|
-: Gurus, Sants :-
Ramakrishna |
Buddha | Vivekananda
| Mahavira |
Guru Nanak |
Tukaram |
Mirabai
In
the sixth century BCE, north India was home to a
dozen or more kingdoms and oligarchies,
including the kingdom of Koysala, which in the
Ramayana is described asbeing ruled by Dasaratha
and his son Rama at one time, their capital
located at Ayodhya. The Sakya tribe, which ruled
over Koysala in the sixth century, had its
capital at Sravasti in the Himalayan foothills,
and it is at nearby Lumbini (now in Nepal) that
Siddhartha Gautama was born in or around 563 BCE
on a full moon night. His birth, like that of
Christ, is supposed to have been miraculous, and
the sage Asita is said to have declared that the
boy would become the greatest monarch of all
times or a great renouncer, the teacher of
humankind. Anxious lest Siddhartha take to the
life of a saint, his father and aunt, in whose
care he had been placed after the death of his
mother in his infancy, endeavored to hide the
realities of life from Siddharta. In his young
manhood, Siddhartha was married to Yasodhara,
who soon bore him a son.
Buddha. Gupta period, c. 5th centiry AD.
Sandstone, about 167 cms tall. Collection:
British Museum, London. One day, resolved that
he should see more of the world, Siddhartha
ordered a chariot to take him out to witness the
life led by his subjects. There, for the first
time, he encountered an old man bent with age,
and so came to the realization that with
advancing years ones strength diminishes. On
subsequent trips, he saw an ill man, and was
brought to an awareness of disease, and finally
a corpse, which brought home the inescapable
conclusion that no one can escape death. Upon
his return to the palace, Siddhartha resolved to
find the cause for the sorrow that afflicts
humans, as well as the way to bring the sorrow
to an end. Accompanied only by his faithful
servant Channa, he set out from the palace one
night; and then sending Channa back to
Kapilavastu with his jewel, Siddharta cut off
hair and assumed the life of a mendicant.
In his quest for the truth, Siddhartha engaged
with the teachings of various sages, and
practiced the austerities counseled by these
spiritual teachers. Weak from hunger and the
pain inflicted on his body, Siddhartha came to
the conclusion that extreme deprivation and
exposure of the body to pain would in no manner
bring him closer to self-realization. Moving
underneath a bodhi tree in Sarnath, outside the
vicinity of present-day Benares, he resolved to
sit and meditate until he achieved
enlightenment. Though visions of affluence,
power, opulent food, and sexual fulfillment
swept past him, Siddhartha remained untempted by
all these deviations from the path. It is then
that he became the exponent of a specific set of
teachings, henceforth known as the "Four Noble
Truth", namely: all existence is suffering (dukha);
the cause of suffering is ignorance (avidya) or
desire; if there is suffering, there is a cure
for it; and the cure for suffering lies in the
eight-fold path of right beliefs, right speech,
right conduct, right mode of livelihood, right
effort, right mindedness, right meditation, and
right aspirations.
Siddhartha, or the Buddha, "The Enlightened
One", as he became known, preached his first
sermon in the deer park at Sarnath in or around
527 BCE. The very first disciples he acquired
became the members of the Buddhist sangha or
association, and slowly his fame spread. It is
said that Kasshyapa, a renowned Brahmin sage,
came to realize the futility of worshipping the
fire (agni) upon encountering the Buddha, and
similarly the Buddha was able to persuade king
Bimbisara, who would become his patron, that the
sacrificial killing of innocent animals could
not be construed as adding merit or happiness to
ones life. The Buddha became the great exponent
of ahimsa or non-violence, but he resolutely
refused to claim for himself any miraculous
powers. One of the most famous episodes in
Buddhas life relates how, since his fame had
spread, a woman once came to him with her dead
child, and asked him to bring him back to life.
While consoling her, the Buddha asked her to
bring him a few mustard seeds from any house
where no death had taken place; and though she
went from door to door, this woman had to return
to the Buddha with the news that she had not
been able to find any such house. This would be
the great teaching of the Buddha: whatever is
born must die, and there is no permanence except
sorrow; and to free us from this sorrow, one
must become free from desire itself. The
Buddhas last words, in paraphrase, are said to
have been, "Growing old is the dharma of all
composite things."
Over the years, though his father endeavored to
restore to him the kingdom that he had
renounced, the Buddha could not be tempted to
abandon his calling; eventually, his own son,
Rahula, became his disciple. The oral sources
relate how some people conspired to kill him: a
huge boulder was thrown down upon him and some
disciples gathered around him, but it is said
that the boulder split in two, and a piece fell
on either side of the Buddha. A wild elephant
was set loose in the Buddhas path, and though
it caused havoc everywhere, it knelt at the
Buddhas feet. The Buddha lived to the age of
eighty, when he is described as having achieved
mahanirvana, or absolute spiritual emancipation.
In less than two centuries after his death, his
teachings had spread not only in India but over
large parts of Asia. The emperor Ashoka, who was
to establish the greatest empire India was to
know until the advent of the Mughals in the
sixteenth century, himself became a convert to
Buddhism. Some people have associated the
Buddhas teachings with an excessive
intellectualism and agnosticism; others have
charged that Buddhism is a form of quietism.
[For a more detailed consideration, see
Buddhism] However one may view the subsequent
history of Buddhism, it is clear that the
teachings of the Buddha constitute one of the
eminent chapters in the spiritual and
intellectual history of humankind. |