The Hindu (Erode)

WHAT INDIA’S JEWISH BUILDINGS HAVE TO SAY

- Nidhi Gupta

In 2017, Jose Dominic was invited to dinner with the Salem family in Kochi’s Jew Town. Kenny Salem, an “old friend”, had migrated to Canada and was back to visit his ancestral home. Dominic was expecting his hosts’ famous dishes that evening, perhaps Jewishstyl­e chuttulli fish fry and egg pastels. But there was more in store.

“My friend, the grandson of A.B. Salem, a Gandhian who’d fought in the Independen­ce struggle, wanted to sell the house,” recalls the cofounder of CGH Earth, a renowned hotel and resort chain in Kerala. “With his sister, he made a list of five people, and I was the first person he called. He said he was hoping that whoever bought it would somehow try to keep the place in its original character.” A year later, it was mostly restored and members of the Salem family and the wider Jewish community, who had arrived for the 450th year anniversar­y of the Paradesi Synagogue, stayed there.

The 350yearold house is the first of a cluster of Jewish heritage bungalows to be restored in the neighbourh­ood. Others include Mandalay Hall, now a Postcard hotel, and Ezekiel House, also a project initiated by Dominic — all in a bid to revive Synagogue Lane in Kochi’s Jew Town. “The first wave of Jewish refugees, known as the Malabari Jews, came to this coast before Rome was built,” he says. “The second wave, the Sephardic Jews, migrated here in the 15th16th centuries to escape persecutio­n in Spain.”

Synagogue Lane used to be a residentia­l district up until the 1950s, when the Koders, Cohens, Salems, Robys and many others lived there with large families and staff. The lane, as Dominic told The Hindu last year, was the front yard for these homes “as parties, weddings, rituals flowed out onto the street. Tables laden with food and chairs were brought out in the evenings and the community gathered together”.

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