Six years after his initial renunciation he realized that extreme mortification does not yield liberation. He arose and broke the austerities. The five ascetics were disgusted and departed to Banares.
As his former garments had perished, he took a yellow shroud from the corpse of a servant girl awaiting cremation nearby. To help him wash it, the god Indra struck the ground and produced a pond. A local Brahmin’s daughter, Sujata, approached and offered him a golden bowl filled with rice prepared in the essence of the milk of one thousand cows. Renewed in body and mind, his complexion brilliant as the luster of burnished gold, the bodhisattva bathed and then walked to a nearby cave to continue his meditation. However, the earth shook and the voices of previous buddhas resounded in the air, telling him that this was not the place of his enlightenment and advising him to proceed to the nearby Bodhi tree. The sites of all these events were seen by the Chinese pilgrims in the fifth and seventh centuries, and they record that stupas had been constructed at each. None of these exist today.
As he walked to the tree the grain cutter Svastika gave him a bundle of kusha grass. A flock of birds flew around the bodhisattva three times. When he entered the area about the tree, the earth shook. He made himself a seat from the kusha grass on the eastern side of the tree and after seven circumambulations sat down facing the east. He made the great resolve not to rise again until enlightenment had been attained, even if his skin, bones and flesh should crumble away. Sending forth a beam of light from the hair-treasure between his eye-brows, he invoked Mara, who came to challenge him. Mara dispatched first his horrible armies and next his enticing daughters, but the bodhisattva remained unmoved and defeated him, calling upon the earth and her goddess as his witness. He continued in profound meditation through the three watches of the night and finally realized supreme enlightenment at dawn. The air filled with flowers and light, and the earth trembled seven times.
For seven days the Buddha continued to meditate beneath the tree without stirring from his seat and for six weeks more remained in the vicinity. During the second week he walked up and down, lotus flowers springing from his footsteps, and pondered whether or not to teach. This was later represented by the chankramanar jewel walk, a low platform adorned with eighteen lotuses, which now runs close and parallel to the north side of the Mahabodhi Temple. For another week he sat gratefully contemplating the Bodhi tree; this spot was later marked by the animeshalochana stupa, now situated to the north of the chankramanar. Brahma and Indra offered a hall made of the seven precious substances, in which the Buddha sat for a week radiating lights of five colours from his body to illuminate the Bodhi tree. Hsuan Chwang describes this site as being west of the tree and remarks that in time the precious substances had changed to stone. However, ratnaghara is now identified by some as a roofless shrine again north of chankramanar.
During a week of unusually inclement weather, the naga king Muchalinda wrapped his body seven times about the meditating Buddha, protecting him from the rain, wind and insects. Hsuan Chwang saw a small temple next to the tank, thought to be this naga's abode. He described it as being somewhat southeast of the Bodhi tree and it is now identified with the dry pond in Mucherim village near Bodhgaya.
While the Buddha sat meditating beneath
the ajapala nigrodha tree, Brahma came and requested him to teach the Dharma.
Hsuan Chwang saw this tree with a small temple and stupa beside it at the
southeast corner of the Bodhi tree enclosure. It is thought that the site
is now within the Mahanta's graveyard near the present eastern gate.
Buddha spent the last of the seven
weeks seated beneath the tarayana tree. Hsuan Chwang placed this some distance
south and east of the Bodhi tree enclosure, near the places where the bodhisattva
earlier had bathed and eaten Sujata's offering. All were marked by stupas.
Here two passing merchants, Trapusha and Bhallika, offered the Buddha the
first food since his enlightenment. Seeing that he needed a vessel to receive
it, the four guardians of the directions each offered precious bowls, but
he would only accept one of stone from each. He pressed the four bowls
together to form one, which survived, and when Fa Hien saw it in Peshawar
four rims could be seen in the one.
After thus spending forty-nine days
meditating close to the seat of enlightenment, the Buddha left Bodhgaya
on foot to meet the five ascetics at Banares in order to turn the first
wheel of Dharma. This accomplished, he returned briefly to Uruvela and
introduced the three brothers--Uruvela, Gaya and Nadi Kasyapa--to his teachings.
They developed faith in the Buddha and, together with a thousand of their
followers, became monks and accompanied Shakyamuni to Rajgir.
Thus far we have described Bodhgaya
only in connection with Shakyamuni Buddha, but that connection is in no
way exclusive. In the same manner as Shakyamuni, all the buddhas who show
enlightenment to this world eat a meal of milk rice, sit upon a carpet
of grass at Vajrasana, engage in meditation, defeat Mara and his forces
and attain supreme enlightenment beneath the Bodhi tree (although the species
of tree differs with each Buddha).
