Assalayana Sutta Commentary
Assalayana Sutta Commentary
Assalayana Sutta Commentary
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1 Sutta significance
Assalyana Sutta
The Discourse to Assalyana | M 93/2:147-157 Theme: Purity is not on account of birth or rebirth Translated by Piya Tan 2011
1.1 SUTTA SUMMARY. A brahmin youth approaches the Buddha arguing that the brahmins are the highest class. The Buddha replies by showing in many ways how this could not be possible. For example, the brahmins are born from women, not from the Brahmas mouth (as they claim), and how can they be sure that their line is purethat any of their ancestors, man or woman, have never coupled with a nonbrahmin? [1-3] Some 500 brahmins in Svatth on some business decide that one of them should refute the Buddha on his view that the four classes are equitably pure. [4] They approach the brahmin youth Assalyana, a Vedic expert, to be their champion, but he refuses, saying that it is a difficult task, but after being pressed, he reluctantly agrees. [5] They approach the Buddha, and the debate between the Buddha and their representative Assalyana begins with the latter claiming that only the brahmins are the pure class. [5.3-4] The Buddhas opening response is that brahmins, like everyone else, are born of women. [6] When Assalyana is unconvinced, the Buddha tells him that in Yona, Kamboja and the countries beyond the northwestern borders, they have only two classes, masters and slave. [7] Assalyana is still unconvinced. The Buddha then explains that anyone from any of the four classes who commits any of the 10 courses of bad action would be reborn in a suffering state, like everyone else. [8] Conversely, anyone from any of the four classes who does any of the ten courses of good action would be reborn in a happy state, like anyone else. [9] When Assalyana says he is still unconvinced, the Buddha then says that anyone, not just the brahmins, are capable of cultivating lovingkindness. The Buddha continues with two parables: [10] water washes everyone, not only brahmins, just as clean; [11] whatever the kind of wood, inferior or superior, it would produce fire and heat all the same. Next, the Buddha presents arguments on account on procreation. [12] Assalyana agrees that the offspring of kshatriya boy and a brahmin girl would belong to both classes. [13] The same, thinks Assalyana , is the case with the child of a kshatriya girl and a brahmin boy, but [14] the Buddha counters by saying that if a mare were to mate with an ass, the result is a mule (that is, it is neither a horse nor an ass). Here, the Buddha is alluding to the fact that the kshatriyas are strictly endogamous, and would not accept intermarriage.1 [15-16] In the parable of the two brahmin brothersone an ordained religious expert but immoral, the other an unordained non-expert but one morally virtuousAssalyana then states that it is the latter who is worthy of support by the laity. [16] It is the virtuous non-expert who should be honoured first in any ritual offering. [17] Finally, Assalyana agrees with the Buddha. [18] The Buddha then relates the past-life story of the dark-complexioned Asita Devala who was scorned and cursed by seven brahmin seers. However, Devala showed only lovingkindness, so that the more he was cursed, the more radiant he became. When the brahmins realized their error, Devala questioned their notion of class purity, whether they really knew that their forefathers were brahmins all along, not someone from another class. They admitted that they did not. Devala then stressed that birth is not a matter of class, but a conjunction of proper conditions [18.25-27]. [19-23] The Buddha says that even these seven brahmin seers could not refute Asita Devala. Assalyana accepts the Buddhas explanations and goes for refuge. 1.2 SUTTA HIGHLIGHTS. The Assalyana Sutta is significant in that it records all the arguments ever used by the Buddha against the brahmins claim to class supremacy. Assalyana is a 16-year-old brahmin student of Svatth, learned in the Vedas and related fields. After repeated requests by 500 brahmins to
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See Viabha Vatthu (DhA 4.3/1:356-362) & (Upagantabba) Kula S (A 9.17) @ SD 37.11 (8).
