The Chinese fishing nets, Jewish synagogues, Portuguese churches, Dutch palaces and British village greens appear like punched impressions left by those that settled and invaded
Any important building in
Inside, it is now only a museum with musty coronation robes, roped off palanquins and admittedly still sensual murals, like the one of
For me heritage survives if it can and does reinvent itself. Then it is still part of the fabric of a place—living heritage. The beauty of St Francis Church, believed to be the first European church built in
There are hardly any Jews left in Kochi to pray at the Pardesi (white Jew)
Jewish Synagogue, but I liked the conversational sense of worship with the
brass pulpit in the centre, that is until I was told the women had to sit
separately up in the gallery. Still the oldest Jewish synagogue in the
Commonwealth speaks of the unusual tolerance for the medieval dispossessed
children of Israel .
The Jews came to Kerala; some say in 587, fleeing from Nebuchadnezzar’s occupation
of Jerusalem ,
others that they came in the 11th century in King Solomon’s trading fleet.
Either way they were accepted and settled, trading in spices in Cranganore
north of Kochi .
When the Portuguese Inquisition arrived in early 1600, carrying out their
persecution and burning Jews at the stake in Goa ,
the Raja of Kochi gave the Kerala Jews a parcel of land near the palace from
which the community thrived during the great trading period. That perhaps is
closer to the point. Kochi
was inclusive because it thrived on trade, and business is business. The Jews
were valued as traders, who spoke Malayalam, and they were successful as
evidenced in the Belgian and Italian chandeliers that hang from the ceiling of
the synagogue and the delicate willow-pattern floor tiles, each hand-painted
and brought from Canton in 1776.
After the British left, the Jews were offered free passage to Israel in the 1950s and many of those who had
run the spice warehouses around the synagogue in Jew Town
emigrated. But trade continues as wafts of the scent of ginger and pepper
leaking out onto the streets attests. In amongst the colourful tourist shops
are the unassuming Indian Spice Trade Association, the Oil Exchange and the
Pepper Exchange, which still hums with trade but men now sit in booths dealing
on phones. It was another kind of world with strange codes, like a secret
language, on notice boards for the sales of ungarbled pepper and ready garbled
pepper.
Many of the old spice houses have however
changed their trade to the export of antiques. Room after room of teak boxes,
Rajasthani doors, Chettiar enamel tiffin carriers and Chinese pots wait in the
half light ready to be shipped anywhere in the world. In amongst these large
warehouses, that are part museum to those that can’t afford it and part shop to
those that can, are the smaller tourist traders. “Hello, hello, hello,” they
call, “looking is free”. Mirrored belts glint in the sun, alongside lacquer
boxes, oldish bronze statues and black and white photographs of grandfathers,
grandmothers, mothers and sons. Strangely, little is from Kerala or Kochi for that matter,
whether it is new crafts or old. Browsing these stores I meet the new invader,
the tourists.
The sheer size of the influx makes a mockery of
the sign in the renovated dark wood and whitewashed hotel, the Old
Courtyard—‘You are walking on history, kindly tread lightly.’ Tell that to the
hordes of international and local tourists down at the iconic cantilevered
Chinese nets, brought from the empire of Kublai Khan. Here fishermen still sell
the morning catch of live crabs, red snappers, shark, prawns and pearl spot but
they have to jostle with the tourists, the piles of seaweed and those trying to
sell mini nets, wooden snakes and fish that they will clean and cook for the
tourists on the spot. The nets themselves, which look like lace handkerchiefs
that have just gently been dropped by a lady’s hand, are still in working
order. I doubted it at first but huge tankers passed me proving the depth and
dolphins barely a hundred yards away showed the rich sea life in what seemed
like a small river. The place though was comical, as tourists stood at the nets
taking pictures of a passing spice boat, except on the boat were more tourists
taking pictures back at them of the nets.
Even as the sun set and a boy danced in the
waves as though he were alone and free, I felt trapped in a tourist
merry-go-round and so headed back into the medieval settlement of pastel houses
and narrow alleys. Walking around I realised even the street names mapped out
the history of Kochi .
