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BuddhaGaya | Rajgriha | Nalanda | Sarnath | Shravasti | Sankashya | Lumbini | Introduction |
"How transient are all component
things!
Growth is their nature and decay:
They are produced, they are dissolved
again:
And this is best, -- when they have
sunk to rest."
While staying at Vaisali, Buddha thrice mentioned to Ananda a buddha's ability to remain alive until the end of the aeon. Failing to understand the significance of this Ananda said nothing and went to meditate nearby. Shakyamuni then rejected prolonging his own life-span. When Ananda learned of this later he implored the Buddha to live longer but he was refused, for his request had come too late.
Coming to Pava, the blacksmith's son Kunda offered him a meal which included
meat. It is said that all the buddhas of this world eat a meal containing
meat on the eve of their passing away. Buddha accepted, but directed that
no one else should partake of the food. Later it was learned that the meat
was bad. He told Ananda that the merit created by offering an enlightened
one his last meal is equal to that of offering food to him just prior to
his enlightenment.
Between Pava and Kushinagar the
Buddha rested near a village through which a caravan had just passed. The
owner of the caravan, a Malla nobleman, came and talked to the Buddha.
Deeply moved by Shakyamuni's teachings, he offered the Buddha two pieces
of shining gold cloth. However, their lustre was completely outshone by
Shakyamuni's radiance. It is said that a buddha's complexion becomes prodigiously
brilliant on both the eve of his enlightenment and the eve of his decease.
The next day, when they arrived at
the banks of the Hiranyavati river south of Kushinagar, the Buddha suggested
that they should go to the caravan leader's sala grove. There, between
two pairs of unusually tall trees, Shakyamuni lay down on his right side
in the lion posture with his head to the north. Ananda asked if Rajgir
or Shravasti, both great cities, would perhaps be more fitting places for
his passing. The Buddha replied that in an earlier life as a bodhisattva
king this had been Kushavati his capital, and at that time there had been
no fairer nor more glorious city.
The noblemen of Kushinagar, informed
of the Buddha's impending death, came to pay him respect. Among them was
Subhadra, an 120-year-old brahmin who was much respected, but whom Ananda
had turned away from the monkhood three times. However, the Buddha called
the brahmin to his side, answered his questions concerning the six erroneous
doctrines, and revealed to him the truth of the buddhist teaching. Subhadra
asked to join the Sangha and was thus the last monk to be ordained by Shakyamuni.
Subhadra then sat nearby in meditation, swiftly attained arhantship and
entered parinirvana shortly before Shakyamuni.
As the third watch of the night approached,
the Buddha asked his disciples thrice if there were any remaining perplexities
concerning the doctrine or the discipline. Receiving silence, he gave them
the famous exhortation: "Impermanence is inherent in all things.
Work out your own salvation with diligence." Then, passing through the
meditative absorptions, Shakyamuni Buddha entered mahaparinirvana. The
earth shook, stars shot from the heavens, the sky in the ten directions
burst forth in flames and the air was filled with celestial music. The
master's body was washed and robed once more, then wrapped in a thousand
shrouds and placed in a casket of precious substances.
For seven days, offerings were made
by gods and men, after which, amidst flowers and incense, the casket was
carried to the place of cremation in great procession. Some legends say
that the Mallas offered their cremation hall for the purpose. A pyre of
sweetly scented wood and fragrant oils had been built but, as had been
foretold, it would not burn until Mahakashyapa arrived. When the great
disciple eventually arrived, made prostrations and paid his respects, the
pyre burst into flames spontaneously.
After
the cremation had been completed the ashes were examined for relics. Only
a skull bone, teeth and the inner and outer shrouds remained. The Mallas
of Kushinagar first thought themselves most fortunate to have received
all the relics of the Buddha's body. However, representatives of the other
eight countries that constituted ancient India also came forth to claim
them. To avert a conflict, the brahmin Drona suggested an equal, eightfold
division of the relics between them. Some accounts state that in fact Shakyamuni's
remains were first divided into three portions--one each for the gods,
nagas and men--and that the portion given to humans was then subdivided
into eight. The eight peoples each took their share to their own countries
and the eight great stupas were built over them. In time these relics were
again subdivided after Ashoka had decided to build 84,000 stupas. Today
they are contained in various stupas scattered across Asia.
In later times Fa Hien found monasteries at Kushinagar, but when Hsuan Chwang came the site was almost deserted. Hsuan Chwang did see an Ashoka stupa marking Kunda's house, the site of Buddha's last meal. Commemorating the mahaparinirvana was a large brick temple containing a recumbent statue of Buddha. Beside this was a partly ruined Ashoka stupa and a pillar with an inscription describing the event. Two more stupas commemorated former lives of the Buddha at the place. Both Chinese pilgrims mention a stupa where Shakyamuni's protector Vajrapani threw down his sceptre in dismay after Buddha's death, and some distance away a stupa at the place of cremation and another built by Ashoka where the relics were divided.
(Wat Thai Kusinarachlermraj)
Kushinagar was rediscovered and identified
before the end of the last century. Excavations have revealed that a monastic
tradition flourished here for a long time. The remains of ten different
monasteries dating from the fourth to the eleventh centuries have been
found. Most of these ruins are now enclosed in a park, in the midst of
which stands a modern shrine housing a large recumbent figure of the Buddha.
This statue was originally made in Mathura and installed at Kushinagar
by the monk Haribhadra during the reign of King Kumaragupta (415-56 AD),
the alleged founder of Nalanda Monastery. When discovered late in the last
century the statue was broken but it has now been restored. Behind this
shrine is a large stupa dating from the Gupta age. This was restored early
in this century by the Burmese. Not far away a small temple built on the
Buddha's last resting place in front of the sala grove has also been restored.
Some distance east a large stupa, now called Ramabhar, remains at the place
of the cremation.
On one side of the park a former
Chinese temple has been reopened as an international meditation centre.
Next to it stands a large Burmese temple. On the south side of the park
is a small Tibetan monastery with stupas in the Tibetan style beside it.
Thus also at Kushinagar one can see dharmic activities alive even today.
Stupa at Wat ThaiKusinarachermraj
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