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defeat the Buddha in a debate, he visits the Buddha and asks him his response to the claims of the brahmins that they are the highest class, born of Brahms mouth. The Buddhas first asserts the biological unity of mankind, that is to say, all humans, including the brahmins, are born in the same manner, from a mothers womb, that is, biologically, and not from some Gods mouth, as claimed. Moreover, when a brahmin mates with a woman from whatever class, their child look just as human as their parents. There is no difference by way of birth amongst humans. Socially, too, class division is not universal. In Yona and Kamboja, and in the outlying countries [6], for example, there are only 2 classes: masters and slaves, or lords and servants. Even such a system is not a rigid one, as lordship and slavery depend on economic factors (that is, a wealthy man could own slaves, and a slave could buy his freedom in due course). Ethically, anyone, brahmin or not, would fare according to their karma: they are reborn in suffering states or joyful states according to their actions. Those who have done evil, whether brahmin or not, would suffer its painful fruits, and those who have done good would enjoy its fruits in due course. The Buddha then speaks of the spiritual unity of mankind. Anyone, from whatever class, is capable of cultivating lovingkindness; the fuel we burn produces a blazing fire, no matter who lights it; no matter who uses water to wash, the dirt is washed off all the same. There is no special purity for one who makes a fire offering nor is one purified by baptizing himself in a river. Similarly, even between uterine brothers, if one is learned and good, the other is foolish and immoral, the better one would rightly deserve religious offerings, not the bad one. Spiritually, class is not a hindrance to the holy life. Birth, religious learning and class have no bearing on spiritual growth. Assalyana is saddened that he is unable to prove the Buddha wrong. The Buddha then relates how an ancient seer, Asita Devala (Devala the dark), was despised and cursed by seven brahmin seers (on account of the formers complexion). The more the brahmins cursed him, the more radiant his complexion became, until the guilt-ridden brahmins relented, and was instructed by Asita that no one should be despised of his class, as we can never be sure of any pure lineage. The Buddha closes his instructions by explaining to Assalyana the nature of human birth, that it has nothing to do with class, but arises when the proper conditions are present. The consciousness that is reborn does not belong to any class. It is simply consciousness. On being asked by the Buddha what does Assalyana think he is now (what class he belongs to), he can only reply, We know not what we are! (na maya jnma keci maya homa). But he rejoices in the Buddhas teaching and takes refuge. 1.3 RELATED SUTTAS 1.3.1 Parallel texts. The Assalyana Sutta has a Chinese parallel in the Madhyama gama (M 151 = T1.663b-666c) and another parallel in an individual translation (T71 = T1.876b-878b).2 They all agree on the Suttas venue as being in Jetas Grove near Svatth. Analayo has done a helpful comparative study of the Pali and its parallels (2011:549-556). Furthermore, the closing of the Assalyana Sutta has a counterpart in a discourse in the Ekottarika gama and in a sutta quotation in Samatha,devas commentary on the Abhidharmakoa,bhy, extant in Tibetan.3 Parts of a version of the SuttaAssalyanas expression of defeat and the account of the seven brahmin seershave also been preserved in Sanskrit fragments.4
According to the Taisho ed, T71 was tr by Dharma,raka. M 151 has the title (fn zh sh h jng) the discourse to the brahmin Assalayana, (with a shng variant reading as , fn zh sh h jng). Here h is an archaic form of . The Abhidharma,koa,upyik,nma k (Abhk) gives its title as rta len gyi bui mdo. T71 has the title (fnzh b lu yn wn zhng zn jng), the discourse on the brahmin Assalayanas questions about class superiority. On M 151, see Thich Minh Chau, The Chinese Madhyama gama and the Pli Majjhima Nikya, Delhi, 1964:61, 313-320. For a comparative study, see Analayo, A Comparative Study of the Majjhima Nikya, Taipei, 2011:549-556. 3 E 40.9 = T2.742b-743a and Abhidharma,koa,upyik,nma k (Derge ed (4094) mngon pa, ju 110a4-111b5 or Qianlong ed (5595) tu 126a2-128a1); cf Abhidharma,koa (3.12, Pradhan 1967:121,22+25; 121/22-25, Gretil ed) which parallels M 93.18.26/2:157,1-3, with its Chinese counterparts in T1558 @ T29.44c26+45a1, and T1559 @ T29.201c22+28. E 40.9 and Abhk parallel the account of the 7 brahmin seers at M 93.18/2:154,29 ff.
