BUDDHIST PLACES OF INDIA
Essence of Buddhism
Though more widespread in East Asia, Buddhism was born in India.
Siddhartha, who was later known as the Buddha or the Enlightened One, was born
in Lumbini at the foothills of the Himalayas. Unable to countenance death and
disease, the young prince, Siddhartha renounced the world. In order to attain
the ultimate aim of Nirvana the transcendental state of liberation, the
Buddha advocated the Eight-Fold Path.
Important Buddhist Sites
Some of the most important Buddhist sites are situated in India. Among them,
Bodhgaya is the most sacred of all. Many monasteries, stupas and rock edicts
have been found at Sanchi in Madhya Pradesh and Rajgir in Bihar. While the sylvan
surroundings of Lahaul, Kangra and Spiti valleys are home to various monasteries,
McLeodganj is the abode of the 14th Dalai Lama.
Sanchi

Definitely
worth a visit. It houses stupas, monasteries, pillars and temples all
masterpieces of Buddhist art.
Bodhgaya
The rallying point for Buddhists from all over the world. The chant 'May all
beings be happy' rent the air of Bodhgaya, where the Four Noble Truths were
gifted by the Buddha in the 5th century B.C.
Lahaul Valley
An emerald in a bronze and silver setting', Lahaul is the land of abundance
in an otherwise starved region. The local deity worshipped here is Kelang Wazir,
a Tibetan God.
Kangra Valley
This capital city of the Katoch dynasty is a destination par excellence. The
Kangra Valley has a rich history and the Tashijong Monastery, which has links
with the Kham region in Tibet, is well worth a visit.
Spiti Valley
'World within a world ' and a 'place where the Gods live' Spiti is a
high-altitude cold desert dotted with numerous monasteries.
Sarnath
A much frequented pilgrim centre, not only for the Buddhists, but for the Jains
and the Hindus as well. This site has some famous stupas and Buddhist monasteries.
Mcleodganj
McLeodganj a colourful little town is a perennial favourite with tourists. It
is steeped in Buddhist culture and is best known as the residence of the 14th
Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso.
Rajgir

The
place where the Buddha's teachings were first penned down, Rajgir is also the
birthplace of various traditions that form a part of our everyday lives.
Sravasti
Once an important Buddhist town, it has the distinction of being the place where
the Buddha preached most of his sermons. Sravasti is also the place where the
Buddha is said to have levitated and performed many other miracles.
Sometime during the sixth century BC a solitary, wandering ascetic sat to meditate
beneath a shady tree, resolving not to rise until he had attained the ultimate
knowledge of spiritual enlightenment. Thus began Buddhism, one of the world's
great religions and pilgrimage traditions. Historians, religious scholars, and
various Buddhist sects debate the actual year of the Buddha's birth; it may
have been as early as 644 BC or as late as 540 BC. It is however, relatively
certain that he was born Prince Gautama Siddhartha, the son of Suddhodana, king
of the Shakya tribe. His birthplace was the forest grove of Lumbini in the hilly
regions of what is today northeastern India and Nepal. Miraculous events surrounded
his birth.
Sages prophesied that he would become either a powerful king or, renouncing
his royal life, an enlightened being and religious leader. King Suddhodhana,
wanting the former and fearing the later, sought to insulate his son from religious
and philosophical concerns by surrounding him with a life of ease and plenty.
Ensconced within palace walls, the prince grew to manhood and fatherhood never
having seen old age, sickness, poverty, or death. Yet this blindness to the
full range of human experience was not to last. One day the prince ventured
beyond the castle walls and, witnessing the inevitable sufferings of human existence,
recognized the shallowness of his pampered life. Metaphysical questions filled
his thoughts and with them the conviction that he must seek and know the great
truths of life. Thus at the age of twenty-nine, he let go the constraints of
family and worldly responsibility to tread the path of self-discovery. Following
the ancient traditions of Hinduism, Siddhartha sought out spiritual teachers,
or gurus.
Inquiring of their knowledge, he diligently practiced various yogas and meditations.
Seven years passed, the last three in extreme asceticism, yet still he had not
achieved his goal of enlightenment. Finally recognizing that such practices
had served him well but were no longer appropriate, Siddhartha journeyed toward
the ancient sacred forests of Uruvela (modern Gaya in Bihar, in north India)
with the intention of finally and completely realizing the infinite. Guided
by visionary dreams and following in the footsteps of Krakucchanda, Kanakamuni,
and Kasyapa, the Buddhas of three previous ages, Siddhartha sat beneath the
Bodhi Tree. Touching the earth, thereby calling it to witness the countless
lifetimes of virtue that had led him to this place of enlightenment, he entered
into a state of deep meditation. Three days and nights passed and his intention
was realized. Siddhartha became the Buddha, meaning the "Enlightened One."
The Buddha spent the next seven weeks in meditation near the Bodhi Tree.

