
With Kochi being a melting pot of different religions - Hinduism 47%, Christianity 35%, and Islam, Jainism, Judaism, Sikhism and Buddhism in lesser numbers - it sometimes feels as if every other day is a festival!
Appropriate to its multi-ethnic composition, Kochi celebrates traditional Kerala festivals like
Onam (harvest festival) and
Vishu along with North Indian Hindu festivals like Holi and Diwali with great fervour. Christian and Islamic festivals like Christmas, Easter, Eid ul-Fitr and Milad-e-sherif are also celebrated. A merry making fest called the
Cochin Carnival is celebrated at Fort Kochi during the last ten days of December.
The city once had a large Jewish community, known as the
Malabar Yehuden - and now increasingly as Cochin Jews - that figured prominently in Kochi's business and economic strata. Most Cochin Jews now live in Israel.