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1.3.2 Related suttas. The Assalyana Sutta and the Vseha Sutta (M 98 = Sn 3.9) share the same theme: our personal purity is not by birth but by our actions.5 The Vseha Sutta, however, deals with the subject in greater detail and in a poetically didactic way. The Assalyana Sutta, on the other hand, employs a series of related arguments to prove the Buddhas point. The Khema Sumana Sutta (A 6.49) contains the Buddhas statement: Thus, bhikshus, do youths of family declare their direct knowledge (a): the goal is told but without alluding to a self6 [2]. Here the expression, youths of family (kula,putta),7 refers to the fact that Khema and Sumana are young monks who come from good families. The point is that age is no barrier to awakening. The Angata,bhaya Sutta 2 (A 5.78) (given in brief in the Samaya Sutta, A 3:66) contains a beautiful reflection on the urgency of spiritual practice, even for one who is still young: The monk reflects: I am now youngbut the time will come when old age will touch this body; then it would not be easy to turn to the Buddha Word, or the forest and woodlands, or the solitary dwelling. Before it comes to me, let me attain the unattained, so that I will dwell comforted (phsu) even when I am old. (A 5.78/3:103) The key sentence of the Sutta is clearly that the goal is told but without alluding to a self (attho ca vutto att ca anupanto). It is only the arhat who fully understands the true nature of non-self, that there is no abiding entity. With that understanding, the arhat also does not see others by way of categories, that is, he does not measure anyone or anything. He is free from conceit and complexes. There is a deliberate play on the term upanta, which is clearly an allusion to the brahminical rite of upanta, where a boy is brought near to a Guru and initiated into one of the twice-born classes (by investiture with the sacred thread or other ceremonies (SED). In the Assalyana Sutta (M 93), the phrase, eko ajjhyako anupanta (one is a reciter, initiated) occurs in a brahminical context, where anupanta means uninitiated, not having received brahminical education.8
2 Assalyana
2.1 ASSALYANA IN THE PALI TRADITION. Assalyana was a 16-year-old brahmin student (mava) of Svatth, who is very learned in the Vedas and related fields [3.3]. The Pali sources, however, do not mention who his teacher is, although we know the teachers of other brahmin students who debate with the Buddha.9 The Vedic tradition, however, names his teacher as aunaka, and that valyana himself is a renowned teacher [2.2]. Assalyana is mentioned in a list of eminent brahmin youths given in the Sutta Nipta Commentary.10
According to Analayo, the so far unpublished fragments are nos 2380/37 + 2380/44 of the Schyen collection, identified by Klaus Wille. The fragments correspond to the final part of the debate at M 93.15-18/2:154-155, esp to Assalyana (Skt valyana) showing physical signs of being defeated and to the account of the 7 brahmin seers. (2011:549 n107) 5 M 98/2:196 = Sn 3.9/596-656/115-123 & SD 37.1 (1.3.3). 6 The goal is told, but without any reference to the self, attho ca vutto att ca anupanto (A 6.49.2/3:359) = SD 18.2b. As in jvaka S (A 3.72/1:216) = You have spoken of (mans) welfare, and self is not brought in ques tion (A:W 1:198); Soa Koivisa Vatthu (V 1:185) = the goal is spoken of but the self is not obtruded(V:H 4:235). Comy to jvaka S (A 3.72) takes the phrase to mean, You have given an answer to my question, but you do not say, I myself have such virtues. (AA 2:331). 7 Youth of family, kula,putta, alt trs son of family, clansman, noble youth. In Vakkali S (S 22.87.39/3:124) = SD 8.8 (qv), the Buddha refers to Vakkali posthumously as kula,putta instead of bhikkhu. Vakkali was prob in his early 20s. The aged Pukkusti is similarly referred to as kula,putta in Dhtu Vibhaga S (M 140) = SD 4.17.3n. See also Mah,parinibbna S (D 16.5.8ab) = SD 9(7g). On other terms denoting young, see Siglovda S (D 31.1.2/3:180) n, SD 4.1. 8 M 93.16/2:154. 9 For a list of brahmin youths (mava) who have met the Buddha, see Cak S (M 95) @ SD 21.15 (2.1). 10 Assalyana,vseha,ambaha,uttara,mavakdyo (SnA 1:372).
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Five hundred brahmins staying in the city coax him to debate with the Buddha and refute his views on class equality. He agrees reluctantly, well knowing that the Buddha is a Dharma-speaker, and Dharmaspeakers are difficult to refute [4.2, 4.4, 4.7], meaning that the Buddha is a wise teacher, well known for his teaching and debating skills. Assalyana apparently sees himself only as a spokesman for the brahmins [6.1], and clearly has some respect for the Buddha [4.2, 4.4, 4.7]. As such, there is no head-splitting incident (where Vajira,p threatens to hurl his glowing iron thunderbolt at the deceptive or dishonest challenger) here, as found in the Ambaha Sutta (D 3)11 and the Ca Saccaka Sutta (M 35).12 Ironically, the reluctant debater is in due course convinced by the Buddhas teachings, and goes for refuge [23]. Since the Apadna and Dhammapla quote the Sutta, it is possible that Assalyana is the father of Mah Kohita and his mother Canda,vat. Mah Kotthita, says Dhammapla, is converted while listening to the Buddhas discourse to this father: My mother is called Canda,vat, my father is Assalyana, while the Buddha trained [educated] my father in all that is pure. mt canda,vat nma pit me assalyano yad me pitaram buddho vinay sabba,suddhiy (ThaA 1:31 quoting Ap 243/2:480)
This notion, however, has a difficulty. It is unlikely that this refers to the Assalyana Sutta, because in the Sutta, Assalyana is only 16 years old. We have, however, no other record of teachings to Assalyana concerning sabba,suddhi, meaning all that is pure or the purity of the all. It should be noted that the name Assalyana, which is valyana in Sanskrit, is a well known name in the Buddhas time, and there are probably many others of this name [2.2]. Buddhaghosa, in his Majjhima Commentary, adds that Assalyana became a devoted follower of the Buddha, and built a reliquary shrine (cetiya) in his own residence for worship. All his descendants, too, down to Buddhaghosas day, built similar shrines in their houses (MA 3:412). 2.2 ASSALYANA IN THE BRAHMINICAL TRADITION. The Sanskrit form of Assalyana is valyana, which was the name of a Vedic teacher (fl 400 BCE), a student of aunaka, and the author of the valyana-rauta-stra, a Vedic manual of sacrificial rituals for the use of the class of priests called hotar, or hot, whose main function was to invoke the gods. valyana belonged to the forest tradition of hermits and itinerant holy men rather than to any priesthood. He is mentioned as a teacher as well as a sage in Vedic litanies and is invoked along with Indra and the sons of Brahm.13 Considering the dates of valyana and of the Buddha, they could have well been contemporaries, and that he is indeed the Assalyana of M 93. The Sutta describes him, at the time of his meeting with the Buddha, as being a 16-year-old brahmin student who leads a wanderers life. If we take the Assalyana Sutta account of the meeting between valyana and the Buddha as being historical, it might be said that surely the Buddha would have some influence on his thinking, practice and works. Such a research must be left to the specialist scholar.
