In
this unit: After
leaving the palace, Siddhartha was determined to discover
the meaning of existence. He studied with the best teachers
of the day, and lived the hard life of an ascetic. Yet
he didn't feel any closer to the Truth. The turning point
came when he almost died of hunger. Soon after that, he
attained enlightenment under the Bodhi tree.
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At
the age of 29, Siddhartha began the homeless life
of a monk. From Kapilavatthu, he walked south to the
city of Rajagaha, the capital of the Magadha country.
The king of this country was named Bimbisara.
The morning after Siddhartha arrived, he went to the
city and obtained his meal for the day by going from
house-to-house begging with an alms-bowl. |
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Searching
for Teachers
Siddhartha
wandered along the Ganges River looking for spiritual
teachers. Alara Kalama and Uddaka Ramaputta were considered
to be the best teachers in meditation at that time so
Siddhartha went to study with them.
First
he studied under Uddaka Ramaputta, then under Alara Kalama.
Very soon he had learnt all they had to teach, but he
had not learnt to end suffering. He said to himself, "I
must find the truth on my own".
Six
Years of Hardship
With his five friends, Siddhartha went to a forest near
the village of Uruvela. Here, several holy men were living
in and tormenting themselves with extreme poverty.
They
believed that if they put their bodies through terrible
physical hardship, they would understand the truth. Some
slept on a bed of nails. Some stood on their head. They
all ate so little they were just skin and bones.
Siddhartha
found a quiet spot on the banks of a nearby river. There
he practised the most severe hardship. He slept on a bed
of thorns. He ate only one grain of wheat and one sesame
seed a day.
At
other times, he would eat nothing at all. His body wasted
away until there was only a layer of thin skin covering
his bones. Birds made nests in his matted hair and layers
of dust covered his dried-up body. Siddhartha sat completely
still, not even brushing away insects.
The
Song of the Lute
One
evening, a group of young girls on their way home passed
by Siddhartha who was sitting in meditation. They were
playing lutes, a musical instrument, and singing. He thought,
"When the strings of the lute are loose, its
sound won't carry. When the strings are too tight, it
breaks. When the strings are neither too loose nor too
tight, the music is beautiful. I'm pulling my strings
too tightly. I cannot find the Way to Truth living a life
of luxury or with my body so weak."
Thus,
he decided to give up self-torture. He came to know that
this was not the correct way.
Soon
after, while bathing in the river, Siddhartha was so weak
that he fainted and fell. Sujata, a young village girl
who lived by the river, saw him and brought him a bowl
of rice and milk. After his meal, he immediately felt
stronger and continued his meditation.
When
his five companions saw him eat, they were disgusted,
thinking he'd given up. So they left him.
The
Sun of Enlightenment Shines
Siddhartha remembered meditating under the rose-apple
tree when he was a child. "I shall meditate
as I did before. Perhaps that is the way to become enlightened."
From then on he began to eat daily.
Still
seeking a way to understand the meaning of life, Siddhartha
set out for Buddhagaya. Near a grove, he sat down under
a huge Bodhi tree. Silently he vowed, "Even if my
flesh and blood were to dry up, leaving only skin and
bones, I will not leave this place until I find a way
to end all sorrow." He sat there for forty
nine days. He was determined to discover the source of
all pain and suffering in the world. Mara, the evil one,
tried to scare him into giving up his quest. For instance,
he hoped to lure Siddhartha into having selfish thoughts
by sending visions of his very beautiful daughters. But
the Buddha's goodness protected him from such attacks.
During
this period, Siddhartha was able to see things as they
truly were. Now he had finally found the answer to suffering:
"The cause of suffering is greed, selfishness
and stupidity. If people get rid of these negative emotions,
they will be happy."
During
a full-moon night in May, Siddhartha went into deep meditation.
As the morning star appeared in the eastern sky, he became
an enlightened one, a Buddha. He was thirty five years
old.
When
the Buddha stood up at last, he gazed at the tree in gratitude,
to thank it for having given him shelter. From then on,
the tree was known as the Bodhi tree, the tree of Enlightenment.
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Congratulations!
Now that you have
finished unit 3, why not see what you
have learned by doing the unit 3 Quiz?
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Launch
Quiz |
Note: Quiz uses
Flash 6.0 |
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