synagogue commissioned the Kerala Hindu artist S. S. Krishna to paint ten canvases portraying the Paradesi community’s historical events over the centuries to celebrate their quatro-centennial in 1968. The paintings have been exhibited to visitors in this windowless space ever since.

Returning to the point just off the tallam, a short covered yet unenclosed breezeway leads directly ahead to the sanctuary building. The courtyard which surrounds the sanctuary building can be accessed from either side of this breezeway. The walled court not only protects and separates the sanctuary from the outside secular world, but it served as a gathering area for holiday and life-cycle activities. Most famous of these celebratory events was when the congregation circumambulated the courtyard on the Jewish festival of Shimhat Torah, or Rejoicing of the Law, during the service, singing, dancing, and clapping while carrying the Torah scrolls. The ground surface of the space is partially finished in granite stone pavers, a hard material not readily available to the region yet used in important secular and religious spaces, and the walls are chunam over soft laterite stone (Salem:  19). Within the courtyard are a loose collection of scrubs, overhanging trees, and a well which is near the northeast corner.  Water from the well served the communal needs of the Paradesi community for centuries, and similar ones can be found at other Kerala synagogues.
The sanctuary building is a two-story structure constructed of thick load-bearing laterite stone walls veneered with chunam that are pierced with windows and openings. The structure is covered by a steeply pitched roof (gabled to the east end and hipped at the west elevation) finished with flat-profiled clay tiles set over a framing system fabricated from local wood.  The sanctuary building is made up of a various spaces:  the azara and sanctuary proper on the ground floor, and balcony and women’s seating area upstairs. The azara, an anteroom found in all Kerala synagogues, and mentioned in Biblical descriptions of the ancient Temple in Jerusalem, is entered directly off the breezeway linked to the earlier described spaces.   It is rectangular and finished in whitewashed chunam over laterite walls, terracotta tiled floor, a wooden beamed and planked ceiling, and shuttered windows on all sides.  In the center of the azara’s west elevation is the opening to the sanctuary.  Its most prominent feature is its multi-foil cusped arch, a design often associated with Islamic, Moorish, and Mughal architecture. No other Kerala synagogue contains such a design, nor does it exist in any synagogue elsewhere in India.

 The azara in all Kerala synagogues has various functions. It served as a transition space where the women would pass through and enter the sanctuary before ascending to the gallery level, and it was also the room where the Cohanim performed important ritualsAs the direct patrilineal descendants from the Biblical Aaron, the Cohanim since the period of the Temple in Jerusalem have for two millennia performed many duties set forth in the Torah (Weil:  44). In the Paradesi Synagogue, they ritually washed their hands in a brass basin before blessing the congregation.   In a purely functional sense, the azara acts as a waiting or holding area where latecomers.  The room has also been where mourners and women gathering at weddings other celebrations would sit. The azara has always contained charity boxes for contribution to the synagogue and other needy causes, and it was also the place where its members and guests would sit on the built-in benches lining its walls and remove their shoes before entering the sanctuary.  

The Kerala Jews have always removed their footwear, a practice unfamiliar in most Jewish communities around the world. There are various theories about the origin of this practice, ranging from adopting the custom from Hindu, Jain, and Muslim communities in India for entering their respective houses of prayer, the general tradition of removing shoes for hygienic reasons before entering an Indian dwelling, to the remembrance of the divine command to Moses on Mount Horev to remove his shoes, for the place where he stood was holy ground (Weil:  44). The azara also once served another less than noble purpose which reflected local class prejudices. According to Ruby Daniel, who was born and lived in Kerala before immigrating to Israel in the mid-1950s, the Paradesi community included a group of Meshuharim (commonly translated from Hebrew as liberated slaves) Jews who until the 1940s were not allowed into the sanctuary or into the women’s seating area on the gallery level.  The men in this community were delegated to the azara during prayers, and the women sat outside the sanctuary building altogether, on benches lining the edges of the breezeway (Johnson).  

