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Re-exploring the Past: The Fort Kochi Chapters – 1

Inside St Francis Church, Fort Kochi


Moraes Zogoiby (Moor), the narrator-protagonist of Salman Rushdie’s iconic novel The Moor’s Last Sigh, carries in his genes a richly variegated lineage. His mother, Aurora da Gama, belongs to the da Gama family of Kochi, who claim descent from none less than Vasco da Gama, the historical Portuguese Catholic explorer. Abraham Zogoiby, his father, is a Jew whose family originally belonged to Spain from where they were expelled by the Catholic Inquisition. Kochi welcomed all the Jews who arrived there in 1492 from Spain. Vasco da Gama landed on the Malabar coast of Kerala in 1498. Today’s Fort Kochi carries the history of all those arrivals and subsequent mingling of history and miscegenation of races.

Kochi’s history is intertwined with that of the Portuguese, the Dutch, the British, the Arbas, the Jews, and the Chinese. No culture is a sacrosanct monolith that can remain untouched by other cultures that keep coming in from all over the world. Kochi shows us how cultures mingle and remain ever dynamic. No dynamic culture can be a calcified fossil or a stagnant mass of granite that might at best boast about its ‘unadulterated’ antique history.

History cannot remain stagnant, however. Stagnation is never the nature’s way. Therefore, it keeps giving us certain markers of significant changes.

St Francis Church in Fort Kochi, one such historical marker, where Vasco da Gama was buried in 1524, is still preserved in good condition and is visited by hundreds of tourists every day. It reminds us that Fort Kochi (Cochin was the anglicised name during the Raj) is the oldest European settlement in India. Every street in Fort Kochi has a history to narrate, not a neo-history or a fabricated one but one which really goes back to the 15th and 16th centuries with concrete evidence which has not been erased by revisionists yet. Even the roads carry historical names.


Vasco da Gama’s primary intention in coming to India was trade. He wanted to establish a direct maritime trade route for spices. But his goal was quickly and inextricably linked to conquest and dominance. The Mughals led by Babur would invade the northern frontiers of India only three decades after Vasco da Gama established his foothold in the Southwestern coasts.

Vasco da Gama’s core objective was to break the Arab and Venetian monopoly on spices, especially pepper, cinnamon, and cloves. Previously these good reached Europe via complex, expensive, and time-consuming overland or Red Sea routes controlled by Muslim and Italian middlemen. [Please note that the Mughals were not the first Muslims to enter India. Nor were Muhammad bin Qasim's descendants.] The Arab Muslim merchants transported the spices overland through West Asia (Middle East), and then distributed throughout Europe by Venetian traders. This system involved multiple intermediaries and many taxes, making the final products extremely expensive in Europe. Vasco da Gama’s sea route put an end to all those cumbersome processes and taxes and middlemen.

In the process, Kochi became a melting pot of many cultures. Christians, Muslim, Hindus, Jews, and others lived together in Kochi.  The Jews have left the place for Israel though a few remain around the historical synagogue.

Muslims in Fort Kochi are a diverse, historically significant community, including local Malayalam speakers (Malabaris), traders like the Kutchi Memons (Sunni traders from Sindh/Gujarat) and Bohras (Shiite traders), and the ancient Naina community, linked to Tamil Muslim traders from Kayalpatnam. They've shaped the area's unique cultural blend with prominent mosques like the Memon Jamat Khana and unique institutions, maintaining traditions while integrating into Kochi's vibrant, multi-faith environment.

Close on the heels of Vasco da Gama’s arrival came the Portuguese missionaries to Kerala and reshaped Christianity which was already flourishing in the area right from the first century CE, thanks to the region’s trades with the Roman Empire. It is believed that Thomas, the disciple of Jesus, came personally to establish Christianity in Kerala. It is possible that Thomas could have undertaken the voyage on one of those Roman vessels. The Portuguese missionaries got into some serious conflict with the earlier Christians in Kerala. That’s a different history and we will look at that in another post.

One of the many tombs in St Francis Church


To be continued



Comments

  1. Hari OM
    ooh, love this - and it's so true that just about every nation on this planet is made up of such melting pots! Something that gets forgotten when lines are being drawn... YAM xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My writing, ever since Modi became the PM, has been motivated largely by this awareness of mine that it is sheer absurdity to demand any kind of racial superiority today. There has been too much mingling and miscegenation for any race to be 'pure' today. Through this series, I intend to underscore precisely that fact. No nation can be any Viswaguru today! No nation has a right to do that.

      Delete
  2. Thanks for your historically and enriched and informed piece empirically establishing that civilzations are in evolution, not clashing against each other (Samuel Huntington) but in a dialectical and spirally dialectical collaboration. The sample of each one's saliva under the Genome test, would prove the crisscrossing of civilizations, registered in the sinews of our flesh!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Racial purity is a myth. Any two humans share approximately 99.9% of their DNA. Yes, the saliva is enough to prove that and more. It's so silly that we humans still keep fighting in the name of borders.

      Delete
  3. It's always interesting how different cultures and peoples interact when they come into contact with one another.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. No doubt. The problem is some loony politician comes around and stirs the cultural soup into a political concoction and intoxicates the gullible public.

      Delete

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