By the end of the discourse, all the
five hundred bhikkhus broke away from the three fetters and attained
Sotāpattiphala. Back in the Mahāvana forest, the Buddha gave them meditation
instructions and within a short period they all attained supreme liberation and became Arahantas. For
the second time, their former spouses from the Sākyan and Koliyanclan sent
messages requesting them to return and live the household life again. But the
Arahanta Bhikkhus sent the reply: “We are no longer in the position to lead a
worldly life, as we have understood the root cause of suffering and want to
attain nibbana.” Having received the news, the five hundred deserted wives
decided unanimously to go to Mahāpajāpati Gotami to appeal to her to obtain
permission from the Buddha for admission to the sangha as bhikkhunis, as they
also wanted to understand the Dhamma. All of them shaved their hair and had
adorned yellow robes, dedicating their lives to the Brāhmacariyain the Buddha’s
dispensation, while they were still in the royal palace. Then they made
arrangements to set out together for Mahāvanaforest of Vesāli where the Buddha
was residing. The distance between Kapilavastthu and Vesāli was fifty
Yojanas(Five hundred miles). When the Sākyan and Koliyan royal families made
arrangements for their journey and provided five hundred sedans, the five
hundred ladies agreed amongst themselves that such a mode of travelling might
tantamount to an act of disrespect to the Buddha and therefore, made the
journey of fifty Yojanason foot. Royal families of both countries arranged for
regular provision of food at every stop and sufficient number of escorts for
their security en-route to Vesāli.
Ānanda decided to approach the
Buddha on her behalf and asked her to remain at the gate until he returned with
Buddha’s consent. In fact, the Buddha made it crystal clear that the difference
of sex does not stand in anybody’s way for attaining of salvation. The supreme
spiritual achievement is open to all alike. True religion never questions the
potential divinity of human beings.
The sangha of bhikkhunis was found
five years after the Buddha’s Supreme Enlightenment. The occasion being: when
the Buddha stayed at Mahāvanaforest at Vesāli, Mahāpajāpati Gotami, who did not
receive admission into the monastic sangha at Nigrodha’s Park at Kapilavatthu,
asked permission again for receiving higher ordination as bhikkhunis together
with five hundred Sākyanprincesses. Initially, the Buddha refused admission,
but finally granted permission for women to receive Upasampadā(higher
ordination) as bhikkhuni under the condition of the eight rules of respect,
called Garudhammas, which Mahāpajāpati Gotami accepted. The bhikkhuni
ordination had been carried out throughout the Buddha’s lifetime and had continued
from the early period until the Buddhist age. “It was not a novel idea, but
more women were ready to renounce worldly ties than there had ever been
before.” Buddhism consisted of the Fourfold Assembly: bhikkhus, bhikkhunis,
upāsakasand upāsikās in which the bhikkhunisplayed an important role that made
the Buddhist personnel complete and perfect in Buddhism.
Three hundred years after the Buddha’s
Parinibbāna, the bhikkhunis still had a role in the sangha Society making it
evident in the Tipitaka. But after the third and fourth rehearsal of the
scriptures in the Buddhist countries of Theravāda, such as Sri Lanka, Myanmar
and Thailand, there has been no clear evidence that Mātugāmas (womenfolk) had shown
an active role in the lineage of bhikkhunis ordination similarto men who had
taken bhikkhu ordination. However, in the Buddhist countries of Mahāyāna, such
as China, Taiwan, Korea, Vietnam, Japan, Mātugāmas regularly receive higher ordination as
bhikkhunis.
Today, bhikkhunis and other Buddhist
women are determined to find ways to help improve society and lighten the burden
of oppressed people. Attuned to the Buddhist path in right livelihood, some
have worked in secular positions such as that of psychologists, helping women
and children who have been hurt or marginalised. Others have voiced the idea
that bhikkhunis can improve the world by setting living examples of
unpretentiousness and living in accordance to principles of non-hurting.
Likewise, it has been suggested that bhikkhunis have helped with problems
regarding abortion, prostitution, menopause and other issues that women prefer
to discuss with other women. They have also helped unwed mothers. Buddhist women
in Thailand recently opened a home for women with unwanted pregnancies.
References:
1. Chatsumarm Kabilsingh, A
Comparative Study of Bhikkhuni Pātimokkha, Varanasi: Chaukhambha Orientalia,
1984.
2. I.B. Horner, Women Under
Primitive Buddhism,: Laywomen and Almswomen, London: Rutledge and Kegan Paul,
1930, reprinted, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1999.
3. Rita M. Gross, Buddhism After
Patriarchy, Albany: State University of New York Press, 1993.
4. T. W. Rhys Davids, Buddhist
India, London: 1903.
5. Anita Borrows article “The Light
of Outrage: Women, Anger, and Buddhist Practice,”.
6. Chatsumarn Kabilsingh, “The
History of the Bhikkhuni Sangha” in Blossoms of the Dharma: Living as a
Buddhist Nun, Thubten Chodron, ed., North Atlantic Books, Berkeley: 2000.
7. K.T.S. Sarao, “Double Tragedy: A
Reappraisal of the Decline of Buddhism in India” International Journal of
History of Buddhist Thought, Dongguk University, Vol. 1, No.1, February 2002:
91-101.
About the author:
Dr. Kavita Chauhan is a Lecturer of
History with Savitri
Bai Phule Balika Inter College,
Kasna,
Greater Noida.
#Buddha #Buddhism #Zen #Life #Lifestyle #wisdomwinds
#Buddha #Buddhism #Zen #Life #Lifestyle #wisdomwinds
I want to contact Dr Kavita mam, please help me to reach out her. Rohit Mhaske Student MA history
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