Isa

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El joven Jesús llegando a Ladakh, India.

En 1887, el médico ruso Nicolas Notovitch viajó a la ciudad tibetana de Himis, en lo alto de la cordillera del Himalaya, en busca de escritos antiguos sobre la vida de un hombre al que los budistas llamaban “Santo Issa”. En el monasterio de Himis, el lama principal le leyó manuscritos antiguos; entonces Notovitch escribió la historia de Issa, un israelita que viajó al Oriente para estudiar las sagradas escrituras y luego regresó para enseñarlas a su pueblo, en Palestina, y ahí fue crucificado.

The parallels between Saint Issa and Jesus were remarkable, leading Notovitch to conclude that the manuscripts provided the account, absent from the Bible, of Jesus’ life between age 13 and 30. He published the story of his discovery in 1890 in Life of Saint Issa (English trans. The Unknown Life of Christ, 1895). According to Notovitch, the original Pali manuscripts of the life of Saint Issa were in the library of Lhasa in Tibet where the Dalai Lama resided.

Critics claimed that Notovich’s account of the manuscripts was false. However, in 1922, Swami Abhedananda, a scholar and disciple of the Hindu Saint Ramakrishna, saw the same documents at Himis. Nicholas Roerich, Russian archaeologist, author, artist, philosopher saw the same, or similar, documents in 1925. Roerich also discovered Jesus’ journey to the East recorded in the oral history of the region. He said, “In what possible way could a recent forgery penetrate into the consciousness of the whole East?”

See also

Lost years of Jesus

For more information

Elizabeth Clare Prophet, The Lost Years of Jesus: Documentary Evidence of Jesus’ 17-Year Journey to the East.

Sources

Pearls of Wisdom, vol. 25, no. 58.

Elizabeth Clare Prophet, October 6, 1987.