The Eight Places of Buddhist Pilgrimage
Jeremy Russell |
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First published in 1981 by Mahayana Publications, Tushita
Mahayana Meditation Centre. This article first appeared in Teachings
from Tushita, Journal of Tushita Mahayana Meditation Centre.
Born and educated in England, Jeremy Russell’s interest
in Buddhism was initially sparked during his first visit
to Dharamsala in the early 70. He subsequently studied
at the Library of Tibetan Works & Archives for several
years. He has lived in Dharamsala with his family since
1981, dividing his time between working as an editor
for several offices of the Tibetan government-in-exile
and leading trekking groups into the nearby mountains.
He is editor of Chö-Yang, the Journal of Tibetan
Culture.
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Contents
- Introduction
- Lumbinibirthplace of
the Buddha
- Bodhgayasite of Buddha's
enlightenment
- Sarnathfirst turning
of the Wheel of Dharma
- Rajgirsecond turning
of the Wheel of Dharma
- Shravastiteachings
in the Jetavana Grove
- Sankashyawhere Lord
Buddha descended from Tushita Heaven
- Nalandasite of the great monastic university
- Kushinagarwhere Buddha
entered mahaparinirvana
- Conclusion and Books Consulted
Nalanda
Site of the great Monastic University
"'What do you think, householder? Is this town of Nalanda
successful and prosperous, is it populous and crowded with
people?'
"'Yes, venerable sir, it is.'"
Utpali Sutra
Although
Nalanda is one of the places distinguished as having been
blessed by the presence of the Buddha, it later became particularly
renowned as the site of the great monastic university of the
same name, which was to become the crown jewel of the development
of Buddhism in India. The name may derive from one of Shakyamuni's
former births, when he was a king whose capital was here.
Nalanda was one of his epithets meaning "insatiable in giving."
Shakyamuni stayed here on a number of occasions, for a mango
grove had been offered to him by 500 merchants. Hsuan Chwang
mentions a number of temples and stupas marking places where
Buddha had taught. On one visit he preached to men and gods
for three months, and a stupa containing his hair and nail
clippings of that period was erected. A remarkable tree that
had been miraculously produced from a discarded tooth stick
of the Buddha stood in this area. Next to a water tank, a
stupa marked the place where a non-buddhist, holding a bird
in his hand, had challenged the Buddha to divine whether it
was alive or dead. The Buddha declined to answer him. Another
stupa commemorated the occasion that a foreign monk had prostrated
himself before the Buddha, praying for a rebirth as a universal
monarch. Shakyamuni sadly told his followers that this monk
possessed such vast merit that he might have become a buddha,
but because of this action he would be reborn as a universal
monarch as many times as there were atoms of earth beneath
his prostrate body.
The sitting place of Shakyamuni and the buddhas who had
come before him was marked by a stupa, as was the spot nearby
where Bimbisara first came to greet the Buddha. In two neighbouring
villages, Ashoka built temples and stupas where Sariputra
and Maudgalyayana were born and also entered parinirvana.
During his stay at Nalanda, Hsuan Chwang saw a number of
temples in and around the monastery. Some contained images
of the Buddha, others of Avalokiteshvara and also Arya Tara,
whom he describes as having been a popular object of devotion
at that time. He also mentions the great temple erected by
King Baladitya, which was similar to but slightly larger than
the Mahabodhi Temple. The ruins of this are now prominent
on the site.
Modern historians have tentatively dated the founding of
a monastery at Nalanda as being in the fifth century. However,
this may not be accurate. For example, the standard biographies
of the teacher Nagarjuna, believed by most historians to have
been born around 150 AD, are quite specific about his having
received ordination at Nalanda monastery when he was seven
years old. Further, his teacher Rahulabhadra is said to have
lived there for some time before that. We may infer, then,
that there were a monastery or monasteries at Nalanda long
before the foundation of the later Great Mahavihara.
