was imported not many centuries later into Southern
India by the Nestorian or Chaldaean missionaries from
Persia and Mesopotamia, whose apostolic zeal ranged
all over Asia, even into Tibet and Tartary. According
to the Saxon chronicle, our own King Alfred sent alms
to India in 883 for St. Thomas and St. Bartholomew,
and at that date there certainly existed, besides
some small Christian communities on the Coromandel
coast, two flourishing communities on the Malabar coast,
where the so-called Syrian Church has maintained itself
to the present day. Another curious and perhaps
equally ancient link with the West may still be seen
to survive to-day in the small community of white Jews
at Cochin, which, according to their own tradition,
was founded when their forefathers were driven out
of Palestine after the destruction of the second Temple.
To the charter which they still have in their possession,
inscribed, like most west coast title deeds, on copper
plates, the date assigned by the best authorities
is about 700 A.D., and the powers and privileges which
were specifically conferred upon their ancestors show
that at that period already they had acquired in a
remarkable degree the confidence and friendship of
the Hindu Kings of Malabar. The decline of both
Christian and Jewish communities seems to have begun,
indeed, with the appearance of the first Portuguese
invaders from Europe, whose incursions destroyed the
peace and tolerance which Christian and Jew had enjoyed
in the days of undisturbed Hindu rule.
To what period the subjection of the old Dravidian
stock to the superior civilization of the Aryans dates
back, or in what manner it was continued, there is
little as yet to show. All that is actually known
is that at some very remote period Aryan Hinduism
was imported into Southern India by Brahmans from
the north, who established it in the first place probably
by force, and whose descendants have ever since maintained
the claims of their sacred caste to a position of religious
and social pre-eminence even greater than that which
any other Brahmans of the present day have succeeded
in retaining. Nowhere else in India does the
Brahman, as such, wield the power and assert the prerogatives
which the Namputri Brahman enjoys on the Malabar coast.
Even the Maharajahs of Travancore, who by birth belong
to the Kshatrya or warrior caste, have to be “born
again” by a peculiar and costly ceremony into
the superior caste before they ascend the throne, and
one sept of the Namputri Brahmans successfully exacts
in the person of the head of the Azhvancheri family
recognition of its spiritual overlordship by personal
homage from the Maharajah once in every six years.
Nothing, perhaps, conveys more graphically the extraordinary
sanctity which attaches to the Brahman caste than
the uncompromising manner in which all along the Malabar
coast they have enforced and maintained the laws of
ceremonial “pollution.” Nowhere else
have such stringent rules been enacted to fix the