The largest and most important space of the Paradesi Synagogue compound is the sanctuary. In the tradition of all Kerala Jewish houses of worship, it is rectangular in plan and double height. Measuring 27’ (8.2 m) wide, 42’-8” (12.8 m) long, and 19’ (5.8 m) high, the sanctuary, the focus of all religious worship, is a centralized space where the bench seating, never fixed in placed or in the form of individual seats, surrounds the central tebah, or podium where the Torah scrolls are routinely read and the service is conducted. The shallow tray ceiling is detailed in a grid of square panels of painted wood each featuring a lotus pattern (a distinct Indian motif), and walls of the sanctuary are white-washed chunam. During select Jewish holidays and life-cycle celebrations, the walls of Paradesi’s sanctuary are adorned with colorful fabrics which give the space its sense of place.  Unique to this synagogue and well renowned is its tile floor made up blue and white Chinese tiles.The hand painted, willow pattern tiles, each slightly different, were imported by Ezehiel Rahabi in the 1760s and hence are not original to the synagogue.  Accounts vary as to why and how they were purchased and installed. One reveals that they were to be used by the local Rajah, but when he learned that they were fabricated using unholy cow parts taboo to Hindus, he sold them at a good price to the Jews.  Some sources claim that the tiles were not from China but rather from the Netherlands.  

The Paradesi Synagogue’s tebah, shaped like a lyre or curved keyhole, is contained by a stepped railing featuring twenty-five profiled polished brass balustrades of waist height that rest on the carpeted floor of the tebah and are capped by a polished brass banister. The banister is topped by a two-tiered secondary series of slimmer and shorter polished brass balustrades.  At the curved end of the tebah, the side closed to the heckal, the railing is at its highest level before its “arms” symmetrically step down twice.  These curved “arms” intersect with the straight lines at the entry to the tebah, which feature flanking polished brass scrolls. At the end of the tebah and wherever the railing steps up, short brass balustrades with glass domes are positioned. These provide lighting to the tebah and definition to the space. Surrounding the outside perimeter of the tebah is a very low wooden bench that is normally draped in a colorful fabric.   Here, since it is so low to the floor, boys would often sit.  

Unique among synagogues throughout the world is the second tebah found in all Kerala synagogues. It is located on the gallery level in a shallow space overlooking the sanctuary that is supported by two brass columns that flank the entry doors to the sanctuary.  While their architectural function is to support the gallery, over the years these twin profiled pillars have come to represent or recall the pairs of columns known as Boaz and Jachin that are believed to have existed in the ancient temple in Jerusalem. The special tebah is reached via a steep wooden stair that is located in the corner of the sanctuary to the right when entering the space. The stairs are used by the men who remove the Sefer Torah from the heckal and carry it upstairs to the second tebah during Shabbat and holiday services. At other times, the Torah is read from the ground floor tebah. The second tebah is placed in the center of the gallery, where it is defined by the wood balustrades of the railing that bump out towards the sanctuary. Adjacent to the gallery and second tebah is the women’s seating area.  This room, measuring 27’ (8.2 m) in length and 9’-5” (2.7 m) in width, is accessed via a pair of doors that swing into the women’s area on an axis with the second tebah. The gallery and women’s seating area are adjacent to one another, but they are separated by a wooden mechitza, a perforated screened partition. This partition allows for the sights and sounds of the service to filter into the women’s area but provides a degree of visual privacy and separation common to other orthodox synagogues throughout the world.

The heckal, a cabinet for storing and displaying the Torah scrolls, is normally the most sacred and hence embellished feature of synagogues throughout the world, and in the Paradesi Synagogue this tradition is maintained. Its heckal is located in the wall opposite the entrance. In Jewish tradition, the heckal is placed in the sanctuary along the wall closest to Jerusalem. Since Jerusalem is west of Kochi, the heckal in the Paradesi Synagogue is on its western wall.  8’-6” (2.4 m) in width, it is beautifully hand-carved from local teak wood, stained, and highlighted with gold, red, and some green paint.  Many of the carvings on the surfaces of the heckal are organic and floral in nature, popular motifs in many synagogues and also popular in other secular and religious architecture in Kerala. Topping the heckal is large panel featuring a series of festoons and swags surrounding a crown. The crown, a popular motif on heckalot/arks in all regions of the world, represents the sacred and high place of the Torah in the Jewish religion, not the majesty of a Jewish king.

