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			A connection between Christianity and the Orient is not as outrageous as one might think. The Sumerians already traded with India, Alexander extended his realm to there, and the Old Silk Route opened for business at about 100 BCE, thus establishing regular commerce between Occident and Orient. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	None of which will of course by itself raise this movie from Dan Brown status. Gerard Stafleu  | 
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			I thought this bit of the article was bch material. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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 What this shows is a problem with statements like "has its root in." Christianity was a religion formed by rearranging already existing religious building blocks into a new formation. These blocks were in wide use, including some by Buddhism. So, does the use of these same, widely used, blocks indicate "roots" of Christianity in Buddhism, or just shared use of the blocks? Gerard Stafleu  | 
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 http://robertbr.tripod.com/spirit/isakasmir.html This is interesting stuff! And this professor is Sufi Islamic who studied Buddhism! Quote: 
	
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			St. Thomas is held by some traditions to have landed in South India (there is a St. Thomas Mount in Chennai which supposedly holds his remains, though this may or may not be the Doubting St. Thomas - there was another Thomas from a couple of centuries later who might be the one interred).  There is also a legend of St. Thomas landing in West India in the kingdom of one Gondophares, and also another tradition of him being somewhere in Iran/Iraq. 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	As for Jesus himself, some people say he spent his missing years in India. There are definitely some very Hindu-sounding traditions blended into Christianity (starting with the baptism, and even the resurrection is an interesting blend of Egyptian resurrection and Hindu reincarnation). Even if he wasn't influenced by India, he would have found easy acceptance as a Hindu guru. And to many Indians (e.g. St. Thomas Christians) who were very early converts to Christianity, he did.  | 
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			Fake Saint Thomas Story - claims that the Christian community in India was founded by a merchant, Thomas Canancus in 345 CE, who lead a group of refugess from Persia and was given asylum by Hindu authorities.
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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			Once again i state that Jesus is a local version of Buddha, who is a version of Brahma.Jesus never existed, neither did Buddha - only concepts.
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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			I am really impressed by this - especially the parallels! 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
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 'The boy grew in wisdom and stature'.The || as I am sure you will note, is that in western art iconography 'Jesus grew by vision and statue'  | 
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