NationStates Jolt Archive


The Japanese Jesus trail

The Genius Masterminds
10-09-2006, 14:45
The Japanese Jesus trail

By Duncan Bartlett
BBC News, Japan


A Japanese legend claims that Jesus escaped Jerusalem and made his way to Aomori in Japan where he became a rice farmer. Christians say the story is nonsense. However, a monument there known as the Grave of Christ attracts curious visitors from all over the world.




The Grave of Christ has become an international tourist attraction
To reach the Grave of Christ or Kristo no Hakka as it is known locally, you need to head deep into the northern countryside of Japan, a place of paddy fields and apple orchards.

Halfway up a remote mountain surrounded by a thicket of bamboo lies a mound of bare earth marked with a large wooden cross.

Most visitors peer at the grave curiously and pose in front of the cross for a photograph before heading off for apple ice cream at the nearby cafe.

But some pilgrims leave coins in front of the grave in thanks for answered prayers.

The cross is a confusing symbol because according to the local legend, Jesus did not die at Calvary.

His place was taken by one of his brothers, who for some reason is now buried by his side in Japan.

The story goes that after escaping Jerusalem, Jesus made his way across Russia and Siberia to Aomori in the far north of Japan where he became a rice farmer, married, had a family and died peacefully at the age of 114.

A villager hinted that I might be able to meet one of Jesus' descendents - a Mr Sajiro Sawaguchi, who is now in his 80s.

His family owns the land on which the grave stands and his house is at the foot of the mountain.

I set off to find him but was told he was too ill to speak to me.

Jesus' descendant?

However, his grandson Junichiro Sawaguchi did agree to talk. Was I about to meet someone with a true touch of the divine?

The tubby middle-aged gentleman in glasses who spoke to me did not seem particularly Messianic.


Local legend says Mr Sawaguchi (r) is a living descendant of Jesus
"Actually, my family are Buddhists not Christians," said Mr Sawaguchi.

"And I don't claim to be a descendent of Jesus although I know some people have said my grandfather is connected to the legend. However, when I was a young child, my mother drew the sign of a cross upon my forehead as a symbol of good fortune," he told me.

Certainly the cross has brought good fortune to the villagers, who make money from the visitors and the media who seek out the grave.

It has become the region's only internationally recognised tourist attraction.

However the legend of Jesus the rice farmer does not stretch back very far. It only began in the 1930s with the discovery of what were claimed to be ancient Hebrew documents detailing Jesus' life and death in Japan.

Those documents have now mysteriously disappeared and the grave has never been excavated. I asked a village official, Masaoki Sato, if he realised that the grave might cause offence to Christians who believe in Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection.

"We're not saying that the story is true or what is written in the Bible is wrong," he politely explained. "All we are saying is that this is a very interesting old legend. It's up to the people who come here to decide how they interpret it."

Ritual and tradition

Many Japanese find it hard to make sense of Christianity. Schools are banned from teaching any religion and people are generally more interested in ritual and tradition than theology.

However, Christian-style weddings are enormously popular. They are often held in hotels which have special chapels, complete with crosses and stained glass windows.

Foreign students are sometimes hired to play the part of the priest, although the whole event has no official sanction from any church.

Churchy-looking buildings have other entertainment purposes too.

In the city of Nagoya, I went to a theme restaurant where diners could choose either to have dinner in the chapel, seated on pews and surrounded by paintings of Jesus and the saints, or on the floor below, which is decorated like a prison, complete with metal bars around each table.


Only 1% of Japan is officially Christian. However, there are some lively churches, such as the New Life Ministry in Tokyo.

When I arrived on Sunday afternoon it was packed with young worshippers, clapping along to songs of praise and raising their hands in joy.

I met Pastor Shintaro Watanabe, who was dressed in a floral Hawaiian shirt and had an almost permanent smile on his face.

Wasn't he shocked by the legend of Jesus' grave? He laughed and said it was just a silly story which caused him no particular offence.