D 3.1.20-21/1:94 f) & SD 21.3 (4). M 35.13b/1:231 = SD 26.5. 13 See Ganga Ram Garg (ed), Encyclopaedia of the Hindu World, New Delhi, 1992: valyana.
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Asokas 5th and 6th rock edicts (c 250 BCE14) refer to Yona, Kamboj, Gandharas, Rastrikas, Pitinikas and other peoples on the western borders, whose societies had only masters and slaves.15 Three inscriptionsall in Aramaicfound in 1932, 1969 and 1973 respectively in the Lamghan valley above the Puli-Darunta,16 at the Sultan Baba Ridge and at the Sam Baba Ridge; and in 1964 in Kandahar (at Shahi-Quna, the old city in the south),17 speak highly of the Kambojas during Asokas time.18 The Greek king Milinda (Menander 1 Soter, 165 or 155-130 BCE) apparently came from Yona (Miln 1,11, 82,23, 83,1), a native of Kalasi,gma in Alasanda, 200 yojanas from the town of Sgala (modern Sialkot). The Mah,vasa says that Yona was converted to Buddhism after the Third Council (of the Theravda) (Mahv 12.4-5). The Yona region is today covered by modern Bactria province, and extending into modern-day Pakistani provinces of the NW Frontier Province, Punjab, and parts of Himachal Pradesh and the Jammu region. 3.2 YONA (or Yavana) is the Pali transliteration of Ionia, an ancient Greek region covering the islands between Greece and Asia Minor, and in Attica and the central coastal Anatolia, in present-day Turkey, the region nearest Izmir, historically called Smyrna (after the city). The Ionians flourished as the Ionian League during the 7th-6th centuries BCE. Yona was a part of the eastern periphery of Persia (ancient Iran), now part of Afghanistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan. Around the Buddhas time and the after-centuries, Ionia was probably a generic term for the Greeks, which would be Bactria (Persian, Tajik; Chin dxi), the ancient name of a historical region from south of the Amu Darya (Oxus) river to west of the Indus river. The region was the birthplace of Zoroastrianism, and later Buddhism flourished there, before it was overrun by Muslims from the 7th century onwards.19 In the later commentarial period and after, Yona or Yavana probably referred not only to the Greeks, but to all westerners living in India or the adjoining regions, and even to foreigners, such as the invading Muslimsjust as in Thailand today, white foreigners are referred to generally as farang, a local colloquialism for Frank, an ancient word for Western Europeans. Hence, Yavana (and its various forms) broadly applied to Ionia, Greece, Bactria, and later to even Arabia (SED: yavana). [3.4.1] In ancient Greece (and Arabia, too), there were two kinds of slavery, chattel (personal possession) slavery and dependent groups, such as the penestae of Thessaly or the Spartan helots, who were more like mediaeval serfs (bonded servants in a feudal system). The chattel slave was an individual deprived of liberty and forced to submit to an owner who may buy, sell, or lease him or her like any other chattel.20 In India of the Buddhas time, too, slaves actually had more privileges than, say, paid workers.21
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These rock edicts are found at Shahbarzgarhi and Mansehra in NW Frontier Province. Also found in these places is the 13th rock edict (c 250 BCE) which however omits Gandhara). The Minor Rock Edicts (c 342 BCE), inscribed in Greek and Aramaic, and located in Kandahar (one of the ancient Alexandrias, today 2 nd largest city in Afghanistan), apparently directly address the Yonas and Kambojas. Three inscriptions found in 1932, 1969 and 1973 respectively in the Lamghan (or Laghman in Pashto language) valley above the Puli-Darunta (12 km NW of Jalalabad, to the west of the road to Kabul, above the Pul-i-Darunta), Sultan Baba Ridge and Sam Baba Ridge) and in 1964 in Kandaharall in Aramaicspeak highly of the Kambojas during Asoka s time. See B M Barua & I B Topa, Asoka and His Inscriptions,1968:149; Warwick Ball, Archaeological Gazetteer of Afghanistan, 1982 n250; & H C Raychaudhury & B N Mukerjee, Political History of Ancient India, 1996:256. 