
The last Jews of Calcutta: A community on the brink of disappearance
Today, only remnants remain: a few synagogues, schools, and a cemetery. The Jewish Girls' School (JGS) on Park Street still runs, but without a single Jewish student. Synagogues remain scattered across the city, but regular services have ceased. 'They cannot gather a minyan, the required number of ten males necessary to hold a service,' says Silliman. Nahoum & Sons in New Market is still the city's beloved Jewish legacy, but its menu has evolved to cater to modern tastes.
This is the story of Calcutta's Jewish community and their descent into oblivion.
The first Jews to arrive in Calcutta belonged to the Baghdadi community, one of the three Jewish communities in India. The other two — the Bene Israel of Maharashtra and Gujarat, and the Cochin Jews — had settled in India long before the Baghdadis. According to Navras Jaat Aafreedi, assistant professor of Modern Indian History and Jewish History at the Presidency University, 'The oldest written reference to the presence of the Bene Israel in the Konkan strip belongs to the year 1734.' The community, Aafreedi says, was described as one that was monotheistic, that refused to indulge in idol worship, that observed Sabbath on Saturday, and a community that refrained from consuming pork and circumcised their male offspring on the eighth day of birth.
Sayan Lodh, whose PhD focuses on the Judaizing Movements in India at Presidency University, says that Baghdadi Jews arrived in Calcutta in several waves, beginning in 1798 with Shalom Ovadya HaCohen from Aleppo, Syria. HaCohen was joined by family and other merchants from Iraq, Syria, and Persia who traded in jewellery, indigo, spices, opium, and silk. 'They gradually established a thriving commercial network stretching from West to East Asia, extending across all major ports such as Basra, Bombay, Calcutta, Singapore, and Hong Kong,' notes Lodh. This, according to him, came to form 'Jewish Asia'.
These merchants rented and purchased houses from Armenians, with whom Calcutta's Baghdadis maintained a close relationship for centuries. 'Until the Baghdadi elite moved to southern Calcutta between 1900 and 1950, they shared the city's grey town with Armenians, Anglo-Indians, Greeks, Portuguese,' writes academic Nathan Katz in Who Are the Jews of India? (2000).
The next wave of migration was in the 1830s when there was flooding in the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. A large number of Jewsmoved to Calcutta and set up trading houses. In a short time, they made a great fortune. Lodh says, 'They, in turn, re-invested their wealth in real estate, owning some of the prominent landmarks in Calcutta [Esplanade Mansions (built in 1910), Chowringhee Mansions (1907)]…'
The final waves of Jewish immigration to Calcutta occurred in the early to mid-twentieth century, 'driven in part by the Ottoman Empire's policy which made it compulsory for all males to serve in the army as World War I approached, and later by the horrors of Holocaust during World War II,' says Lodh.
Commercial opportunities, according to Silliman, were another driving factor. 'As the British presidencies of Calcutta and Bombay developed, Jewish merchants came here in search of fortune,' she says.
By the 1940s, there were over 4,000 Jews in the city. Several Jewish institutions had also been established, including three synagogues, the Jewish Girls' School (1881), and the Jewish Ezra hospital (1887). 'There's also the Ezra House and the Gubbay House in the Alipore zoo, housing birds and reptiles. It is named after Jewish philanthropists,' says Silliman.
The Calcutta Jews strictly observed their Baghdadi practices, including speaking Arabic, eating regional cuisine, and wearing traditional clothes. However, the Mutiny of 1857 came as a significant turning point. As Katz notes, 'This traumatic event propelled India's Baghdadis to abandon their familiar Middle Eastern cultural roots and to seek European status and identity.' Part of that process was to imitate the British and shed their Indianness.
The 'anglicisation' of Calcutta's Jews, as described by Lodh, began with language. English replaced Arabic in Baghdadi homes and offices. 'By 1915, this transition had been effected among the elite and by 1930, English was the language used for all community records, correspondence, and education,' adds Katz. The elites of the Jewish community sent their daughters to Loreto House, a Catholic school.
While earlier residing in the greytown district of Burrabazar, Baghdadi Jews now began moving closer to the white town districts of Bow Bazar, Park Street, and Ballygunge. Jewish architecture, too, resembled British style. 'The Maghen David Synagogue, for instance, externally resembles a church with a tall spire and a clock tower,' observes Lodh.
Baghdadi Jews also served as sheriffs, municipal councillors, and honorary magistrates in Calcutta. In 1879, Elia David Joseph was appointed Sheriff, an honour later conferred on his two sons. 'The Baghdadi Jews, in fact, adopted a Judeo-British identity,' asserts author Suparna Ghosh Bhattacharya in The Baghdadi Jews in India (2019). The anglicised women of the Baghdadi community played sports such as badminton, hockey, and basketball, emulating the lifestyle of British women.
'Their clothing changed, and so did their religious rituals,' says Lodh. He also mentions the practice of cutting cakes during weddings and wearing European suits and wedding dresses.