According to an emissary from Jerusalem who visited the Paradesi Synagogue in 1850, the sanctuary wall engaged with the heckal was made from “a compound of clay…(mixed) with the fat milt of the nuts of the kukus, in other words coconut water instead of plain water, for the cement was mortar, so as to withstand many days and to honor the greatness that was among them.” (Weil:  45).  Draped in the front of the heckal is a beautiful parokhet, or curtain.  It can be drawn to reveal the carved and painted doors of the heckal.  The Torah scrolls kept in the heckal, capped with beautiful crowns, are each housed in a rounded wooden case which is covered with hammered silver.  To Jews, the Sefer Torahs are the equal of royalty, and are thus ornamented as such.  One of these crowns was presented by the Rajah in 1805.  In front of the steps leading up to the heckal is a rug presented to the synagogue by Emperor Haile Sallassie of Ethiopia in 1956. 

In the Paradesi Synagogue near the heckal are two special chairs, one for the Prophet Elijah and the other for the brit mila, or circumcision ceremony.  Both are made from carved and stained teak with a plush cushion and perhaps a richly colorful fabric draping it entirely.  Also hanging inside the sanctuary from the shallow sloped ceiling are, in true Kerala synagogue fashion, many glass lanterns -- clear, cobalt blue, emerald green, ruby red, and other colors. These lanterns, some blown in Belgium, France, and the Netherlands and others locally fabricated, are popular in many secular and religious buildings throughout India.  Intended for burning the coconut oil readily available in Kerala, they have never been electrified.  Other ceiling-suspended brass, silver, pewter, bronze, or other metal alloy fixtures in the Paradesi Synagogue are also prevalent in Indian synagogues, including the ner tamid, a fixture that stays lit all the time.  Ceiling fans, common throughout the country, also hang in the synagogues.  No Indian synagogue is air-conditioned, and today the fans, which were installed only in the 1970s, provide the sole source of cooling other than cross-ventilation. The whirling of the ceiling fan blades, both hypnotic and soothing, is a familiar and comforting sound of the Kerala synagogue experience. Before the fans were hung, a non-Jew was employed to pour water over the stone pavers around the perimeter of the synagogue and on the walls themselves to keep the building as cool as possible.

CURRENT STATUS

Today the Paradesi Synagogue is said to be the oldest functioning Jewish house of prayer not only in southern India, but in the whole country, and even the entire British Commonwealth.  It is visited by thousands of tourists from India and abroad each year six days a week, except on Friday afternoons and all day Saturday when the synagogue is closed, visitors can make their way down Jew Street, enter the gatehouse, pay a small entry fee (ten rupees), and make their way around the synagogue compound. A no photography policy was enacted a few years ago at the synagogue, and visitors are kindly asked to observe this rule.

Kadavumbagam Synagogue, Mattancherry


LOCATION

For centuries, Kochi’s Mattancherry was a vibrant center for Jewish life with three synagogues lining Synagogue Lane in Jew Town alongside Jewish schools, homes, and places of businesses.  Hundreds of Jews lived, worked, prayed, were educated, played, socialized, and celebrated life-cycle and holiday events here, representing one of India’s and the world’s famous centers of Jewish existence.  Although this small area of Kochi has never been exclusively Jewish as Muslims mixed with Hindus, Christians, and those of other persuasions have lived here as well, it was a Jewish enclave by choice where its people existed side by side and interacted on a regular basis.  These Jews themselves were never a homogenous community, but descendants of individuals of distinct cultural and social backgrounds who arrived in Kerala at different periods and from disparate places.  Eventually they built three synagogues all located within a short walk.