Then,
at the request of the god Indra, he began to speak of the great truth he had
realized. His first sermon was given at Isipatana (modern Sarnath near Banaras).
This first discourse, often called "Setting in Motion of the Wheel of Truth"
presented the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path for which Buddhism
is so famous. (The Four Noble Truths assert that human beings suffer because
of the clinging nature of the mind. There is a way out of this suffering, however,
and that is through the meditative practices of the Noble Eightfold Path. Through
these practices an individual gains insight into how his or her suffering is
caused by identification with the mind's processes. Letting go of such identification,
one discovers and increasingly resides in a pre-existing state of inner peace.)
The Buddha spent the remainder of his life traveling around northeastern India
teaching and establishing monastic communities for both men and women. He died
at the age of eighty in the village of Kusinara (modern Kushinager, Uttar Pradesh
state, India), and his death is known as the parinirvana, the "going beyond
nirvana".
His body was cremated with great ceremony and the cremation relics were placed
in an earthern jar. Soon thereafter the relics were divided into eight portions
and these, along with the jar that held them and the embers of the cremation
fire, were then distributed among the rulers of eight territories in which the
Buddha had traveled and taught. Legends state that ten stupas (Buddhist reliquary
shrines) were constructed to house these sacred objects. The origins of the
practice of pilgrimage in Buddhism are obscure. Some scholars believe that Buddhist
pilgrimage was initially imitative of the practice among Hindus but later became
an integral part of the Buddhist tradition, assuming its own distinct features.
Buddhists themselves are fond of quoting certain passages from the Mahaparinibbana
Sutta in which the Buddha tells his chief disciple, Ananda, that there are four
places "...that a devout person should visit and look upon with reverence."
These four places are Lumbini, where he was born; Bodh Gaya, where he attained
realization; Saranath, where he gave his first teachings; and Kushinager, where
he passed away. While these places are actual geographical locations and the
scene of certain events in the Buddha's life, we have no real proof that the
Buddha spoke of the practice of pilgrimage. Contrary to popular belief, the
Buddha never wrote any of his teachings down. What records we have of his words
derive solely from the remembrances of his disciples. Three months after the
Paranirvana, five hundred of his chief disciples met in a cave at Rajagraha
and by common consensus agreed upon what were to be considered the main teachings
of the Buddha. Considerable disagreement arose among them on the finer points
of the Buddha's message as is evident from the fact that by the year 100 BC
eighteen separate sects had been formed, each with its own interpretation. The
teachings were collected together into what came to be known as the Tripitaka,
and they were handed down almost wholly by word of mouth till they were finally
committed to writing in Ceylon in the first century BC. Whatever the authenticity
of Buddha's injunctions regarding pilgrimage, the four places mentioned above
became known as the Caturmahapratiharya, or "the Four Great Wonders"
and monks and pilgrims began visiting them.