However, mimicking the rulers proved fruitless. The revision of electoral rolls for Central and Provincial (Bengal and Bombay) Legislatures between 1929 and 1935 eliminated the Baghdadis from the European group and categorised them as 'non-Mohammedan' along with the Bene-Israel and Cochin Jews.
'The Baghdadis finally understood their predicament in siding with the British, and gradually started to come closer with the other two Jewish communities in India…from the 1930s,' writes Lodh in his journal article The Role of Baghdadi Jews in India's Freedom Movement (2024).
A Jew, Bernard V Jacob, attempted to establish an 'All India Council' to bring the three Jewish communities together. However, a cohort comprising all the factions remained a distant dream. The Baghdadis refused to assimilate with their co-religionists. They did not participate in politics either, and barely understood the nationalist sentiment of fellow Indians.
Partition in 1947 deepened the crisis. 'Questions of their ethnic and communal identity became urgent, and they could no longer define themselves in terms of their Jewishness alone,' argues academic Joan G Roland in The Baghdadi Jews in India.
Many Baghdadis recognised that being both Indian and Jewish was possible and compatible. When the Constitution of India was adopted on 26 January 1950, notes Roland, the Jews also celebrated. 'They declared their allegiance to India, participated in Indian elections, and most accepted Indian citizenship…even though they felt their economic future was uncertain,' she adds.
Still, life after the British worried the community. With the departure of the colonial rulers and the emergence of the State of Israel a year later, Baghdadis made up their minds about leaving Calcutta. 'It is also possible,' reckons Lodh, 'that what they witnessed in Calcutta, the communal riots during the partition period, made them uneasy about living in independent India.' He mentions the account of Flower Silliman, a beloved member of the Baghdadi community who passed away last year, recalling how she witnessed the riots as a teenager and was deeply traumatised by the experience.
Socialist policies issued by the Indian government further discouraged the Jews. The regulations restricted imports and controlled the export of foreign exchange, hampering the business of many wealthy Baghdadis.
'As Calcutta's Jews began emigrating in increasing numbers to Israel, the UK, America, Canada, and Australia, JGS, in its new premises, became all but devoid of Jewish students,' says Silliman. In 1953, the school administrative body decided to admit non-Jewish students.
The identity of Calcutta's Baghdadi Jews remained ambiguous, neither British nor Indian. They were always worried about assimilation and strived to distinguish themselves from the Hindu, Muslim, and Christian communities of the city. Katz says, 'These Jewish immigrants were attracted to India largely because of the opportunities the British presence afforded, and they left India soon after the British did.' He adds that they were never intrinsically Indian as the Bene Israel or Cochini Jews – truly, 'an identity aloof.'
Today, only a few Baghdadi Jews remain. When asked about their numbers, Aafreedi says: 'How do you count Jews?' Jewish identity, he explains, is passed through the mother. 'Anyone born of a Jewish mother is Jewish, irrespective of what the person's faith is. Conversely, someone with a Jewish father but a non-Jewish mother would typically need to undergo conversion.'
The heritage buildings spread across Calcutta are among the last remaining links to the city's Jewish past. 'What I've learned from studying Calcutta's Jewish community,' says Lodh, 'is that several communities, other than the Bengalis, have played a role in shaping the city far out of proportion to their numbers. The Jews are one such community.'
Who are the Jews of India? by Nathan Katz
Calcutta Mosaic: Essays and Interviews on the Minority Communities of Calcutta edited by Himadri Banerjee, Nilanjana Gupta, Sipra Mukherjee
The Jewish Community of India: Identity in a Colonial Era by Joan G. Roland
Nikita writes for the Research Section of IndianExpress.com, focusing on the intersections between colonial history and contemporary issues, especially in gender, culture, and sport.
