In addition to Jewish expatriates and recent immigrants, there are seven Jewish groups in India. • Among the many theories noted by
Shalva Weil as to the origin of
Malabar Cochin Jews, they claim to have first arrived in India together with the Hebrew king
Solomon's merchants. The fair-complexioned component is of European-Jewish descent, both
Ashkenazi and
Sephardi. • Madras Jews: The
Spanish and Portuguese Jews,
Paradesi Jews and
British Jews arrived at
Madras during the 16th century. They were diamond businesspeople of Sephardi and Ashkenazi heritage. Following expulsion from
Iberia in 1492 by the
Alhambra Decree, a few families of Sephardic Jews eventually made their way to Madras in the 16th century. They maintained trade connections to Europe, and their language skills were useful. Although the Sephardim mostly spoke
Judaeo-Spanish (i.e., Ladino), in India they learned Tamil and Judeo-Malayalam from the
Malabar Jews. • Nagercoil Jews: The
Syrian Jews and
Musta'arabi Jews were Arab Jews who arrived at
Nagercoil and
Kanyakumari District in 52 AD along with the supposed arrival of
Thomas the Apostle, likely making them Christians in reality. Most of them were merchants and had also settled around the town of
Thiruvithamcode. By the turn of the 20th century, most of the families made their way to Cochin and eventually migrated to Israel. In their early days, they maintained trade connections to Europe through the nearby ports of Colachal and Thengaipattinam, and their language skills were useful to the Travancore kings. As historians Daniel Tyerman and George Bennett cited, the reason for this group of Jews selecting Nagercoil as their settlement was the town's salubrious climate and its significant Christian population. • The
Jews of Goa: These were
Sephardic Jews from Spain and Portugal who fled to
Goa after the commencement of the
Inquisition in those countries. The community consisted mainly of Jews who had been forcibly converted to Christianity but wanted to remain Portuguese subjects, instead of immigrating to countries where they could practice Judaism openly (e.g. Morocco and Ottoman Empire). They were the primary targets of the
Goa Inquisition. As a result, its members fled to parts of India outside Portuguese control. • The main branch of the Native
Bene Israel community is said to have arrived at the Konkan Coast in ancient times. They are completely mingled in the native culture. They believe that their ancestors fled
Judea during the persecution under
Antiochus Epiphanes and arrived on Indian soil after seven people survived a shipwreck near the Nagaon village on the
Konkan Coast in 175 BC. • Another branch of the
Bene Israel community resided in Karachi until the
Partition of India in 1947, when they fled to India (in particular, to Mumbai). Many of them also
moved to Israel. The Jews from the
Sindh,
Punjab, and
Pathan areas are often incorrectly called Bene Israel Jews. The Jewish community that used to reside in other parts of what became Pakistan (such as
Lahore or
Peshawar) also fled to India in 1947, similarly to the larger Karachi Jewish community. • The
Baghdadi Jews arrived in the city of
Surat from Iraq (and other Arab states), Iran and Afghanistan about 250 years ago, in the mid 18th and 19th centuries. • The
Bnei Menashe ("children of Manasseh") are
Mizo and
Kuki tribespeople in
Manipur and
Mizoram who are recent converts to
Rabbinic Judaism but claim ancestry reaching back to the lost Ten Lost Tribes of Israel—specifically, one of the sons of Joseph. • Similarly, the small
Telugu-speaking group, the
Bene Ephraim ("children of Ephraim") claim ancestry from Ephraim, one of the sons of Joseph and a Lost Tribe of Israel. Also called Telugu Jews, they have observed Rabbinic Judaism since 1981. • European Jewish immigrants to India escaping persecution during World War II account for a small portion of Jewish Indians today. From 1938 to 1947, about 200 Jews fled from Europe and sought asylum in India. Over seventy years later, the descendants of these Jewish migrants have made their own Jewish-Indian mixed community and culture within India. == Cochin Jews ==