![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Religious
Thinker of India : Gautama Buddha
Gautama Buddha was born
Siddharta Gautama in Northern India around 563 BC, on the day of the
full moon in May. He was the son of the king and queen of the Sakya
kingdom. At his auspicious birth, seven Brahmin priests consulted by the
king agreed that if the young prince would stay at home, he would become
a universal king, unifying India; but if he left, he would become a
Buddha and remove the veil of ignorance from the world. The eighth
Brahmin declared that he would definitely become a Buddha, renouncing
the world after seeing four signs - an old man, a diseased man, a dead
man and a holy man. The king, concerned about losing his heir, sheltered his son from pain and suffering and surrounded him with every conceivable luxury - including three palaces and 40,000 dancing girls. The turning point of Siddhartha's life occurred when he was twenty-nine as he set out on four journeys during which he encountered a decrepit old man leaning on a staff; a pitiful man wrecked with disease; a corpse; and finally a yellow robed monk with a shaved head and a begging bowl. Moved with compassion by the first three signs, he realized that life was subject to old age, disease and death. The fourth sign signified to him the possibility of overcoming these conditions and inspired him to leave the world he knew in order to find a solution to suffering. In the middle of the night the prince left his wife and newborn son and began the life of a wandering monk. He joined a group of five ascetics and for six years practiced severe austerities, which left him so weak that he nearly lost his life. Realizing the futility of asceticism the prince abandoned his austerities to seek his own path of enlightenment whereupon his five companions rejected him and deserted him. One day a villager's daughter fed him a rich rice milk which gave him great strength. Following this meal he sat beneath a fig tree and vowed not to move until he had attained enlightenment. The tree became known as the Bo tree (short for Bodhi or enlightenment) and the place was later named the Immovable Spot. While Gautama was in meditation, Mara, the Evil One, confronted him with temptations much in the same manner in which Jesus was tested by Satan during his fasting in the wilderness. Mara tempted him with beautiful dancing girls and voluptuous goddesses parading before him, followed by terrible demons assailing him with weapons of flaming rocks, boiling mud and utter darkness, but Gautama remained unmoved. As a last resort, Mara challenged his right to be doing what he was doing. In response, Gautama used the earth-touching mudra. He tapped the earth, and the earth thundered her answer: "I bear you witness!" - whereupon Mara fled. Gautama spent the rest of the night in deep meditation, in samadhi, and finally reached his enlightenment. This took place on the day of the full moon in the month of May about the year 528 BC, when Gautama was thirty six. In his enlightened state Gautama had realized the Four Noble Truths, which became the foundation of his teaching:
At the age of eighty, one of his devoted followers, Cunda the goldsmith, unknowingly served him a meal that contained poisoned mushrooms. Gautama became violently ill. Concerned that Cunda might feel responsible for his death, he compassionately asked Ananda, his main disciple, to tell Cunda that of all the meals he had eaten, only two stood out as special blessings -one was the meal served to him before his enlightenment, and the other was the food from Cunda which opened the gates to his transition. Gautama passed during the full moon of May, about 483 BC. |
| Powered by the { Solution 4 Matrix } Creators of { Guide 2 India } |