Pillars intact...
Two columns which marks the entrance to
the Jew Street of Parur, is erroneously depicted as the symbol of their
cliquishness even though they were close to other communities of locale. It is
even believed that the King of Travancore ordered to erect those pillars. But
the historians and antiquarians were always puzzled about the origin and
existence of it.
One pillar intact....
Recently Muziris heritage project headed the renovation of the standing pillar and re-establishment of the other one which had fallen years back, A Hebrew and English etching was found which was hidden under the plaster all these days….it had nailed the issue with a final answer.
Pillar
during the renovation...
These are not just two Columns which mark the entrance or gateway
of the Jew Street, but an aid to keep up their ritual and tradition. It is
misnamed as “eruv/ erub”, which is named after its epithet, than the name of
the object itself. It acts as a device for removal of difficulties on applying
the precepts for Sabbath and other holiday rests. It creates a symbolic
enclosure that allows observant Jews, to carry objects outdoors on the Sabbath.
In ancient times, an eruv would combine multiple residences into a walled
courtyard, but in modern times, rabbinic interpretation allows such an
enclosure to be accomplished by creating symbolic wall or fence continuously
around an area.
Thus, confirmed that the pillars are not just a gateway to mark
the entrance but a ritual enclosure.
Such a set of pillars existed in Jew Town
of Cochin too. It is even mentioned by Moses Pereira Da Pavia (1686 AD) in his
report Noticias dos Judeos de Cochim “All living in one street with their
Herub (Eruv) is fixed with two pillars of stone crossed by an Iron bar,” it
shows that it was an old tradition among the Jews of Malabar.
I remember Gamliel Salem’s once explained to me, During Sabbath it
is forbidden to carry something, such as a prayer book from one’s home along
the street and to the synagogue, and food from one house to other. To the Jews
of Cochin the solution was an "Eruv", the reason behind building
the Jew town in such a manner where most of the buildings touch each other is
to create that symbolic enclosure.... Gammy uncle remembered that there were
two pillars at the entrance of the Jew Town in Mattancherry, and a string is
tied covering the entire space and touches synagogue too which makes the entire
town symbolically one enclosure. …..any detach in the building is solved by
this eruv. He explained to me that he had seen some people
touching the prayer book to the string and walk along to the synagogue and vice
versa. The tradition was stopped post Aliyah, as the buildings in the Jew town
were sold to non-Jews. Later the pillars demolished for some reason...
In modern world were the communities in
the civilized societies are the fights for setting eruv, here in the God's own
country it was built with no disputes....