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==External links== ==External links==

* ''Roza Bal, The Tomb of Jesus'' by Fida Hassnain and Suzanne Olsson.ISBN-13: 978-1419697586 Booksurge usa, Gulshan Publishing, India. Modern research into Roza Bal tomb and efforts to retrieve DNA from the tomb.
* (site examines theory of Jesus in India. Includes and of Roza Bal) * (site examines theory of Jesus in India. Includes and of Roza Bal)
* (site subscribes to the identification with Jesus) * (site subscribes to the identification with Jesus)

Revision as of 07:50, 14 February 2009

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Roza Bal

Roza Bal is the name of a shrine located in the Khanyar district of Srinagar, in Kashmir, India, venerated by some Muslims, Hindus and Buddhists. Some people identify the sage buried there with one Yuz Asaf and with Jesus, whom they allege to have arrived in Kashmir after surviving his crucifixion.

The tomb itself consists of a low rectangular building on a raised platform, surrounded by railings at the front. It has three arches at the front, where entry can be had, and four arches at the side. Inside is a rock carving that is said to show feet bearing crucifixion wounds.

The tomb had previously been maintained by local descendants of the buried sage. It is currently maintained by a Board of Directors consisting of Sunni Muslims. Sahibzada Basharat Saleem, a former caretaker (now deceased), claimed to hold genealogical tables that link him as a direct descendant of the buried sage. In recent times another man was buried there, who is revered by some local Muslims as a Sufi saint, although others point to historical data that he was only the shrine's long-serving caretaker.

Notes

  • Roza Bal, The Tomb of Jesus by Fida Hassnain and Suzanne Olsson.ISBN-13: 978-1419697586 Booksurge usa, Gulshan Publishing, India, 2008. Modern research into Roza Bal tomb and efforts to retrieve DNA from the tomb.
  1. Several authors have held the view that Jesus had travelled to the Indian subcontinent including Mirza Ghulam Ahmad and the Russian traveler Nicolas Notovitch.
  2. James Polster: Mystery of the Martyr's Tomb. Yahoo! News, May 15, 2006

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