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The Last Jews Of Kerala

Edna Fernandes

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Paperback

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English
Portobello Books
21 September 2009
Separated by a narrow stretch of swamp-like waters, and distinguished by the colour of their skin, the Black Jews and the White Jews have been locked in a rancorous feud for centuries. Only now, when their combined number has diminished to less than 50 and they are on the threshold of extinction, have the two remaining Jewish communities in south India begun to realise that their destiny, and their undoing, is the same.

Living in Cochin alongside this last generation, Edna Fernandes tells their story from the illustrious arrival of their ancestors from the court of King Solomon, through their long heyday of wealth, tolerance and privilege to their present twilit existence, as synagogues crumble into disuse and weddings disappear, leaving only funerals.
By:  
Imprint:   Portobello Books
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 197mm,  Width: 127mm,  Spine: 15mm
Weight:   165g
ISBN:   9781846270994
ISBN 10:   1846270995
Pages:   272
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

EDNA FERNANDES is a British Indian journalist who has worked for many of the leading international news organizations from AP-Dow Jones and Reuters in London to the FT in New Delhi. Her articles have appeared in the Wall Street Journal and International Herald Tribune. Her first book for Portobello was Holy Warriors

Reviews for The Last Jews Of Kerala

Repetitious history of a vanishing community.The title refers to the fewer than 50 remaining Jews living in the province of Kerala, on India's tropical southwest shores. The Paradesi, or white Jews, live in Mattancherry; across the river at Ernakulam live the Malabari, or black Jews. Both groups' ancestries date as far back as the great Jewish Diaspora of 70 CE. For centuries these Jews prospered in religiously tolerant India, playing important parts in business and at court, until their numbers grew to thousands. The crux of the story, writes journalist Fernandes (Holy Warriors: A Journey Into the Heart of Indian Fundamentalism, 2007), is the long-running argument between the white and black Jews regarding who arrived in Kerala first; this has made all the difference as the community nears extinction. The author chronicles soured relations between black and white, the establishment of an apartheid system and the interbreeding that prevented the maintenance of a pure Jewish community. Fernandes's attempt to depict their demise as tragic is unpersuasive. As one elder Paradesi summed up, Now after the others left, gone to Israel, gone overseas, or just gone - the Kashmiris, the Muslims, the Christians have come. This is the oft-told story of many small towns: The younger generation was no longer committed to living in a backwater, upholding traditions of the older generation just to keep the town alive. Furthermore, there is nothing forgotten about the Kerala Jews' story. Political and spiritual world leaders have walked down their dusty streets for decades, visiting the enclave in a show of homage to the ancients who succeeded handsomely, but whose time has gone. The book degenerates into a series of interviews in which anecdotal evidence, opinion, rumor and redacted history supersede thoughtful accounting.Spirited prose and often entertaining personal testimonies can't save an uneven narrative that too often lapses into bland travelogue. (Kirkus Reviews)


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