Other
places associated with the Buddha's life soon became pilgrimage sites in the
new religion. Primary among them were the four sites of Rajagraha, where the
Buddha tamed a maddened elephant; Sravasti, the site of a momentous event known
as the Miracle of the Pairs; Vaisali, where monkeys offered the Buddha a gift
of honey; and Samkasya, where the Buddha descended from the heavenly realms
after teaching his mother. These eight sites together were known as Astamahapratiharya,
or the Eight Great Wonders. Furthermore, there were the places where the relics
of the Buddha's cremation had been enshrined in stupas (the exact locations
of these relic sites are unknown today). Following his conversion to Buddhism
in the third century BC, the Emperor Ashoka opened seven of the original stupas
and collected their relics. The Asokavadana (accounts of Asoka) relate that
the emperor divided these ancient relics into 84,000 portions and vowed to erect
a stupa for each portion somewhere in his great empire.
While it is highly unlikely that this many stupa reliquaries were actually constructed
(the number has symbolic rather than actual meaning), Asoka did establish a
number of temples and monasteries that became important sites on the Buddhist
pilgrimage circuit. More important than the actual religious foundations Ashoka
founded was the impetus he gave to the tradition of Buddhist pilgrimage and,
through it, the spread of Buddhism across the vast Asian landmass. The passion
of Ashoka's religious fervor coupled with the force of his imperial patronage
initiated and sanctioned both a sacred geography and a pilgrimage practice in
Buddhist India. These traditions would be perpetuated by sages such as the fifth-
and seventh-century monks Fa-hsien and Hsuan-tsang, who were instrumental in
introducing Buddhism to China, and the eighth-century Indian Tantric master,
Padmasambhava, who definitively established Buddhism in Tibet. Besides the funeral
relics enshrined by Ashoka in his stupas, other relics of the Buddha such as
shavings from his head and clippings from his fingernails began to "appear"
or be ''discovered" over the centuries. The authenticity of these relics
supposedly deriving from the time of the living Buddha is questionable. Just
as false relics were manufactured by unscrupulous Christians during the European
medieval ages, so also did the practice occur in the Buddhist world.
Many other places became pilgrimage centers as the religion of Buddhism slowly
extended its influence across the vast regions of Asia. In general, there were
three primary categories of Buddhist sacred sites that arose in the centuries
following Buddha's paranirvana. There is no relative ranking of the sanctity
of these three types (or of the individual places within the types) nor did
one category arise before the others. One category concerns those places that
were considered sacred prior to the arrival of Buddhism and were later incorporated
into the fabric of Buddhist sacred geography. Such places could have been the
shrines or holy mountains of various shamanistic or proto-religious cults, or
the hermitages of sages, yogis, and ascetics. Buddhism from its very inception
tended to be a proselytizing religion. Its early proponents and missionaries,
intent on gaining converts, naturally sought out those places and communities
where spirituality had already manifested, especially in Tibet, where certain
Bon-Po sacred sites were taken over by the Buddhists, and in China, where particular
Taoist sacred mountains became the abodes of Buddhist bodhisattvas.

The
second category of Buddhist sacred site that arose after the passing away of
the Buddha were those places associated with the lives or relics of various
sages, saints, and teachers in the Buddhist tradition, for example, the well
known pilgrimage site of Sanchi in central India. The Buddha never visited this
place, yet relics of two of his chief disciples, Sariputra and Maudgalyayana,
are enshrined within the great stupa. A third type of Buddhist pilgrimage sites
are those that have their genesis in the manifestation or apparition of various
deities. This type of site, seldom encountered in the older Hinayana Buddhist
tradition of Sri Lanka and Burma, is quite frequent in the Mahayana tradition
as practiced in Tibet, Nepal, China, and Japan. The so-called manifestation
of deities, itself a complex subject, is discussed in chapter two of the text.
Preeminent among all these pilgrimage sites, both old and new, is Bodh Gaya,
the place where the Buddha attained enlightenment. As mentioned earlier, this
site is traditionally believed to be the place where the Buddhas of the three
previous ages had also attained enlightenment. No archaeological remains have
been found of any structures dating from the time of the historical Buddha;
the earliest temple seems to have been constructed by the Emperor Asoka around
250 BC. This shrine was replaced in the second century AD by the present Mahabodhi
temple, which was itself refurbished in AD 450, 1079, and 1157, then partially
restored by Sir Alexander Cunningham in the second half of the ninteenth century,
and finally fully restored by the Burmese Buddhists in 1882. The temple's square,
truncated tower rises 180 feet (54 meters) above the ground.
Its two lower stories house shrines that have served through the ages as places
of homage, ritual practices, and meditation. Its upper portion is crowned by
a stupa containing relics of the Buddha. Inside the temple is an enormous statue
of the Buddha said to be more than seventeen hundred years old. In front of
the Buddha image is a Shiva Linga (see photo# ) said to have been installed
by the great Hindu sage Shankaracharaya. The Hindus believe that the Buddha
was one of the incarnations of Lord Vishnu; thus the Mahabodhi temple is a pilgrimage
shrine for Hindus as well as Buddhists. Behind the temple are the two most venerated
objects in all the Buddhist world, the Bodhi Tree and, beneath it, the Vajrasana,
or seat of the Buddha's meditation. The tree standing today, while not the original,
is a descendant of the tree growing in Buddha's time.
A cutting of that tree was taken to Sri Lanka in the third century BC, where
it still flourishes at the sacred site of Anuradhapura. A sapling from that
tree was later brought back to Bodh Gaya, where it is still growing today. The
Bodhi Tree was harmed, burned, and cut down various times by fanatical Hindus
but, according to legend, each time it miraculously regrew. Around the tree
and the temple compound are numerous other places rich in association with the
Buddha's enlightenment. The environs of Bodh Gaya have attracted sages, yogis,
and meditators since the time of Buddha. Such great spiritual figures as Buddhajnana,
Padmasambhava, Vimalamitra, Nagarjuna, and Atisha have lived and meditated beneath
the Bodhi Tree.
Buddhist
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