15 See Jules Bloch, Les inscriptions dAsoka,Traduites et commentes (Collection mile Senart), Paris, 1950:103, 130; E Hultzsch, Inscriptions of Asoka (Corpus Inscriptorum Indicarum) 1, Oxford, 1925:191; A C Woolner, Asoka Text and Glossary, Calcutta, 1924:8 f. 16 12 km NW of Jalalabad, to the west of the road to Kabul, above the Pul-i-Darunta. 17 See G P Carratelli & G Garbini (tr), A Bilingual Graeco-Aramaic Edict by Asoka, IsMEO Serie Orientale Roma 29, http://www.scribd.com/doc/72363713/A-Bilingual-Graeco-Aramaic-Edict-of-ASoka-Carratelli-and-Carbini. 18 See B M Barua & I B Topa, Asoka and His Inscriptions,1968:149; Warwick Ball, Archaeological Gazetteer of Afghanistan, 1982 n250; & H C Raychaudhury & B N Mukerjee, Political History of Ancient India, 1996:256. 19 Cf MA 3:409; AA 3:110. 20 E M Wood. Peasant-Citizen and Slave: The Foundations of Athenian Democracy . New York: Verso, 1988. 21 On the status of slaves in the Buddhas time, see Myth in Buddhism = SD 16.1 (2.2.2).
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3.3 KAMBOJ 3.3.1 Kamboj as a country. Kamboj was one of the 16 great countries (mah,janapada), which was not in the Middle Country in the Buddhas time,22 but in the north country region (uttar,patha). The name is probably related to Cambyses of Anshan (6th cent BCE). The Kambojas were probably the descendents of Indo-Iranians known as Sassanians and Parthians. There were an ancient kshatriya IndoIranian tribe inhabiting the borders of the Iranians and the Indo-Aryans. As a kingdom, during the Vedic period, they were located in the Pamirs and Badakshan in Central Asia. The Kambojas migrated into India during the Indo-Scythian invasion from the 2nd-5th centuries CE. Later they moved into the Indo-Aryan region and in due course, into various parts of northern India up to Asokas time. After the 2nd century CE, they probably extended over SW Kashmir and Kafirstan (the Hindu Kush. straddling Afghanistan and Pakistan). [3.1] Since the Kambojas were kshatriyas or warriors, uninfluenced by the brahmins of northern India, they only had two classes, masters or owners and slaves. A brahminical work, Viu Pura (2.37), too, says that the Kambojas do not have a four-class system. In the Assalyana Sutta, the Buddha quotes Kamboj as one of the societies that do not have such a system. 3.3.2 Kamboj as a warring tribe. According to Greek historians, Alexander the Great [2.3.2], in his campaigns between Kapisi23 and Gandhara,24 had to battle hard and without much success with three warlike tribes (gaa), that is, the Astakenoi, the Aspasioi and the Assakenoi, living in the northwest of the river Indus.25 They appeared as Avayana and Avakayana in Pinis Adhyy (the core of his grammar),26 and as Avaka in the Puraas.27 They were kshatriyas, collectively known as Kamboj. The Sanskrit prefix ava (Iranian aspa and Prakrit assam horse) to their names attest that they were closely related with horses. In fact, they were known to be skilled cattle-herders and horse-breeders,28 shrewd horse-merchants,29 fierce mounted warriors,30 and were also said to earn their living as mercernaries.31 The Asoi (one of their ancient Greek names) is a clan name amongst the modern Kamboj people of Punjab, which apparently connects them with the Asoi/Assakenoi or Avakayana (today called Pashtun) of Paropamisadae, that is, the Swat-Kunar valley (previously Kafiristan, modern Nuristan, straddling Pakistan and Afghanistan).
