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back to Wat Pra Keo and Wat Po • please also see http://thomasriddle.net//buddhist_sites/intro.htm for pictures of the place where the historical Buddha died. an excerpt from The Buddha's Life, by Gerald Roscoe, Orchid Press, Bangkok 2000 In his eightieth year, in the village of Beluva where he had gone to spend the Rains Retreat, the Buddha was stricken by a serious illness, the nature of which is not known. Seeing that the Buddha was so ill, Mara, who had not troubled him for so many years, came to him and said, it's time now for you to attain final Nirvana. The Buddha replied that hewould not do so until he had "given security to the afflicted", until he saw Buddhism "flourishing, held by many, and well proclaimed." Mara said, these things have already come to pass, and the Buddha, having had the satisfaction of hearing Mara testify that he had succeeded in his mission, told the Evil One that he would attain the final Nirvana in three months' time. Mara then departed, knowing that evil would persist in the world even though the Buddha had taught the way to purification. Mara knew that some people, perhaps many, would attain enlightenment by following the Buddha's path, whereas others, perhaps many more, would not attain enlightenment because they would be addicted and attached to the evils which Mara symbolized. The moment the Buddha declared that he would
pass away in three months' time the earth staggered, great bolts of lightning
fell from the sky, mountains toppled, and heavenly drums thundered. Ananda
saw this commotion and asked the Buddha what had caused it. The Buddha said
that even though he might have chosen to remain alive "for a cycle"
he was tired "as an old cart kept together with thongs", that he
was worn and ill, and had decided that he would sustain his life for three
more months only. He told Ananda that one of the occasions when earthquakes
occurred, as this one had, was when a Buddha "shakes off the sum of his
life". The sad news alarmed Ananda and he wept. He
asked the Buddha what would happen to the Sangha after his death, whom could
the disciples turn to for instruction and inspiration? The Buddha answered
that the disciples had learned from him everything he was able to teach them
and that now they should "dwell as having refuges in themselves and not
elsewhere, as having refuges in the Doctrine and not elsewhere." Ananda then asked what those disciples should
do who had become accustomed to pay reverence to the Buddha when the Rain
Seasons had ended. The Buddha told him that there were four places to which
a faithful disciple might go, places that would rouse his devotion: where
the Buddha was born, where he attained enlightenment, where he delivered the
first discourse on the Turning of the Wheel of the Doctrine, and where he
would soon attain complete nirvana -- Lumbini Grove, Bodhgaya, Benares, and
Kusinara, now the four most holy places of Buddhism. After the Rains Retreat, and despite his serious
illness, the Buddha spent his next three months walking slowly and painfully
from village to village addressing assemblages of monks and urging them to
practice the doctrines he had taught them, "in order that this religion
may last long and be perpetuated for the good and happiness of the great multitudes". When the Buddha arrived at Pava, on what was
to be the last day of his life, he stayed in the mango grove of a smith named
Cunda, who prepared for him a meal of "hard and soft food" and a
serving of sukaramaddava. Scholars have been unable to agree on the precise
meaning of sukaramaddava, some believing that it means soft food of a pig,
others that it means soft food given to a pig, mushrooms. Whatever the food
may have been, it made the Buddha dreadfully ill, causing blood to flow from
him and violent pains to assail him. Through the force of mindfulness and meditation
the Buddha was able to control the pains, and he and his faithful attendant
Ananda started on their way to Kusinara. On the way the Buddha sat down to
rest near a stream, and asked Ananda to bring him water from the stream. Ananda
returned empty- handed and told him that the water was not drinkable, that
it was muddy and turbid. The Buddha asked Ananda to go back to the stream,
and when Ananda did so he found that the water, thanks to the Buddha's wondrous
powers, was now clear and pure. The Buddha, sensing that Cunda might be feeling
guilt and remorse, told Ananda to inform Cunda that in a future birth he would
receive a great reward, because having eaten the food he had given -the Buddha's
last alms -the Buddha was about to attain nirvana. Two gifts, he said, will
be blessed above all others: the food given him by Sujata, which revived him
so that he could attain Buddahood under the bodhi-tree, and the food given
him by Cunda, which brought about his passing away.
The Buddha then sent Ananda to the villagers
of Kusinara with his invitation to come see him and be presented to him for
the last time. So many came that they could not be presented individually,
and Ananda had to ask them to come to the Buddha a family at a time. His next act of compassion was to assemble
the monks and speak to them about the insight and kindness of Ananda. He told
Ananda not to weep, reminded Ananda of what he had so often taught him about
the impermanence of all things, and assured Ananda: you have always done well,
persevere and you too will be freed from the thirst of life, the chain of
ignorance. Later at night a brahmin philosopher named
Suhhadda came to see the Buddha hoping that he might he able to ask him some
questions about the Dhamma. Ananda tried to turn him away lest he disturb
the Buddha's final moments, but the ever-compassionate Buddha told Ananda
to bring Subhadda to him. Talking to him patiently and quietly, the Buddha
was able to resolve Subhadda's doubts, after which Suhhadda was admitted to
the Sangha and eventually attained enlightenment. Then the Buddha asked the five hundred assembled
monks if any of them had doubts, misgivings, or questions about any matter
of the Dhamma. All were silent, and when Ananda expressed his surprise, the
Buddha assured him that all the monks present had entered the path and were
certainly destined for enlightenment. With his last breath, the Buddha addressed
this final advice to his disciples: "Decay is inherent in all compound
things. Work out your salvation with diligence." Then, as the founder of one of the world's great religions, the compassionate teacher who showed mankind how to escape suffering, entered final nirvana, lotus blossoms fell from heaven and covered his body.
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