It is recorded that Kumaragupta the First, an early Gupta
monarch who reigned between 415 and 456 AD, built a monastery.
In the century following this his various successors each
built a further monastery. Between the years 530 and 535 a
king of central India, perhaps Yashodharman, added another,
and by building an encircling wall around them all created
a mahavihara.
At
the time Hsuan Chwang stayed at Nalanda and studied with the
abbot Shilabhadra, it was already a flourishing centre of
learning. In many ways it seems to have been like a modern
university. There was a rigorous oral entry examination conducted
by erudite gatekeepers, and many students were turned away.
To study or to have studied at Nalanda was a matter of great
prestige. However, no degree was granted nor was a specific
period of study required.
The monks' time, measured by a water clock, was divided
between study and religious rites and practice. There were
schools of study in which students received explanations by
discourse, and there were also schools of debate, where the
mediocre were often humbled, and the conspicuously talented
distinguished. Accordingly, the elected abbot was generally
the most learned man of the time.
The libraries were vast and widely renowned, although there
is a legend of a malicious fire in which many of the texts
were destroyed and irrevocably lost. The fire is said to have
eventually been put out by a flood of water that poured from
the texts on highest yoga tantra, kept in the topmost story.
During the Gupta age the practice and study of the mahayana,
especially the madhyamaka, flourished. However, from 750 AD,
in the Pala age, there was an increase in the study and propagation
of the tantric teachings. This is evidenced by the famous
pandit Abhayakaragupta, a renowned tantric practitioner who
was simultaneously abbot of the Mahabodhi, Nalanda and Vikramashila
monasteries. Also Naropa, later so important to the tantric
lineages of the Tibetan traditions, was abbot of Nalanda in
the years 1049- 57.
Much of the tradition of Nalanda had been carried into Tibet
by the time of the muslim invasions of the twelfth century.
While the monasteries of Odantapuri and Vikramashila were
then destroyed, the buildings at Nalanda do not seem to have
suffered extensive damage at that time, although most of the
monks fled before the desecrating armies. In 1235 the Tibetan
pilgrim Chag Lotsawa found a ninety-year- old teacher, Rahula
Shribhadra, with a class of seventy students. Rahula Shribhadra
managed to survive through the support of a local brahmin
and did not leave until he had completed educating his last
Tibetan student.
Nalanda was perhaps most important for its mahayana activities.
Under the guidance of Nagarjuna, formulator of the middle
way, it eclipsed even the monastery at Bodhgaya. Aryadeva,
Nagarjuna's principal disciple, held his famous debate with
Maitrichita at Nalanda. Two further disciples of Nagarjuna
to attain great fame in India were Chandrakirti and Shantideva,
both students of Nalanda.
Arya
Asanga, father of the lineage of extensive teachings and formulator
of the mind-only school, also spent twelve years at Nalanda.
His brother Vasubandhu, introduced to the mahayana by Asanga,
became abbot after Asanga retired and taught to thousands.
The great mahayana logician Dignaga, author of the Pramanasamuccaya,
was another abbot at Nalanda. His excellent successor Dharmakirti,
who defeated the renowned hindu scholar Shankaracharya in
debate, also received his training at Nalanda. Also of this
lineage, Kamalashila wrote most of his works at Nalanda. He
and Shantiraksita, another renowned scholar of Nalanda, were
among the very first teachers to carry the Dharma to Tibet.
A pilgrim to Nalanda today finds vast and well-excavated
ruins, many of which are more substantial than the mere foundations
remaining in other places. It is easier here to imagine the
former glory of the monasteries and temples described by Hsuan
Chwang. An adjacent museum houses many buddhist and hindu
images from different ages, as well as other findings from
the site. Nearby is the Nalanda Institute of Pali Studies,
where a number of ordained and lay students have re-established
a tradition of buddhist knowledge. While the range of study
at this Institute is broader than its name might imply, it
would be most appropriate if in the future the present holders
of the direct traditions of Nalanda were able to reintroduce
them there.
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