Down Dutch Cemetery Road ,
Rose Street ,
Princess Street ,
Calvetty Street ,
Church Road
and I came across the house where Vasco da Gama lived and died. It was now a
homestay, tourist information stall and café, and I thought ‘this is living
heritage’. I asked to see inside and found school children doing their homework
in the blue glass portico. Excited I entered the main room but it had been
split by a new wall and a toilet had been added in a corner of the room. I
winced at the insensitive conversion and asked the owner when he bought it to
make it a hotel. No, he said, his family has lived there for four generations.
“I only charge seven hundred and fifty rupees. If I were a palace in Udaipur I would charge
five thousand. Seven hundred and fifty is enough for me to maintain the heritage
and my survival. Some people don’t like it. They say it is not cute. Whatever,
I have lived here for 43 years and I will continue to do so tomorrow, if I am
alive tomorrow, if I survive.”
Business is still business then in Kochi , though the nature
of it might have changed. The port moves with the times reinventing it and
trying to swallow its new invaders, though they plunder its resources, then
spices now water. Still any philosophical debate about tourism or what makes
good ‘living heritage’ and what doesn’t, for me another tourist, suddenly felt
arrogant standing in front of a man who was simply finding the best way to
survive in modern Kochi.
THE INFORMATION
GETTING THERE
The Nedumbassery airport is an hour’s drive fromFort Kochi
on the Ernakulam Bypass. An Indian Airline Level 4 ticket from Delhi will cost you around Rs
8,000. Jet, Sahara, Paramount
and Kingfisher also fly to Kochi .
Mangala Express and Kerala Express are the two daily trains from Delhi . The Trivandrum
Rajdhani (Rs 2,330 on 3A) runs twice a week.
GETTING THERE
The Nedumbassery airport is an hour’s drive from
WHERE TO STAY
There are good and cheap hotels on the mainland town of Ernakulam, but stay in the old town if you can. Most attractions can be reached on foot and the streets are worth a wander. The Taj Malabar onWillingdon Island
(0484-2666811/2668010; Rs 5,000-14,000) and the Malabar House (2216666; Rs
5800-11,900) are beautiful properties. Kimansion (2216730, Rs 2,500-4,000) is a
picturesque homestay on Napiers
Street .
There are good and cheap hotels on the mainland town of Ernakulam, but stay in the old town if you can. Most attractions can be reached on foot and the streets are worth a wander. The Taj Malabar on
ATTRACTIONS
St Francis Church is open from 6am-7pm and the Santa Cruz Basilica is open from 9am-1pm and 3-5pm. The Pardesi Synagogue is open from 10am-noon and 3-5pm. The Synagogue is closed on Friday, Saturday and Jewish holidays, as it is still a working Synagogue. TheMattancherry Palace is open between 10am and 5pm.
St Francis Church is open from 6am-7pm and the Santa Cruz Basilica is open from 9am-1pm and 3-5pm. The Pardesi Synagogue is open from 10am-noon and 3-5pm. The Synagogue is closed on Friday, Saturday and Jewish holidays, as it is still a working Synagogue. The
WHEN TO GO
The best time to visitKochi
is between September and May.
The best time to visit
WHERE
TO EAT
The Kashi Art Café is in a lovely ramshackle building and has great coffee and cakes. Malabar Junction is a chic restaurant with a seafood-based fusion menu. Cheaper, but without the ambiance is the Elite Restaurant, where you can get good fish. For the best biryani in town, go to Rahmatullah Hotel, better known as Kaikka’s after the chef, in Mattanchery.
The Kashi Art Café is in a lovely ramshackle building and has great coffee and cakes. Malabar Junction is a chic restaurant with a seafood-based fusion menu. Cheaper, but without the ambiance is the Elite Restaurant, where you can get good fish. For the best biryani in town, go to Rahmatullah Hotel, better known as Kaikka’s after the chef, in Mattanchery.
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