In addition to the Paradesi Synagogue, two others houses of prayer once co-existed in the heart of Jew Town:  the now demolished Tekkumbagam Synagogue almost immediately to the south of the Paradesi Synagogue on the west side of the street, and the Kadavumbagam Synagogue.  These latter buildings served the local Malabari Jews for centuries, and both closed in 1955 when their congregations immigrated en masse to Israel. The Kadavumbagam Synagogue is also located directly on Jew Street (or Synagogue Lane), less than a ten minute walk from the Paradesi Synagogue and just south of the main intersecting lane that leads east to the water front and jetty where the passenger ferry docks.  Cross the intersection and soon look for the derelict building mid-block on the west (right) side of the street.  It gets its name from its location; in Malayalam, kadavu means landing place and bagam means side.

HISTORY

A portion of the former Kadavumbagam Synagogue still stands today and can easily be seen from the road, but it has been compromised over time and the building, first rented and then sold to non-Jews after the congregation left for Israel, today sits idle and is padlocked. Over the years the former synagogue has changed hands, and the structure has served as a warehouse or sat empty.  When a stretch of Jew Street running in front the building was altered some time in the 1960s, Kadavumbagam Synagogue’s two story gatehouse and the connecting breezeway behind it were demolished.  Today the only portion of the former synagogue compound still standing is the sanctuary building.  In recent decades, this remaining structure and its tight surrounding courtyard has been poorly maintained.  At the time the road was shifted and straightened, other buildings in the immediate area were likewise affected, so it is no longer possible to experience the former synagogue is in original context.    

The early history of the Kadavumbagam Synagogue is unclear.  A local narrative indicates that it was established as early as 1130, and the name was taken from a synagogue that existed in Cranganore.  Oral stories reveal that the synagogue was built in 1400 when Jews abandoned the nearby Kochangadi Synagogue just south of Jew Town (yet historically this did not happen until 1795), that it was ruined, and then rebuilt by the mudaliyar (community leader of the Kerala Jews) Baruch Levi in 1539 (Joshua:  1) or that his son, Joseph David HaLevy, was responsible for beginning its construction.  In 1549, the synagogue was completed by Yaakov ben David Castiel, the brother of Elihu Shmuel Castiel, the third mudaliyar and father of David Yaakov Castiel, the fourth mudaliyar (Spalak:  57).  Another source offers a slightly different history in that in 1539/40 the building of the Kadavumbagam Synagogue was begun, and it was completed by Barukh Joseph Levi who had restored the Kochangadi Synagogue.  It was, in turn, extended or restored in 1549 by Jacob David Castiel (Segal:  31).

Enough of the Kadavumbagam Synagogue remains standing to recognize it as a quintessential example of vernacular Kerala architecture for its materials, construction technique, massing, and details.  In response to the climate and annual monsoons and drawing from locally available natural resources and regional construction practices, the building features a steeply sloped clay tiled roof with deep, open eaves that are set on rafters crafted of local wood.  The roof framing system is supported by load bearing walls made of hand-cut laterite stone blocks quarried from the region that are veneered with chunam, a polished lime plaster.  Although many of them have now been removed and filled in, large wooden windows and doors with transoms and shutters once punctured the synagogue’s thick walls, providing natural light and ventilation to the inside.

The road and adjacent buildings in the immediate area of the former synagogue have changed since the congregation left Mattancherry in the mid-1950s, yet there was once an open space directly across from the synagogue compound which extended east to the nearby water and provided a view of the landing place for boats traveling southward.  In years past, according to a narrative, the Rajah of Cochin would set sail in private boat from his Dutch Palace (built by the Portuguese to honor the Rajah and his royal house and upgraded during the Dutch period) at the northern end of Jew Town just beyond the Paradesi Synagogue.  Whenever his Highness was about to travel southward and pass the Kadavumbagam Synagogue, news would reach the congregation.  Someone would open the doors of the gatehouse (today missing), those of the sanctuary with its azara (anteroom) in front of the sanctuary, and finally the doors of heckal itself, which, in Kerala synagogue tradition, were often all on a longitudinal axis.   The Rajah’s boat would pause at the landing, offering him a clear vista from the water, across to the shore, through the gap between neighboring buildings towards the synagogue and all the way through the spaces of the building to the end point:  the Sefer Torahs.  According to this tradition, the Rajah of Cochin would then stand and prostrate himself towards the synagogue (Johnson:  129).