A 1:213, 4:252, 256, 261. Persian Pashto, today one of the 34 provinces of Afghanistan, some 80 km NE of Kabul. Famous for its wine, which Pini referred to as Kapiayana (Stra 4.2.29). In the 7th cent, it was part of a powerful kingdom ruled by a Buddhist kshatriya. 24 An ancient kingdom located today mainly in the Peshawar valley, the Potohar plateau (Taxila) and the Kabul river. Its main cities were Puruapura (modern Peshawar), Varmayana (modern Bamiyan) and Tak ail (modern Taxila). The kingdom lasted from the early 1 st cent BCE to the 11th cent under the Buddhist Kushan kings. Taxila was an important centre of Buddhist learning from 5 th cent BCE to the 2nd cent. 25 On Kambojas battling Alexander: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander%27s_Conflict_with_the_Kambojas. See also T H Holdich, The Gates of India, 1910:102 f & J W McCrindle, The Invasion of India by Alexander the Great, London,1893. 26 Stra 6.1.110 & Nadigaa 4.1.99 respectively: Adhyy Skt text. 27 Legends of gods and heroes said to have been compiled by the mythical Vyasa (dates unknown), the narrator of the Mahbharata. 28 L M Joshi & Fauja Singh, History of Panjab vol 1, 1976:226; J L Kamboj, Ancient Kamboj, People and Country, 1981:247. 29 The Avaka coins refer to them as vatavaka, in Skt vartavaka, those engaged in the horse trade (E J, Rapson, Notes on Indian coins and Seals, part 1, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Soc ns 32, 1900:98-100; R C Majumdar et al, eds, The History and Culture of the Indian People, 2nd ed 1970-1988 2:45). 30 Or, skilled horseback warriors (ava,yuddha,kuala) (akti Sagama Tantra, a,pacad.dea,vibhga, verse 24, in K P Jayaswal, Hindu Polity, 1978:121, 140). 31 Kauilya says that the Kambojs earned a living by the weapon ( varta,sstrpajvin), ie, they were mercernaries as well as weapon-traders (Artha,stra 1.1.4).
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3.4 THE ANCIENT GREEKS AND INDIA32 3.4.1 Yavana, Yona, Yonaka, etc 3.4.1.1 ANCIENT INDIAN WORDS FOR GREEK. The earliest Indian word referring to the Greeks is yavana, attested in Pini.33 S K Belvalkar has noted that the term goes back to at least the 9th century BCE.34 But it is uncertain whether the ancient Indians derived this word from the Greeks themselves or from some intermediate language. For example, the word is found in the trilingual inscriptions of the third Achemenid king Darius I (the Great) (522-486), namely: (1) old Persian, yauna; (2) Elamite, iyauna; and (3) Akkadian (Babylonian), ia-a-ma-nu,35 where ma was pronounced as va, hence ia-va-nu.36 Darius conquered the Ionians of Asia Minor in 545 BCE; hence, it is likely that the name Yavana (from Ia-a-ma-nu) must have been known in India, too. Furthermore, the Hebrew word Yawn (Javan) originally referred to the Ionians, but gradually was applied to the Greeks as an ethnic or political entity. 37 In other words, the name Ionia was well known in the ancient world. 3.4.1.2 THE IONIANS IN INDIA. A number of scholarssuch as Winternitz (1920), Lamotte (1947) and Bechert (1961)think that the reference to Yona suggests the existence of the Greek-Bactrian kingdom, and as such the Sutta must have been composed shortly before Asokas time.38 Bronkhorst (2007), too, thinks that the mention of Yona suggests that the passage which contains this reference was composed afterperhaps long afterthe conquest of Alexander the Great (2007).39 However, as noted, we have evidence that the ancient Indians knew of the Greeks much earlier than that [3.4.2.2]. Historically, it is difficult to conclusively trace the connection between Sanskrit yavana and the Prakrit yona (we cannot really say which is the older). Philologically, it is clear that yona is the Prakrit transliteration of yavana.40 It however remains that there were Greek settlements in the eastern parts of the Achaemenid empire long before Alexander.41 A K Narain, in his book, The Indo-Greeks, suggests three interesting origins of the word Yavana. Firstly, it is derived from YU, keeping away, averting, as in dveo yavana, removing hostility (SED p848), referring to those who are disliked. Secondly, from YU, mixing, mingling (SED id), as in Yauti mirayati v mirbhavati sarvattra jtibhedbhvt iti yavana,42 referring to a mixed race. And thirdly, from the meaning, quick, swift, as in a swift horse, referring to their horsemanship (1957:165 f). Interesting as these explanations might be, they are more likely to be only of academic interest, or at best after the fact, that is, when the word Yavana was well known, it attracted various other local or fanciful etymologies. 3.4.2 Ancient Indians and the Greeks 3.4.2.1 THE BUDDHAS HISTORICAL DATES. The Buddhas death is generally accepted by scholars today to be between 411 and 400 BCE,43 as stated by Paul Dundas, in his book, The Jains, that If, as is
See Assalyana S (M 93) @ SD 40a.2 (3.3.2). Pin, Adhyy, ed Otto Bhtlingk, in Paninis Grammatik, Leipzig, 1887: 4.1.49. 34 S K Belvalkar, Systems of Sanskrit Grammar, Poona, 1915:17. 35 R G Kent, Old Persian [1950] 2nd ed 1953:204 (sv Yauna); H C Toleman, Ancient Persian Lexicon and Texts, 1908:119. 36 Narain, The Indo-Greeks, 1957:165. 37 C C Torrey, Journal of the American Oriental Soc 25:302-311. 38 M Winternitz, A History of Indian Literature 2 [1920], Calcutta, 1933:53; E Lamotte, History of Indian Buddhism, Louvain [1947] 1988:100; H Bechert, Bruchstcke buddhistischer Verssammlungen aus zentralasiatischen Sanskrithandschriften, Die Anavataptagatha und die Sthaviragatha, Berlin, 1961:41 n2. 39 J Bronkhorst, Greater Magadha, Studies in the Culture of Early India, Leiden, 2007:209. Alexander the Greats (356-323 BCE) campaigns were from 335-323 BCE, and he tried to invade India in 326 BCE. See Lakkhaa S (D 30) @ SD 36.9 (4.2.1.1). 40 However, we do have another Indian form, yauna, in Mahbhrata (Poon ed, vol 15, ntiparvan 12.200.40: Yauna,kamboja,gndhr kirt barbarai..., but in the fn, 2 MSS the vl ha (the White Huns). 41 Narain 1957:5 f. 42 Rajendra Lal Mitra, Journal of the Asiatic Soc of Bengal 1874:253. 43 See eg Narain 2003. See also Harvey 2007:105-107.