"I suppose that many Japanese people feel respect for Jesus and the Bible," said the pastor. "The legend ties in with that. Perhaps it shows that people are looking to make a connection with Jesus in some way."

His church is trying to satisfy that spiritual curiosity, just as countless missionaries to Japan have attempted before.

Yet many Christians have discovered that the Japanese view of religion can be rather baffling - as the grave of Christ the rice farmer reveals.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2 (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/5326614.stm)

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Note - Effects on quoted document is to reflect the emphasis on BBC.co.uk

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So, what do you all think? I find this interesting. A descendant of Jesus? Jesus travelling to Japan? Intriguing.

Nonsense or truth?
Call to power
10-09-2006, 14:51
heading off for apple ice cream at the nearby cafe.

:eek: madness!

I for one think it doesn't matter whither its true or not the story is what is important
Cybach
10-09-2006, 15:01
Eat that Da Vinci Code ! lived in France my ass,...... :D
LiberationFrequency
10-09-2006, 15:05
The truth is Jesus escaped execution then went on a world tour spreading the word and sleeping with groupies.
The Genius Masterminds
10-09-2006, 15:06
Eat that Da Vinci Code ! lived in France my ass,...... :D

LOL

:D
Cybach
10-09-2006, 15:12
Though somehow a bit offtopic somehow with all these conflicting reports that Jesus died. That in India there are proofs of a Westerner from Nazareth coming to live with them to learn meditation at the exact timing where there is no mention of Jesus's life and he leaves them aroundwhen he is 30, and then Jesus pops up in the Holy land,... or escaped to live in France, and now Japan make me at least a bit convinced that someone called Jesus did exist at the time that proofs of this sort are found this often with a correlation making it feasible it could have been the same person.

Or conspiracies !
Cabra West
10-09-2006, 15:17
*roflamo

Good story. Not any more or less likely than any of the others, but good story anyway.

It does remind me of the cathedral at Cologne who at some stage during the middle ages claimes to have the skull of Jesus as a 12 yeasr old as a relic in their collection :D
Lunatic Goofballs
10-09-2006, 15:18
Sweet Ninja Jesus! :eek:

http://i33.photobucket.com/albums/d99/illscarlett22/JesusNinjaThumb.gif
Nomanslanda
10-09-2006, 15:30
*cough* bullshit *cough* *cough* *spasm...*

but then again its not a lot more random that all the other jesus stuff :)
Todays Lucky Number
10-09-2006, 15:39
but we all know Jesus is not dead don't we? :cool:
Lunatic Goofballs
10-09-2006, 15:39
*cough* bullshit *cough* *cough* *spasm...*

but then again its not a lot more random that all the other jesus stuff :)

It would certainly explain his absence after the Resurrecton. But let me just say this;

IF it were true, or even feasible, I know exactly where those ancient hebrew documents are; In a little steel box underneath Rome. *nod*

True or false, the last thing the Vatican would have wanted in the 1930s was curiosity. Today, they probably would have scientifically examined the documents. Perhaps if the Vatican ever gets around to it and proves they are fake, they will mysteriously turn up in an attic somewhere to be studied scientifically. Again. :p
Andaluciae
10-09-2006, 15:41
That's what I get for not reading the question all of the way through. I didn't notice the 'is nonsense 'at the end of the question and I voted no.
Cabra West
10-09-2006, 15:41
but we all know Jesus is not dead don't we? :cool:

I think you're confusing that with Elvis, aren't you?
Itsmineallmine
10-09-2006, 15:42
No.
Todays Lucky Number
10-09-2006, 15:51
I think you're confusing that with Elvis, aren't you?

nope although the idea is quite fun :D
I mean according to Islam God didnt let Jesus die, instead he made the betrayer look like Jesus with a miracle and took the living Jesus to heavens with another miracle. The betrayer was crucified thought to be Jesus, looking just like him to all. According to Islam, never ever even once in history God let one of his prophets be killed in the hands of heathens. All suffered much pain because they beared his word of course, all were opposed, exiled etc. but when it came to their lives through miracles they were always saved. Look at all the other prophets stories in Bible or Kuran you will see how they survive being thrown into fire by fire being turned to a field of roses and how moses split the sea, Muhammed hid in a cave from his followers and a bird made a nest, a spider wowed a web to entrance, so when assasins came tracking him returned back.
Free shepmagans
10-09-2006, 16:14
They invented anime, he MUST of been there.
Daistallia 2104
10-09-2006, 18:49
So, what do you all think? I find this interesting. A descendant of Jesus? Jesus travelling to Japan? Intriguing.