In its prime, the Kadavumbagam Synagogue was notable for its exterior ornamentation and painted surfaces, specifically at the gabled facade of the sanctuary building.  The interior was also unique to other Kerala synagogues for its elaborately carved woodwork. Though the majority of Kerala synagogues featured ceilings and balconies made of wood with detail drawing from the region’s secular and religious building traditions using timber, the ones at Kadavumbagam were the most intricate.   About four decades after the building was left behind by the departing congregation, the synagogue’s interior finishes were purchased and carefully removed through funding by an English Jew, shipped to Jerusalem, and then meticulously restored by the Israel Museum. Today the reconstructed room represents Asian synagogues in the museum.

The Kadavumbagam Synagogue is also notable for many miracles attributed to it while it was in use.  According to a local legend, whenever anyone, even unscrupulous characters or people of others religions, became sick, sought protection, safety, or misplaced something and sought to recover it, or when a woman was soon to give birth or just thereafter, it was customary to bring a gift or donation to the synagogue as well as to pray for good will.  These associations attached to the synagogue were widely known to the local community and far beyond (Johnson:  129).

CURRENT STATUS

Today the Kadavumbagam Synagogue, much altered but still identifiable, a gabled building from the front with its flaked walls and steel roll-up door, can easily be overlooked beside more intact neighboring historical architecture, including a few former Jewish residences with their prominent Magen Davids (Stars of David) on the exteriors.  Seeing at it today offers little suggestion of its former glory, yet the Kadavumbagam Synagogue was once an attractive building.

Offered for sale as of 2010, the former synagogue is locked and difficult to access.   For those that are particularly persistent, shop owners in the immediate area may be able to contact the owner for a look inside.


 

Kadavumbagam Synagogue, Ernakulam




LOCATION

One of two former synagogues in Ernakulam once serving the Malabari Jews can be found in the center of the crowded market area on west side of Market Road just south of where it intersects with Jew (or Jews) Street. Look for a faded sign at the street above the entrance path that identifies the property as both the “Cochin Blossoms” fish and plant store and Kadavumbagam Synagogue. Seek out its owner inside, Mr. Elias “Babu” Josephai, who will gladly show any visitor around the property, including the mostly intact prayer space to the rear.

While there, speak with Mr. Josephai regarding a visit to the other former Ernakulam synagogue, the Tekkumbagam, which can be found a five-minute walk away on the north (right) side of Jew Street between Market Road and Broadway. It is located a short distance past a landmark mosque on the same side of the street.

HISTORY

Although its history cannot be verified, narratives claim that the original Kadavumbagam Synagogue was constructed in the medieval period in the port town of Cranganore to the north of Kochi. At that time the Moors, who had arrived on the shores of Kerala some time earlier, had aligned themselves with the native ruler. Since spices were a valuable local commodity and the trade was lucrative and competitive, the Moors saw the Jews, who were involved in the spice trade, as competition that needed to be eliminated. The Moorish persecution convinced some Jews to abandon their synagogues and they resettled in Ernakalum in 1154 (Josephai, interviews by the author, Ernakulam Kerala, 2007/2009). There they were provided relative safety and protection under the tolerant and sympathetic Rajah of Cochin. In 1200, they built the Kadavumbagam Synagogue (Sassoon: 577). Another narrative goes that Jews, faced with persecution once again by the Moors in 1524, fled Cranganore by boat and settled in Ernakalum, finding protection under the Rajah. Yet a third story goes that the Jews of Cranganore and surrounding areas were persecuted the Portuguese during the mid-sixteenth century by the Portuguese – and in three rounds they arrived in Ernakulam (Segal: 19).

According to Elias “Babu” Josephai, the current guardian of the synagogue, the building as it stands today dates to the early sixteenth to early seventeenth centuries. It is Josephai’s claim that the two-storied front section seen from the road was added to a slightly wider and higher building approximately a century later. Both sections replaced earlier structures of unknown dates that are believed to have stood on the same site. Today’s synagogue is set back from Market Road, the central spine of Ernakulam’s busy market area, and is approached along a long and narrow passage lined with plants. It was common to Kerala synagogues to have a gatehouse facing the road, but none exists here, and it is unclear whether there was ever any such structure.