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now almost universally accepted by informed Indological scholarship, a re-examination of early Buddhist historical material, ..., necessitates a redating of the Buddhas death to between 411 and 400 BCE.... (2001: 24). This means that Herodotusand, as we have seen, Assalyana, too [2.2]were the Buddhas contemporaries. Knowing these dates allows us some confidence to have a good idea of the date of the Assalyana Sutta, as we shall see. It was possible, even highly likely, that within Assalyanas own lifetime that his own tribesmen fiercely fought against Alexanders soldiers [2.3.2]. 3.4.2.2 INDIAN SOLDIERS FOUGHT THE GREEKS. In 480 BCE, king Xerxes I (Khashaya Shah) (519465 BCE) of Persia invaded mainland Greece. This was to avenge Greek support of a revolt by the Ionians in Asia Minor against the Persians, who were defeated at Marathon (490 BCE). His huge international force included Indians contingents. The Greek historian, Herodotus (c484-425 BCE), describes them as follows: The Indians wore garments made of tree-wool [cotton], and they had bows of reed and arrows of reed with iron points. (Histories 7.65).44 The heavily outnumbered Greeks, under the leadership of the Spartan king, Leonidas (540c-480 BCE) fought a heroic battle against the Persians (numbering between 50,000 to 200,000).45 In 480, Leonidas, went to Thermopylae (a narrow coastal pass) with his 300 royal guards, and was joined by 14,000 Greeks from the city-states. By the sixth day of battle, they killed 20,000 enemies, losing 2,500 of their own. On the seventh day, a Malian Greek traitor, Ephialtes, led the Persian general Hydarnes by a mountain track to the rear of the Greeks.46 At that point, Leonidas sent away all Greek troops, while he remained in the pass with his 300 Spartans, 900 helots, 700 Thespians and 400 Thebans. Overwhelmed by the Persian army, all the Greek soldiers were killed, except for Thebans, who surrendered. The Indian soldiers who fought for the Persian army surely knew of the heroism of the Greeks, and brought the story back to India. If we accept the latest historical dates of the Buddha [3.4.2.1], then the battle of Thermopylae (480 BCE) occurred around the time of his birth. Within decades of the Buddhas death, Alexander the Great would launch his military campaigns across southern Asia (335-323 BCE), reaching the Indian frontiers in 326 BCE. The point is that, with such international connections, the Buddha and the Indians of his time, knew about the Greeks, and even met them.47 3.4.3 The Greeks in the suttas. The earliest mention of the Greeksas yona [3.2]in the Buddhist texts is probably in the Assalyana Sutta [6.2] and its Chinese parallels [1.2.1]. Yona is also mentioned in the Milinda,paha (Miln 82, 83), first compiled probably in Sanskrit during the 1st century CE, and then translated into Pali in Sri Lanka in the 4th century,48 but additions were made to it later.49 Elsewhere in the Pali texts, we find references in the Mah Niddesa to yona and parama,yona (Nm 155, 415), and in the Culla Niddesa, to yon (Nc 37). The Apadna mentions yonaka (Ap 2:358). While the two Niddesas are ancient commentaries on the older sections of the Sutta Nipta, the Apadna is a collection of stories and legends (past lives) of the early saints. All these works were composed around the 1st-2nd centuries. With the rise of the Han empire (202 BCE-220 CE), the Silk Road reached its fullest extent of over 6,500 km (4000 mi), stretching from Rome to Changan (the Han capital) and beyond to Korea and Japan. This caravan route, the longest in the world in its time, marked the beginning of globalization. However,
Herodotus, Bk 7, ch 65: http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hh/hh7060.htm & The Histories, ed A D Godley, in Perseus website, Tufts Univ, USA. 45 Herodotus estimates Xerxes army at about a million strong; but recent estimates put it as ranging from 50,000200,000 (Philip DeSouza, The Greek and Persian Wars 499-386 BCE, Oxford, 2003:41) or at about 60,000 (Peter R Barksworth, The organization of Xerxess Army, Iranica Antiqua 27 1993:149-167). 46 Herodotus, in Henry Cary (ed), The Histories of Herodotus, New York, 1904:438. 47 On Alexanders campaigns and later influence, see Cakkavatti Sihanda S (D 26) = SD 36.10 (2.2.1). 48 I B Horner, 1963: Miln:H xxi-xxvi. 49 W Geiger, Pali Language and Literature [Strassburg, 1916], tr B Ghosh 1943:26 20; S Jayawardhana, Handbook of Pali Literature, Colombo, 1994:94 The Chinese version of Miln is shorter, corresponding to only pages 189, ie, the first part, of the Pali version: see Lakkhaa S (D 30) @ SD 36.9 (4.2.3). On the etym of yona or yavana, see Narain 1957:165.
