Sarnath:
First turning of the Wheel of Dharma
All
the 1,000 buddhas of this aeon, after demonstrating
the attainment of enlightenment at Vajrasana, proceed
to Sarnath to give the first turning of the wheel of
Dharma. In like manner, Shakyamuni walked from Bodhgaya
to Sarnath in order to meet the five ascetics who had
left him earlier. Coming to the Ganges, he crossed it
in one step, where King Ashoka later made Pataliputra
his capital city. He entered Benares early one morning,
made his alms round, bathed, ate his meal and, leaving
by the east gate of the city, walked northwards to Rishipatana
Mrigadava, the rishi's Deer Park. There are many legends
about the origin of this name. Fa Hien says that the
rishi was a pratyeka buddha who had dwelt there but,
on hearing that the son of King Suddhodana was about
to become a supreme buddha, entered nirvana. Others
mention 500 pratyeka buddhas and Hsuan Chwang mentions
a stupa marking the site of their nirvana.
The name Deer Park derives from an occasion in one of
Shakyamuni's former lives as a bodhisattva, when he
was leading a herd of deer. After much indiscriminate
plundering of the herd by a local king, an agreement
was made with him that one of their number would be
offered only when necessary. The turn came of a doe,
who was shortly to give birth and wished to delay until
then. The bodhisattva offered himself in her stead,
which so impressed the king that he not only resolved
to refrain from killing deer in future but gave the
park to them as their own.
At
this place the five ascetics had resumed their austere
practices. When they saw the Buddha approaching, thinking
him still to be the Gautama who had forsaken their path,
they decided not to welcome him. Yet, as he neared they
found themselves involuntarily rising and paying respect.
Proclaiming that he was the Buddha, Shakyamuni assured
them that the goal had been attained. Hsuan Chwang saw
a large, dome-shaped stupa on this spot, where a large
mound, probably its remains, surmounted by a muslim
monument now, stands a short distance south of the park.
During
the first watch of the night the Buddha was silent,
during the second he made a little conversation and
at the third began the teaching. At the spot where all
the buddhas first turn the wheel, 1,000 thrones appeared.
Shakyamuni circumambulated those of the three previous
buddhas and sat upon the fourth. Light radiated from
his body, illuminating the 3,000 worlds, and the earth
trembled. Brahma offered him a 1,000-spoked golden wheel,
and Indra and other gods also made offerings, all imploring
the Buddha to teach.
Thus, inviting the gods and all who wished to hear,
and saying that he spoke not for the purpose of debate
but in order to help living beings gain control of their
minds, Shakyamuni began the first turning of the wheel
of Dharma. He taught the middle way, that avoids the
extremes of pleasure and austerity, the four noble truths,
and the eightfold path. Kaundmya was the first of the
five ascetics to understand and realize the teaching;
Ashvajit was the last. All eventually became arhants.
The
teachings included in the collection known as the first
turning of the wheel, which began here, extended over
a period of seven years. Other teachings, such as those
on the Vinaya and on the practice of close placement
of mindfulness, were given elsewhere, but the wheel
was turned twelve times at Sarnath. From the time of
the Buddha, monastic tradition flourished for over 1,500
years on the site of the Deer Park. Amongst the many
ruins, archaeologists have found traces dating from
as early as the third century B.C., and the existing
inscription of Ashoka's pillar, dating from that time,
implies that a monastery was already established during
Ashoka's reign. Fa Hien speaks of two monasteries with
monks in residence, while two centuries later Hsuan
Chwang describes a mahavihara encompassing eight divisions.
This contained a great temple with ornate balconies,
over one hundred niches containing gilt images in its
walls, and a statue of the Buddha in the teaching posture.
The
last monastery constructed before the muslim invasion,
the Dharmachakra-jina vihara, was the largest of all.
It was built by Kumaradevi, queen of King Govindachandra,
who ruled in Benares from 1114-1154. Here a surviving
fragment of stone inscription records that in 1058 a
monk presented a gift copy of the Prajna-paramita Sutra
to the monastery: evidence of mahayana activity at that
time. The discovery in the area of ancient statues of
Heruka and Arya Tara shows that vajrayana was also practised
there. Formerly, two great stupas adorned the site.
Only the Dhamekha remains, assigned by its inscription
to the sixth century. The Dharmarajika stupa built by
Ashoka, some say upon the very place of the teaching,
was pulled down in the eighteenth century by Jagat Singh,
who consigned the casket of relics contained within
it to the Ganges river. Hsuan Chwang describes that
Ashoka's pillar, which stood in front of the stupa,
was so highly polished that it constantly reflected
the stupa's statue of the Buddha.
Benares, which was the second city to reappear following
the last destruction of the world, was also a site of
the previous buddha's manifestations. Kashyapa, the
third buddha of this aeon, built a monastery near Deer
Park, where he ordained the brahmin boy, Jotipala, an
earlier incarnation of Shakyamuni. Hsuan Chwang records
stupas and an artificial platform at the places where
several previous buddhas had walked and sat in meditation.
Deer
Park was also the location of Shakyamuni's deeds as
a bodhisattva in former lives. Hsuan Chwang mentions
a number of stupas commemorating these near the monastery:
one where the bodhisattva offered himself as the deer;
another where, as a six-tusked elephant, he offered
his tusks to a deceitful hunter; and a third where the
bodhisattva had been a bird, with Maudgalyayana and
Sariputra as a monkey and an elephant.
Another
stupa commemorated the occasion when Indra manifested
as a hungry old man and asked a fox, an ape and a hare
(the Buddha in a former life) for food. The fox brought
fish, the ape brought fruit, but the bodhisattva hare,
having nothing else to offer, threw himself on a fire
and offered his roasted body. Indra was so moved by
this act that he took the hare and placed him in the
moon. Many people in central Asia still refer to the
moon as the hare sign, or worship the hare in the moon.
Today the actual site of the Buddha's teaching at Sarnath
and the several ruins in the area have been enclosed
in a pleasant park. Nearby, a well-planned museum houses
a number of unearthed statues, many barely damaged,
as well as several other findings from the site. The
museum's entrance is dominated by the famous lion capital
from Ashoka's pillar (an indication of the Indian Government's
renewed interest in Buddhism), has been adopted as the
national emblem. The wheel design on its base has become
the central figure of India's flag.
Adjacent
to the park is the Mahabodhi Society's Mulaghandaluti
Temple, an imposing building containing certain relics
of the Buddha. Close by is the Society's sangharama
and a library possessing a rare collection of buddhist
literature. Also in the vicinity are Burmese, Chinese
and Tibetan temples, as well as a Tibetan monastery
and the Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies, where two
hundred young monks practise and study the many aspects
of the Buddha's teaching, aspiring to qualify for the
degree of acharya. There is also a Tibetan printing
press, The Pleasure of Elegant Sayings, which over the
last decade has published more than thirty Tibetan texts
of buddhist treatises, otherwise hard to find. Thus
the wheel of Dharma that Shakyamuni first turned at
Sarnath continues to revolve.