The sandy path that begins at the street and leads to the synagogue is on axis with the front façade. Similar to other Kerala synagogues, the building is constructed of locally quarried laterite stone block walls veneered in white-washed chunam, or a polished lime plaster. The building’s two corners facing the street are broadly chamfered, so from the front Kadavumghagam Synagogue is half-octagonal in form. The angled wall intersections are demarcated by rusticated quoins that have been for years painted a rust color. The front section is unusual for a Kerala synagogue. On the ground floor, it was used as a social hall and for overflow seating during Jewish high holidays and special occasions. On the second floor were rooms that once served as a Jewish school when the congregation was active. Since Jews used to live to all sides of the synagogue, they were able to conveniently approach the synagogue compound not only from the front but also along two side paths that led to doors on either side of the large front hall. The path to the north is today no longer discernable, and the high wall surrounding the synagogue property offers no hint that there used to be a passage here. To the south, an axis remains although it has been altered and built on.

Behind the large front room (now a sales space lined with fish tanks) is the azara, an anteroom appearing in all Kerala synagogues. Kadavumbagam’s azara is cluttered today with the wares of the Cochin Blossoms business, but it once served a variety of purposes. This space gets its name from the ancient Temple in Jerusalem, but whereas the azara in the Temple was a large exterior courtyard where animal sacrifices took place, in Kerala’s synagogues the azara is a fully enclosed anteroom. It was used variously as an arrival space, place for the ritual washing of the hands, waiting area, acoustical and visual buffer zone, seating place for non-members, and spot for storing ritual furniture and objects.

The windowed azara leads to the large double height sanctuary with its central tebah, now missing except for its base. The prayer space, with ten windows said to recall the number of commandments, does retain its gilded and painted hand-carved teak heckal, decorated and painted ceiling with a grid pattern of lotus flowers (an Indian motif), and gallery. In Kerala synagogue fashion, the painted and decorated gallery features the second tebah placed on the center of this shallow overlook. Continuing in local synagogue tradition, behind the gallery and second tebah is the women’s seating area. Dividing the two spaces is a mechitza, or partition wall. The rear wall of the women’s seating area has doors that provided an easy way into this space when it was used. From here, the upstairs areas that once functioned as a Jewish school could also be accessed.

During the 1950s and 60s, many members of the Kadavumbagam Synagogue immigrated to Israel, and membership in the congregation dwindled. Until the early 1970s, the Kadavumbagam Synagogue was still substantially intact. By 1972, the synagogue had closed and within two years the Torah scrolls were transported to Moshav Nevatim in Israel, an agricultural community which now hosts the Cochin Jewish Heritage Center. In 1975, a storm struck Ernakulam and caused serious water damage to the synagogue. The roof and walls were compromised and foundation damage required the entire structure to be hydraulically lifted. Making matters worse, in 1977 thieves broke into the synagogue and stole some contents. In 1979, the remaining community passed the guardianship of the building to one of its long-standing members, Elias Josephai. For the next six years, the Kadavumbagam Synagogue lay vacant, until in 1985 Josephai established a plant and fish store in the building. The former synagogue has since been known as “Cochin Blossoms”.

CURRENT STATUS

The Cochin Blossoms shop owner, Mr. Elias “Babu” Josephai has over the past years renovated portions of the Kadavumbagam Synagogue, and the work is ongoing. Used as his place of business for a quarter of a century, he is not yet in a position to transfer control of the building to the Jewish community or to the government, and for this reason there cannot be any serious effort to fully restore the synagogue and make it available as a dedicated cultural site. Visitors are, however, welcomed to tour the former synagogue and its grounds when Cochin Blossoms is open during business hours, which includes Saturdays. A heritage plaque identifying the structure as a former synagogue was installed by the “The Friends of Kerala Synagogues” to the right of the front entry in 2009.