Updated On: 07 February, 2024 09:56 PM IST | Mumbai | Nandini Varma
A young reader reviews a beautiful new children’s book that gives us an insight into the life of the earliest Jews who arrived in the historic city

An illustration by Silliman features Chanchal the monkey
In her new children’s book, Shalome Rides a Royal Elephant (Speaking Tiger), Baghdadi Jewish writer Jael Silliman stitches a fascinating history of the first Jews who arrived in Calcutta in the late 18th century. The book traces the journey of Silliman’s ancestor Shalome Aaron Obadiah Ha Cohen, who travelled to India from Syria by ship in search of new opportunities. However, what draws a reader in instantly is that it is narrated through the eyes of Shalome’s pet monkey, Chanchal.
When 14-year-old Aryaman Pathania, a voracious reader from Bombay International School, read the book, Chanchal’s colourful narration was the first thing that struck him. “The fact that the entirety of the book was narrated through Chanchal gave it an unbiased perspective, rather than if it were narrated by Shalome. It also gives the story a humourous tone,” admits Aryaman. Silliman teases the readers by throwing in fun terms like monkspective, monkpals, monkeylicious, and sounds like “tick tick tick and a lick”.