For suggestions, feedback, or an insider's guide to exploring Calcutta, feel free to reach out to her at nikita.mohta@indianexpress.com. ... Read More
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News18
4 days ago
- News18
How Orthodox Jewish families finding ways to support their trans children
Massachusetts (US), Aug 16 (AP) Ziva Mann remembers how joyful and smiley her daughter was as a child — the family even gave her the nickname 'Giggles." 'She was just sunshine," Mann said. That changed around second grade, when her joy began to fade. 'She got sadder and sadder," Mann recalled. 'It was like watching someone disappear." Mann later realised that her child's growing sadness was connected to a struggle to reckon with her gender identity. Her daughter came out as transgender at home in Massachusetts four years ago. 'Mom, I'm a girl," Mann remembers hearing her say. Though she was surprised by the news, she quickly came to admire her daughter's bravery. Since then, the family has striven to find the best ways to support Ellie within their modern Orthodox community, where tradition and strict gender roles shape daily life. They've managed to find emotional and spiritual resources close to home at a time when transgender rights are under attack nationwide. Raising a trans child in Orthodox Jewish communities Two of the three biggest branches of Judaism in the US — Reform and Conservative — support the rights of transgender people, but it can still be challenging for trans youth to find an inclusive congregation. Schools in Orthodox Jewish communities are typically divided by gender, and most synagogues have separate seating sections for men and women — sometimes on different floors. 'Orthodoxy today is just binary," said Myriam Kabakov, co-founder and executive director of Eshel, an organisation supporting LGBTQ+ people in Orthodox environments. 'You're either male or you're female. So if a trans person is in between transitioning, very often they will be asked not to come to synagogue." She said even after someone has fully transitioned, rabbis should allow them to sit where they feel comfortable. But that acceptance is not guaranteed. To connect parents and trans children with inclusive synagogues, Eshel developed a program called 'Welcoming Shuls," where people can confide in spiritual leaders who will treat them with respect. According to Kabakov, about 300 rabbis and 160 families with trans members have joined their listings. Deslie Paneth is among them. She lives on Long Island and has travelled far to find support for Ollie, her transgender son. 'One night, I said to my husband I need help, I don't know how to navigate this,'" Paneth said. 'Without Eshel, I don't know how this would have turned out for any of us." Balancing tradition and change Mann defines herself as modern Orthodox, meaning she strives to uphold Jewish law while embracing the values within her family. 'The only time we break the rules is to save someone's life," she said. 'Because a life is more important than all of the rules." Respecting her daughter's identity felt akin to saving her life, so Mann didn't feel the need to talk to God about it. She said that who her daughter is as a person mattered more than the gender she thought she had. Mann has heard of families with trans children who were asked to leave their synagogue, but this didn't happen to her. Before discussing Ellie's identity with other relatives, Mann reached out to her rabbi. He assured her that her daughter would be treated with dignity and respect. 'He offered us a blessing," Mann said. 'The strength, the love and the grace to parent a child who's walking a difficult path." Finding a place to belong Mann feels lucky to have found support, both in religious spaces and among family members, which has helped Ellie be her joyful self again. Some Orthodox families have faced a tougher process. Paneth recalled that her son, before starting his transition around 2017, was deeply religious, and they enjoyed sitting together at synagogue. 'He tells me still today that, especially around the holiday times, it hurts him that he can't sit next to me in temple," Paneth said. 'He's probably my child who has the strongest commitment to Judaism from an emotional connection." A rabbi told Paneth that Ollie is welcome to come to services, but he would now be expected to sit among the men. This is part of the reason why Ollie has not returned to synagogue since his transition. Faith and identity at a crossroads Ollie believes that his relationship with religion splintered as a student in an all-girls Orthodox Jewish high school. As he started raising questions about gender equality, none of the answers sufficed. 'I'm still convinced that if I weren't trans, I would still be a religious Jew," the 27-year-old said. He initially told his parents he was a lesbian. But since attending a secular college, making LGBTQ+ friends and feeling trapped during the pandemic, he decided to speak with them again. 'If I was going to survive this, I had to come out with my parents as trans and start medically transitioning." He had top surgery in 2022 and soon after met his girlfriend at JQY, a program for Jewish LGBTQ+ teens. The couple now lives together in New York. Ollie doesn't think of himself as Orthodox and says he would like to find a new path toward God. Paneth understands and still includes him in the Jewish holidays. Ollie appreciates it. Because he first connected to God as a girl, it doesn't feel natural to him to embrace traditions that are typical for Jewish men, like wearing a kippah. 'I don't do any of the tasks that men do religiously because I'm the same person I always was," he said. 'Even though I look different, my relationship to God didn't change." Making synagogues more inclusive Kabakov said many LGBTQ+ Jews eventually decide to leave Orthodoxy, but for those who wish to remain, Eshel and some spiritual leaders offer support. Rabbi Mike Moskowitz, who works at an LGBTQ+ synagogue in New York, thinks of his job as helping people understand how they can be their authentic selves and still feel accepted by their religion. 'It's not that Judaism is the problem," he said. 'Orthodoxy, the people, are the problem." The counselling he provides for trans children and their parents is specific to each person, but in general, he offers fresh interpretations of the Hebrew Bible. 'Those who want to be transphobic say the Bible says you can't wear misgendered clothing," Moskowitz said. 'I think a response is that trans folks are not wearing misgendered clothing. They're wearing gender-affirming clothing." He, like Kabakov, believes there's a trend in Orthodoxy toward more inclusivity, but there's more work to do. 'Discrimination is unholy," he said. 'Unity is coping through kindness and being able to replace the weight of oppression with the elevation of love." (AP) SKS RD RD (This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed - PTI) view comments First Published: August 16, 2025, 19:00 IST News agency-feeds How Orthodox Jewish families finding ways to support their trans children Disclaimer: Comments reflect users' views, not News18's. Please keep discussions respectful and constructive. Abusive, defamatory, or illegal comments will be removed. News18 may disable any comment at its discretion. By posting, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.


Indian Express
5 days ago
- Indian Express
Gulab jamun: The sweet that travelled across empires and centuries
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The Hindu
08-08-2025
- The Hindu
Presidency University celebrates 11th National Handloom Day
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