Jesus in India - Hollywood-Bollywood film

Now a Hollywood-Bollywood film about Jesus going to India to study Hinduism Vedas and Buddhist scriptures.

Hollywood takes action hero Jesus to India

Film based on Aquarian Gospel to cover years left out of New Testament

Hollywood is to fill in the Bible’s “missing years” with a story about Jesus as a wandering mystic who travelled across India, living in Buddhist monasteries and speaking out against the iniquities of the country’s caste system.

Film producers have delved deep into revisionist scholarship to piece together what they say was Jesus’s life between the ages of 13 and 30, a period untouched by the recognised gospels.

The result is the Aquarian Gospel, a $20m movie, which portrays Jesus as a holy man and teacher inspired by a myriad of eastern religions in India. The Aquarian Gospel takes its name from a century-old book that examined Christianity’s eastern roots and is in its 53rd reprint.

The film’s producers say the movie will be shot using actors and computer animation like 300, the retelling of the Battle of Thermopylae, and will follow the travels of Yeshua, believed to be the name for Jesus in Aramaic, from the Middle East to India. Casting for suitable Bollywood and Hollywood actors has begun.

“The Bible devotes just seven words to the most formative years of Yeshua’s life saying: ‘The boy grew in wisdom and stature’. The [film] will follow Christ’s journey to the east where he encounters other traditions, and discovers the principles that are the bedrock of all the world’s great religions,” said Drew Heriot, the film’s director, whose credits include the cult hit The Secret.

The film, which is due for release in 2009, sets out to be a fantasy action adventure account of Jesus’s life with the three wise men as his mentors. Although the producers say the film will feature a “young and beautiful” princess, it is not clear whether Jesus is to have a love interest.

The producers say they are hoping for commercial and spiritual gains. “We think that Indian religions (Hinduism, Jainism and Buddhism, especially with the idea of meditation, played a big part in Christ’s thinking. In the film we are looking beyond the canonised gospels to the ‘lost’ gospels,” said William Sees Keenan, the producer, who is currently making Lindsay Lohan’s Poor Things.

“We are looking at new themes. In our story Jesus was loyal to the untouchables [in India] and he defended them with his life by saying that everyone could read the Vedas [Hindu holy books],” said Mr Keenan, a “lapsed Catholic”.

The theory that Jesus’s teachings had roots in Indian traditions has been around for more than a century. In 1894 a Russian doctor, Nicholas Notovitch, published a book called The Unknown Life of Christ, in which he claimed that while recovering from a broken leg in a Tibetan monastery in the Ladakh region, close to Kashmir, he had been shown evidence of Christ’s Indian wanderings. He said he was shown a scroll recording a visit by Jesus to India and Tibet as a young man. Indian experts claim that documentary proof remains of this Himalayan visit.

“I have seen the scrolls which show Buddhist monks talking about Jesus’s visits. There are also coins from that period which show Yuzu or have the legend Issa on them, referring to Jesus from that period,” said Fida Hassnain, former director of archaeology at the University of Srinagar.

Hassnain, who has written books on the legend of Jesus in India, points out that there was extensive traffic between the Mediterranean and India around the time of Jesus’s life. The academic pointed out that in Srinagar a tomb of Issa is still venerated. “It is the Catholic church which has closed its mind on the subject. Historians have not.”

More dramatic are the claims that Buddhism had prompted the move from the “eye for an eye” ideology of the Old Testament to “love thy neighbour” in the New Testament.

In 1995 a German religious expert, Holger Kersten, claimed that Jesus had been schooled by Buddhist monks to believe in non-violence and to challenge the priesthood. Kersten’s book remains a bestseller in India.

The Catholic church in India dismisses the film as just “Hollywood filmmakers in search of a new audience rather than the truth”. Aware that religious passions are easily inflamed, after the Da Vinci Code film sparked protests among Indian Christians, its spokesman said that a movie about Jesus in India was plainly “fantasy and fiction”.

“I have personally investigated many of these claims and they remain what they first seem: fiction,” said John Dayal, president of the All India Catholic Union which represents 16 million churchgoers. “I am sure it will make money but I do not think it will displace thousands of years of biblical thought.”

Re: Jesus in India - Hollywood-Bollywood film

How will White Anglican Christian react that Christ was not a Blue Eyed Handsome White who went in search of Hinduism and Buddhism to India?

Re: Jesus in India - Hollywood-Bollywood film

Mallika Sherawat to play Goddess Saraswati in The Aquarian Gospel!
by Rajiv Dutta

http://www.indiatarget.com/cgi-bin/detailnews.cgi?id=6435

Sexy Mallika to play companion of Jesus. Bollywood’s sexy starlet Mallika Sherawat has bagged herself a top-notch role in a big budget Hollywood flick.

She will play the role of Saraswati in The Aquarian Gospel, an epic story about the missing years of Jesus Christ’s life, where he travelled from Israel through to India. During his journey, Jesus encountered many people of different faiths, including Hinduism.

Mallika is excited about landing this plum role and is relishing the challenge of bringing Saraswati to life. After doing herself injustice in Jackie Chan’s The Myth, Mallika will now be hoping to prove that she does have the talent (and of course the looks) to make it in Hollywood.

What are your thoughts on this unusual casting… do you believe that Mallika Sherawat is the right actress to play such a role in a film that will indeed be very sensitive and provoke immense debate? Or do you think the casting guys have got it all wrong and casting this over-exposed girl is professional suicide? Whatever your thoughts, we would love to hear from you. Please leave your feedback in the comments section below.

There is a documentary shown on Sundance channel,

What occurred in Jesus’s life between the ages of 12 and 30 is largely a mystery. Some scholars refer to this period as “the hidden years.” Curious to explore this formative biographical period, English teacher Edward T. Martin and filmmaker Paul Davids investigate a theory that Jesus traveled the Silk Road as a young man and lived with both Hindus and Buddhists. In their quest, Martin travels more than 4000 miles through India and looks into reports of an ancient manuscript about Jesus housed in a remote monastery in Ladakh.

Sundance Channel : Film : Jesus in India

Jesus in India - The Movie

William H. Kennedy - Sphinx Radio - March 2009

“Now i watched this film, and i’ve been fascinated with this topic since i was 14 years old, and read ‘Autobiography of a Yogi’ by Paramahansa Yogananda - who was one of the first eastern people to come to the States and i was really really happy you had some people from his organisation on the programme and you also had some really hardcore scholars - and its the best movie on Jesus in India i’ve ever seen and i actually have seen a couple others, but this is the most comprehensive, and one thing i want to point out to anybody out there interested in Christian apologetics or just in Hinduism - this is a ‘must see’ film.”

not ‘Goddess’ Saraswati, just Saraswati. most probably the “young and beautiful” princess.