The present Bodhi tree is a descendant
of the original, for the tree has been destroyed deliberately on at least
three occasions. King Ashoka, initially hostile to Buddhism, ordered it
to be cut down and burned on the spot, but when the tree sprang up anew
from the flames his attitude was transformed. In deep regret for his destruction,
Ashoka lavished so much personal care and attention on the new tree that
his queen became jealous and secretly had it destroyed once more. Again
Ashoka revived it and built a protective enclosing wall, as had previously
been done by King Prasenajit of Koshala within the Buddha's lifetime. Later,
Nagarjuna is said to have built an enclosure to protect the tree from damage
by elephants and, when in time this became less effective, placed a statue
of Mahakala upon each pillar.
Records of the third destruction
of the tree are given by Hsuan Chwang, who reports seeing remains of these
walls, and states that in the sixth century a Saivite king of Bengal by
the name of Shasanka destroyed the tree. However, even though he dug deep
into its roots, he was unable to unearth it completely. It was afterwards
revived by Purvavarma of Magadha, who poured the milk of one thousand cows
upon it, causing it to sprout again and grow ten feet in a single night.
In addition to human destruction,
the tree has perhaps perished naturally several times, yet the pipal is
renowned for growing wherever its seeds fall and the direct lineage has
continued. General Cunningham offers an example. After showing severe decay
for more than a decade, the remains of the old tree fell over during a
storm one night in 1876. Young sprouts were already growing within the
old tree (which grew into the one we see today).
The origins of the Mahabodhi Temple,
which adorns the site today, are shrouded in obscurity. Various traditions
hold that Ashoka erected a diamond throne shrine, which seems to have been
a canopy supported by four pillars over a stone representation of Vajrasana.
When General Cunningham was restoring the floor of the present temple he
found traces that he took to be the remains of the shrine. It is his opinion
that the temple may have been built between the fifth and seventh centuries,
but this would seem to be based on Hsuan Chwang's detailed description
of it, while Fa Hien mentions it not at all. Others propose that because
of its resemblance to similar structures in Ghandhara, Nalanda and so forth,
as well as other archaeological evidence, its founding could have been
as early as the second century AD-- Nagarjuna is reputed to have built
the original stupa upon the roof, which is more consistent with the latter
theory. However, from Hsuan Chwang we can be certain that the temple existed
before the seventh century.
Accounts of the builder are no longer clear. Some legends attest that he was a brahmin acting on the advice of Shiva. The statue in the main shrine of the temple, famous for its likeness to Shakyamuni, is said to have been the work of Maitreya in the appearance of a brahmin artisan.
Monastic tradition seems to have
been strong in Bodhgaya. Fa Hien mentions three monasteries and Hsuan Chwang
describes particularly the magnificent Mahabodhi Sangharama, founded early
in the fourth century by a king of Ceylon. Both pilgrims make special remark
of the strict observance of the Vinaya by the monks residing there. Some
accounts tell that the great master Atisha, who later emphasized pure practice
of the Vinaya, received ordination in Bodhgaya.
As elsewhere, neglect and desolation followed the Muslim invasion of northern India. However, extensive repairs and restoration of the temple and environs in the fourteenth century by the Burmese and their further attempts in the early nineteenth century are recorded. In the late sixteenth century a wandering sanyasi settled in Bodhgaya and founded the establishment which is now the math of the Mahanta. When in 1891 Anagarika Dharmapala, inspired by appeals in the press by Sir Edwin Arnold, began the Mahabodhi Society and sought to restore the site as a Buddhist shrine, he was obstructed by bureaucracy. The British Government of India decided that the temple and its surroundings were the property of the Saivite Mahanta, who only then began to take an interest in it. Nearly sixty years of judicial wrangling followed until the Mahabodhi Temple was legally recognized as belonging to Buddhists.
Since the inception of the Bodhgaya
Temple Management Committee and the beginning of its active administration
in 1953, vast improvements have been made to both the temple and its grounds.
Existing structures have been repaired and new stupas are being erected.
With the reintroduction of gilded images in the niches of the Mahabodhi
Temple, it begins to regain some of the splendour described by Hsuan Chwang.
The establishment, in the surrounding
district, of beautiful temples and monasteries by the people of Tibet,
Japan, China, Thailand, Burma and others has brought back to Bodhgaya the
varied traditions of Buddhist practice that have evolved in those lands.
By contrast, the headless, mutilated statues in the local museum present
a disturbing reminder of past destruction.
Pilgrims abound in Bodhgaya and in
recent years thousands have had the fortune to listen to the Dharma there.
Many Buddhist masters are again traveling to Bodhgaya to turn the wheel
of Dharma. For example, the Kalachakra empowerment given by His Holiness
the Dalai Lama in 1974 was attended by over 100,000 devotees. The Tibetan
monastery now offers a two-month meditation course annually for the international
Buddhist community, and meditation courses and teachings are given occasionally
in the Burmese, Thai, Japanese and other temples.
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