Nonsense or truth?

hehehe. I love this old story.
Nadkor
10-09-2006, 19:27
The one I quite like is the idea of going to Asia...around Pakistan area, and being hailed as the reincarnation as Buddha or something. They explain the gap in the Bible where Jesus doesn't appear to have done anything and say that he was recieving religious instruction from Buddhist monks. And that's the reason 'wise men' from the east followed a star to find him at birth, and why he had a vaguely buddhist outlook on life.

Seems plausible, in the world of the gospels.

Although, that's Rather like how Dumbledore not being dead sounds vaguely plausible in the world of Harry Potter.
Wallonochia
10-09-2006, 19:31
I think you're confusing that with Elvis, aren't you?

There's a difference between the two?
Kamsaki
10-09-2006, 19:37
They invented anime, he MUST of been there.
You just know a "Samurai Jesus" series is just around the corner.


Mind you, it has been suggested that Jesus might have been influenced by oriental schools of thought and even possibly been to the far east before his ministry. Were that the case, his return there after his death, even in the same sort of spiritual sense the disciples saw him in, might not be so far fetched.
Free shepmagans
10-09-2006, 19:42
You just know a "Samurai Jesus" series is just around the corner.


Mind you, it has been suggested that Jesus might have been influenced by oriental schools of thought and even possibly been to the far east before his ministry. Were that the case, his return there after his death, even in the same sort of spiritual sense the disciples saw him in, might not be so far fetched.

Around the corner? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VgL_xHs93ao
New Granada
10-09-2006, 19:56
It makes a significant ammount more sense than the "died and came back to life then floated up into the sky" tale.
Cybach
10-09-2006, 20:03
The one I quite like is the idea of going to Asia...around Pakistan area, and being hailed as the reincarnation as Buddha or something. They explain the gap in the Bible where Jesus doesn't appear to have done anything and say that he was recieving religious instruction from Buddhist monks. And that's the reason 'wise men' from the east followed a star to find him at birth, and why he had a vaguely buddhist outlook on life.

Seems plausible, in the world of the gospels.

Although, that's Rather like how Dumbledore not being dead sounds vaguely plausible in the world of Harry Potter.

Well it it makes sense in a certain way :)

But is far-fetched >_>
Desperate Measures
10-09-2006, 20:09
This is the most logical thing that I have ever seen written ever. And I didn't even make it past the first three sentences of the OP. I believe in Japanese Jesus. I believe.
Sheni
10-09-2006, 22:17
This is the most logical thing that I have ever seen written ever. And I didn't even make it past the first three sentences of the OP. I believe in Japanese Jesus. I believe.

I don't, but I WANT to.
Desperate Measures
10-09-2006, 22:27
I don't, but I WANT to.

Seek and you shall find. Though you might want to start with Normal Jesus first. Japanese Jesus is usually in Ninja Stealth Mode.
The Keltic columbian
10-09-2006, 22:38
Look, you are completly not-understanding the way of thinking a story in Japanese culture. A story is'nt used to explain something realistic as the Greeks, the Romans, and most of modern western civilzations do, but to express morals and beliefs. The story is not none-sense or sense it is simply explaining the growing popularity of Christian traditions and belifs.

It's a very good story by the way.
Londim
10-09-2006, 22:45
Pfft. That story is false. Actually I......I mean Jesus moved to Cuba ,fathered Castro and I.....Jesus was the mastermind behind Castros rise to power!

*flees*