A church linked to early plantation life turns 125
The Hindu
Mount Carmel Church in Munnar catered to workers from Tamil Nadu when tea planting was in full swing in the 1880s
The Mount Carmel Church in Munnar, the first Catholic Church in the high ranges, was set up for workers who mostly came from Tamil Nadu when tea planting was in full swing in the 1880s.
The church sheds light on early plantation life in Munnar.
As per documents, Fr. Alphonse, a Carmelite missionary from Spain, was instrumental in starting the church in a shed in 1898. He was among a team of 10 missionaries from Spain who reached the Varapuzha archdiocese. He travelled by foot from Varapuzha and with the support of plantation workers and management erected a shed for holding prayers.
“Due to the adverse climate in Munnar, the Mass was held only on special occasions such as Christmas and Easter. Fr Alphonse reached Munnar from Varapuzha and the held the Mass,’‘ says Fr. Michael Valayinchiyil, the parish priest.
He says efforts are on to trace a picture of Fr. Alphonse from the archives in Spain. Of the 10 missionaries, eight have been identified.
The missionary was buried inside the church in 1916 after he succumbed to black malaria. The present structure of the church was constructed in 1909, a year before the British constructed a church for Europeans in Munnar in the British-Gothic style.
“This was the first Catholic church that was fully opened for workers in Munnar. It was a meeting place and also supplied food items and met the medical needs of the plantation workers,” says Nikesh Issac, a local journalist, who had studied the plantation life.