The historical Buddha was born
Prince Siddhatha Gotama in Kapilavatthu, near the present-day
border of India and Nepal,
on the May Full Moon day in 623 B.C. His parents, King Suddhodana and Queen
Maya, had waited for a child for a long time. Everyone in the kingdom rejoiced
at his birth.
At this time India already had a rich
spiritual heritage. It had been prophesized there would soon be an ascetic who
would realize the ultimate truth and become the greatest teacher. According the Hindu tradition, five days after his birth seven Brahmin priests came to the
temple to name the baby using astrology and forecast his future by reading his
body signs. Each of the Brahmins said this baby would become a universal
monarch or leave his princely life to become a world spiritual leader. The
youngest priest, Kondanna, was so confident that this was the future Buddha that
he left the priesthood to wait in the forest for his future teacher.
When Siddhatha was six years old, King Suddhodana organized a Ploughing Festival which the whole royal family had to
attend. Everyone in the kingdom was celebrating and having a great time, but
little Siddhartha felt that it was all meaningless. He wandered off by himself
and sat under a beautiful tree. Instinctively, he began to watch his breath and
to everyone’s surprise, he started to levitate. It is said that he had
developed this ability by practicing meditation over previous lifetimes.
King Suddhodana loved his son and
desperately wanted him to become a great king. He was given the excellent
education of a prince and by age 16 he knew everything a king needed to know.
He married Princess Yasodhara and was given the deputy kingship by his father.
Prince Siddhatha and Princess Yasodhara lived many happy years in the palace.
When Siddhatha was 29 years old he became curious about what was outside of the
city walls. His father forbid him to go out of the city, but curiosity
overwhelmed him and one night he snuck out in disguise with his best friend, Channa.
A smallpox plague was ravaging the
countryside around the city. For the first time, Siddhatha saw a sick man. He
asked Channa, “Can I become sick one day like this man.” Channa replied, “Yes,
because we all have a human body.”
The next day they went out again. For the
first time, Siddhatha saw an old man. The third day, he say a corpse for the
first time. Each time he realized deep within himself that this was the
inescapable fate of all human beings. On the fourth day, they saw an ascetic
with his begging bowl.
When Siddhatha went back to the palace, he
complained to his father that he did not love his own people if he could allow
them to suffer so much. At the same time, he was informed that his first
son had been born. He immediately realized that the bond between him and
his son would be so strong that he would never leave the palace if he did not
leave that night. He felt that if he really loved his wife and child, he
should find a solution for this dukkha, the transient, unsatisfactory
nature of life that all beings experience. He permitted himself one last look at his wife and son before he
left.
Yasodhara was not surprised when she
found out that her husband had left. Over their thirteen years of marriage she
had observed his spiritual yearnings. She vowed to follow him and support him
in whatever he did.
Siddhatha cut off his hair and took on the
life of an ascetic. He became a student of a great Brahmin teacher, Alarakalama.
Within seven months his abilities were equal to his teacher. Alarakalama asked
him to stay and instruct him and his students, but Siddhartha was not
satisfied. He left his teacher and found another teacher, Uddhakaramaputra, who
had attained a higher state of jhana. Before long, Siddhatha had
surpassed the abilities of this teacher. Still, he had emotional attachments
and pain. He left his teacher to practice by himself.
For six years Siddhatha practiced the
most extreme form of ascetism. He consumed only one meager meal per week. His
body was like skin stretched over a skeleton. He could control his breath for
up to one hour. Finally, he realized that he was no closer to his goal. He
began to eat again. From this point on, he advocated the Middle Way: avoiding
the extremes of sensual indulgence and self-mortification.
The day before his 35th birthday, again the Full Moon of May, Siddhatha sat down under the Bodhi tree.
He was determined not to get up from that spot until he had become fully
awakened, even if he should die in the process. By the next morning he had
attained nibbana.
For seven weeks he remained at Bodh Gaya,
paying respect to the Bodhi Tree and reviewing what he had understood. He tried
to think of someone who would have the capacity to understand what he had
realized. He thought of his two teachers and realized that they had both passed
away. Then he thought of Kondanna and the four other ascetics that he had
stayed with during his extreme asceticism.
When the five ascetics saw the Buddha
approaching, they were determined to ignore him. They were convinced that he
had given up his practice when he started to eat regularly. However, when he
approached they could not resist offering him food and water. Despite their
doubt, they agreed to listen to what he had to say. The Buddha preached all
night. This famous sermon is known as the Dhammacakkapavattava Sutta, or
“Wheel of Dhamma.” Over the next few days, each of the ascetics became
enlightened.
The Buddha continued to teach for the next
45 years. During that time he ordained thousands of monks and nuns and many of
them reached enlightenment, including his wife and his son, Rahula. His chief
disciples were Ananda, the treasurer of the Dhamma, who was able to remember
every sermon the Buddha gave, Sariputta, who was put in charge of the Sangha
upon the Buddha’s death, and Mogallana, who taught the Dhamma by
travelling between worlds.
The Buddha passed into Parinibbana on the
Full Moon of May at the age of 81 in Upawattana Sall Park in Kusinara. He was
cremated and his relics have been divided and enshrined in Buddhist temples
around the globe.
Though this page has been carefully researched, the author does not
claim expertise on Buddhism.
Please send questions, comments, and corrections to emuseum@mnsu.edu and include the URL
of this page.
References
Narada
1988 The Buddha and His Teachings. 4th ed. The Corporate Body of the Buddha
Educational Foundation,
Taipei, Taiwan.
Ven. Sathindriya Peradeniye (Bhante Sathi).
Triple Gem of the North. Interview
December 6, 2007.
Images
Buddha delivering the Dhammacakkappavattana
Sutta. http://bazanlin.wordpress.com/2007/09/12/lord-buddha-and-the-theravada/,
accessed 12/14/07.
Written by Melissa Lorentz, 2007
Page design by Pardhasaradhi
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