Siddhartha
Gautama
Siddhartha Gautama was the son of King Suddhodana
of a tribe that lived in the city of "Kapilavastu" in
the foothills of the Himalayan Mountains in today's Nepal.
He was born more than 2,500 years ago sometime in
the sixth century B.C., probably before 567. From that point on
the legend takes over. All great heroes are surrounded by legends
that obscure the facts of their lives, and the Buddha is no exception.
Under the legends lie a few historical facts known to be true.
It is for that reason that the many stories about the Buddha's
life should not be taken literally, but rather as helpful Buddhist
teachings.
As the son of a rich nobleman, he lived in royal
manner. He had the run of three palaces, the entertainment of
40,000 dancing girls and a herd of elephants decked in silver
ornaments. He is said to have been handsome, a fine student and
a skilled athlete. At 16 he married a highborn lady whom he won
by feats of prowess at a contest. But while still in his twenties,
he was apparently stirred by a sort of divine discontent.
No factual history tells how Gautama came to assume
a religious calling, but the legends of the Four Signs grew to
explain his undertaking. Five days after his birth, the legend
says, soothsayers predicted that the boy would be a Universal
Emperor unless he were summoned to become a Universal Teacher
by four signs, which would reveal to him the misery of the world.
These alternatives permitted only one choice to Gautama's father,
a worldly and aristocratic man, who determined that the prince
should see no human sorrow and ordered the royal parks cleared
of the sick and destitute.
But the gods arranged that one day, while riding
through the grounds, Gautama should come upon a bent and decrepit
old man. He asked his charioteer what this creature was, and from
the answer he learned that all men age. The First Sign of the
prophecy had been fulfilled.
Not long afterward, on another ride through the
park, Gautama saw a man disfigured with sores and trembling with
ague; from this encounter, the Second Sign, he learned that men
suffer sickness. The Third Sign was a dead man, this taught him
the fact of death. The Fourth Sign was a beggar unmistakably content
although he wore nothing but a yellow garment and carried a bowl
for begging food. From this last sign, Gautama learned that men
could find peace in withdrawing from the world, and he understood
that this was to be his own destiny.
Not long afterward he slipped away from home in
the middle of the night, biding only a silent farewell to his
sleeping family because he feared he would not be able to leave
his wife and newborn child if they were awake and smiling at him.
Attended by his charioteer he galloped away from the palace. Nearing
a forest, he took off his princely robes and put on some beggarly
rags. Then he sent his charioteer back to the palace with locks
of his hair as trinkets for his family.
Gautama began his attempt to discover "the
realm of life in which there is neither age nor death" when
he was 29. He approached the task in the traditional way - by
going to sit at the feet of a guru, a learned teacher who taught
the wisdoms of the "Upanishads".
The Upanishads are a collection of philosophical
speculations that begun about 700 B.C. They contained many of
the themes that inspired the originators of Jainism and Buddhism,
and provided the religious foundation for Hinduism. The name comes
from two Sanskrit words, "upa", meaning "near",
and "shad", "to sit", because the Upanishads,
developed before writing was common in India, were passed on orally
by sages to pupils sitting nearby.
The Upanishads probe into the nature of the universe
and the human soul, and the relation of each to the other. They
make no absolute statements of right and wrong, of creation, the
gods or man; instead they speculate, seeking always to find truth,
as opposed to stating it, and offering a wide range of possibilities.
But the Upanishads set the tome for all further religious development
in India, and in this they are the most sacred of literature.
But the teachings failed to satisfy Gautama, and
he left the guru to try another traditional way of finding salvation,
the life of austerity. Joining a band of five ascetics, he retreated
to a forest, where he outdid his companions in the rigors he imposed
on himself. He ate only a single bean a day and eventually grew
so thin that he said he could touch his spine when he put his
hand on his stomach.
After six years of this regimen he collapsed one
day and revived only when a village maiden happened along and
gave him some gruel to eat. When he recovered sufficiently for
reflection, the idea came to him that without the use of his body
he could hardly use his head to gain enlightenment; severe self-denial
was not the path to the knowledge that he was seeking. His fellow-ascetics
gave him up as a reprobate, and Gautama turned to solitary and
meditation.
This time, determined to succeed, he settled himself
under a fig tree outside the town of Gaya, near Banaras, and resolved
not to rise until he understood the mystery of life. After Gautama
sat beneath the tree for 49 days, he awakened from a trance to
see the condition of mankind with clarity. Thus he became known
as the Buddha, the "Enlightened One".

