Jesus In India

by Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad

Page 135 of 171

Jesus In India — Page 135

Jesus in India 135 Among the Afghans, as among the Jews, it is thought incumbent on the brother of the deceased to marry his widow, and it is a mortal affront to the brother for any other person to marry her without his consent. ' 14 Narrative of a Mission to Bokhara, in the years 1843- 1845, to ascertain the Fate of Colonel Stoddart and Captain Conolly, by the Rev. Joseph Wolff, D. D. LL. D. , Vol. 1, second edition, revised (John W. Parker, London {1845} M. DCCC. XLV. ) Page 7. 'From various conversations with Affghauns in Khorassaun and elsewhere, I learnt that some of them are proud of an origin from the children of Israel, but I doubt the truth of that partial tradition. ' Page 13. 'All the Jews of Türkistaun assert that the Türkomauns are the descendants of Togarmah, one of the sons of Gomer, mentioned in Genesis x. 3. ' Pages 14-16. 'The Jews in Bokhara are 10,000 in number. The chief rabbi assured me that Bokhara is the Habor, and Balkh the Halah, of the 2nd Kings, xvii. 6; but that in the reign of Genghis Khan they lost all their written accounts. At Balkh the Mussulman mullahs assured me that it was built by a son of Adam, that its first name had been Hanakh, and afterwards Halah, though later writers called it Balakh, or Balkh. The Jews, both of Balkh and Samarcand, assert that Türkistaun is the land of Nod, and Balkh where Nod "once stood. ". . . The tradition is an old one at Bokhara, that some of the Ten Tribes are in China. I tried the Jews here on various points of Scriptural interpretation, particularly that important one in Isaiah Virgin. They translated it as we Christians do, and they are in total ignorance of the important controversy between Jews and Christians on that point. vii. 14 I obtained a passport from the King after this most interesting