Paravur Synagogue


The Paravur Synagogue, also known as the Parur Synagogue, is a former synagogue, located on Jewish Street in North Paravur, in the state of Kerala, India. The former synagogue is one of the largest and most complete among the Jewish synagogues in Kerala.
Built by the Malabar Jews, it has undergone successive phases of destruction and reconstruction. The present synagogue complex dates from 1616 CE, but it was built on top of a much older building speculated to have been constructed as early as 750 CE or 1105 CE, making it one of the oldest synagogues in India and the Commonwealth of Nations. The former synagogue is closed for worship. It has been renovated by the Government of Kerala and, in 2014, was opened to the public as the Kerala Jews History Museum, a Jewish museum.

History

Jewish people had been arriving in Kerala since 1st millennia BC for trading, and their communities were mostly settled around today's Kodungallur region and Kollam. They received royal patronage and special rights from the local Chera kings such as Cheraman Perumal and established Synagogues at their respective settlements for public worship. This was documented in the copper plates dated 10th century AD issued by Bhaskara Ravi Varman to the Jewish community leader Joseph Rabban.
In the 14th century AD, after the Periyar Flood of 1341, the community had to relocate to nearby towns such as Paravur, Chendamangalam and Kochi. Memories of this incident were preserved by oral tradition through traditional songs in Jewish Malayalam.
The Paravur Synagogue is among the oldest synagogues that still exist in Kerala and is also the largest Synagogue complex. The current synagogue was built in 1615 AD at the Jewish Street of Paravur and very close to the Paravur Market where the Jewish community had settled and worked as traders.
However, traditional accounts hint at a much older heritage, indicating that it was built on top of the ruins of an older synagogue dated 1165 AD.

Synagogue in the Piyyutim of Cochin Jews

Although the community lived peacefully throughout their history among the locals, there were conflicts due to foreign invaders such as Mysore Kingdom and European colonizers such as Portuguese and Dutch during 16th and 17th centuries. According to a traditional Jewish Malayalam song, the synagogue was put to fire in 1662, most likely by the Portuguese, at around the same time when the Paradesi Synagogue near Fort Kochi was also burnt.
After the modern State of Israel was established in 1948, the Paravur Jews started to make aliyah. As of 1949, there were about three hundred Jews still living in Paravur, but most of them immigrated to Israel in large numbers by the mid 1950s.
By 1970s, the public worship at the synagogue ceased as the minyan could not be met and the Synagogue largely remained unattended during later decades. The last ever worship service was conducted in 1988.
File:Israel_Museum-_Transfered_and_Rebuilt_Synagogues_.jpg|thumb|The ark and bima of the Parur Synagogue are now displayed in the Israel Museum in Jerusalem
According to a report by the International Survey of Jewish Monuments, the original bimah and the ark were moved to Israel in 1995 and preserved there.

Kerala Jews Lifestyle Museum

In 1996, the synagogue was declared as a protected monument, however it continued to remain mostly neglected until 2009 when it was handed over to the Kerala State Department of Archaeology. Since 2010, the Government renovated the dilapidated structure as part of the Muziris Heritage Project and converted this into a museum to highlight the Jewish heritage of Kerala. They were opened to public in 2014.

Architecture

The Paravur Synagogue is built with a unique blend of traditional Jewish Synagogue architecture as well as Kerala architectural styles. This is most evident in the use of padippura along the path that leads to the main building.

Structure

Similar to the architecture of other synagogues in Kerala, it has a balcony and a separate gallery for women to assemble, with direct access from outside through a staircase.
The exterior inner wall of the Synagogue compound also holds a plaque dated 1616, with Hebrew text engraved on a stone slab under the name of David Ya’acov Castiel Mudaliar, the fourth Mudaliyar of the Kerala Jews, who was instrumental in the rebuilding of the Synagogue.

Paravur Jewish Cemetery

Paravur Jewish Cemetery is situated to next to Lakshmi College Paravoor.