For another 49 days he remained under the fig tree,
which is also called the Bodhi tree or "Wisdom" tree.
The Buddha kept pondering the riddles he had solved. He then set
out for the holy city of Banaras to teach what he had learned.
In a park outside the city he delivered his first sermon. His
only audience was the band of five ascetics who had abandoned
him before; they turned to him now as rapt disciples. The sermon
was to become one of the most celebrated in the history of religion.
In this sermon the Buddha proclaimed the Four Noble
Truths and the Eightfold Path, concepts that have remained fundamental
to Buddhism, though many have changed greatly.
The Four Noble Truths
The First Noble Truth is that life is "dukkah",
a word usually translated as suffering. But in the Pali language,
in which the Buddhist scriptures were first recorded, the word
is applied to an axle that separates from its wheel or a bone
that comes loose from its socket. In the Buddha's statement, life
is out of kilter; that is why man is doomed to suffer.
The Second Noble Truth is that the reason for suffering
is "tanha" - a word that is usually translated as thirst
or desire, but on the Buddha's terms meant specifically a craving
for individual fulfillment. So long as man strives for himself
he will remain dislocated from the universe at large, and he will
suffer. In this the Buddha was building on an idea from the Upanishads
- that every man should seek identification with all other things.
The Buddha, however, did not regard this identification process
as involving a universal spirit like the Brahman of the Upanishads.
The Third Noble Truth is that the craving for the
individuality must be overcome; and the Fourth Noble Truth is
that the means for overcoming it is the Eightfold Path.
The Eightfold Path
The Eightfold Path, like the Ten Commandments, is
a code to live by; but unlike the Commandments, which are held
to be equally true and binding for all men at all times, the Path
is a set of rules to be followed in ascending order; until the
first step has been mastered, one cannot expect to succeed in
later steps.
The first step in the Eightfold Path is Right Understanding.
Man must know what he is about if he is to win salvation; he must
know the Four Noble Truths.
The second step is Right Purpose: he must aspire
to reach salvation.
The third is Right Speech: he must not lie and must
not commit slander, for both arise out of the will to perpetuate
individuality, and thereby shut the aspirant off from salvation.
The fourth is Right Behavior, toward which the Buddha
offers five precepts: Do not kill; do not steal; do not lie; do
not unchaste; do not drink intoxicants.
The fifth is Right Means of Livelihood: one must
be engaged in an occupation conducive to salvation - preferably
the monastic life.
The sixth is Right Effort: one must exercise will
power if he would succeed.
The seventh is Right Awareness: one must constantly
examine one's behavior and, like a patient in psychoanalysis,
trace it to the cause, trying to understand and remove the cause
of misdeeds.
The eight and final step on the Path is Right Meditation:
one must ponder often and deeply on ultimate truth if one is to
find salvation.

The Legends of the Buddha
Through the legends of the Buddha comes a picture
of a world hero who is an extremely endearing and human person.
On one occasion he encountered an outcaste who lived scavenging
rubbish heaps in the street. The outcaste, accustomed to the rule
that he remove himself from the presence of the upper castes,
cowered against a wall of the nearest building. But the Buddha
broke convention and spoke to the frightened creature. "Sunita,"
he said, "what to you is this wretched mode of living? Can
you endure to leave the world?" The poor scavenger was overcome.
"If such as I may become a monk of yours, may the Exalted
One suffer me to come fourth." The Buddha took him into his
religious order, where he excelled as a monk.
On another occasion a woman approached him carrying
the corpse of her only child; she beseeched the Buddha to bring
the baby back to life. He asked her to bring him some mustard
seed from a family in which no one had died. She searched all
over, but naturally she could find no family that had never suffered
death. Finally understanding the meaning of his request, she gave
up the search, and then entered the Buddhist order as a nun.
The Insights of the Buddha
Several aspects of the Buddha's teachings displayed
insight of astonishing power.
First, he taught in the vernacular instead of the
arcane Sanskrit, in which the teachings of the Upanishads were
preserved, thus making religious ideas available to far more people
than before.
Second, he opened a path to salvation that was independent
of complex rituals - anybody could follow the path, provided he
exercised self-effort.
Finally - and in this the Buddha stands alone among
the religious leaders of the world - he refused to engage in metaphysical
speculation about the universe. The result was the unique phenomenon
of a religion without a god, without worship, even without a human
soul. It is for that reason that Buddhism is often called a philosophy
instead of a religion.
The Buddha made a stunning impact on the India of
his day. He made salvation available to all, independent of what
caste they came from.

If Buddhism was unique, as a religion without a god and without
worship, it did not long remain so. During his life some of the
Buddha's followers tried to deify him, a move he resisted; later
their heirs succeeded. In time the Buddhism split into different
sects and the major divisions came to be called the Greater and
the Lesser Vehicles (vehicles because both claim to carry man
to salvation). The Greater Vehicle which has the larger number
of followers (some 250 million throughout Asia today), not only
deify the Buddha, but supplied the metaphysical scheme he had
resolutely omitted: a cosmology adorned with heavens and hells
and people with saints, as well as a worship embellished with
incense, candles and holy water. Oddly enough, while Buddhism
spread all over the world, it eventually disappeared from India.
The Buddha reached the old age of 80. He died, tradition
has it, when he accepted from a pious layman a piece of pork -
which he knew was spoiled but which he was too polite to refuse.
He ate it, sickened and lay down in a park to die. As he performed
his final meditations, he felt himself becoming free of all passions.
Turning to his followers, he told them to remember that the things
of the world were unreal and were subject to decay. With his last
breath he commanded them: "Work out your own salvation with
diligence."
Amitabha
(Buddha Bless You.)
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