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as we have seen, the ancient Indians were familiar with the Greeks even earlier on [3.4.2.2]. Greek influence upon India was further reinforced, and more deeply so, by Alexanders campaigns. It is very likely that Greek influences were a major factor in the rise of such Buddhist ideas as those of the great man (mah,purisa)50 and his 32 marks.51
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3.3 Then this occurred to those brahmins: There is the 16-year-old brahmin youth named Assalyana, young, shaven-headed, was staying in Svatth. He is a master of the three Vedas, along with their invocations and rituals, phonology and etymology, and the Iti,hsa Puras as the fifth; learned in the vedic padas, a grammarian, and well versed in nature lore and the marks of the great man. 3.4 He will be able to refute the recluse Gotama regarding this statement.60
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6.3 Yes, sir, I have heard that that in Yona and Kamboj and the countries beyond the borders, there are only two classes, that is, master and slave. Having been masters, they are slave; haviug been slaves, they are masters. 6.4 Here, then, Assalyana, on what strength, on what basis, did the brahmins say that The brahmin is the best class; any other class is inferior. The brahmin is the fair class; any other class is dark. Only brahmins are pure [purified], not the non-brahmins. Brahmins are Brahms [Gods] own sons, the offspring from his mouth, born of Brahm, created by Brahm, the heirs of Brahm?
THE BAD KARMIC COURSE CYCLE Does bad karma affects only non-brahmins?
7.1 Although master Gotama speaks thus, the brahmins here still think that The brahmin is the best class; any other class is inferior. The brahmin is the fair class; any other class is dark. Only brahmins are pure [purified], not the non-brahmins. Brahmins are Brahms [Gods] own sons, the offspring from his mouth, born of Brahm, created by Brahm, the heirs of Brahm. 7.2 What do you think, Assalyana? Is it that only a kshatriya [warrior class member] who destroys life, takes the not-given, commits sexual misconduct, speaks falsehood, speaks maliciously, speaks harsh words, speaks frivolously, is covetous, has a heart of ill will, holds wrong views, who, with the bodys breaking up, after death,74 would be reborn in a plane of misery, a bad destination, a lower realm, in hellbut not a brahmin?75 7.3 Is it that only a vaishya [business class member] who destroys life, takes the not-given, commits sexual misconduct, speaks falsehood, speaks maliciously, speaks harsh words, speaks frivolously, is covetous, has a heart of ill will, holds wrong views,
child, a brahmin boy, trades in the Middle Country and marries a brahmin girl, thei r issue will be pure only on his mothers side. (MA 3:409) 74 With the bodys breaking up, after death, kya,bhedassa param,mara. Buddhaghosa explains this phrase as foll: With the bodys breaking up (kyassa bhed) means on abandoning the aggregates that are clung to; after death (param,mara) means that in-between state (tad-antara), in the grasping of the aggregates that have been generated (abhinibbatta-k,khandha,gahae). Or, with the bodys breaking up means the inter ruption of the lifefaculty, and after death means after the death-consciousness (cuti,cittato uddha). (Vism 13.91/427; cf NcA 69). See Deva,dta S (M 130.2/3:178 = SD 2.23. 75 The argument here [7-8], centred around the karmic courses (kamma,patha) is often used by the Buddha, eg, Aggaa S (D 27.5-6/3:82 f) = SD 2.19; Madhura S (M 84.6-8/2:86-89) = SD 69.8; Assalyana S (M 93.7-8/2:149 f) = SD 40a.2 (here); Esukr S (M 96.8+13-17/2:179, 181-184) = SD 37.9.
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with the bodys breaking up, after death, would be reborn in a plane of misery, a bad destination, a lower realm, in hellbut not a brahmin? 7.4 Is it that only a shudra [working class member] who destroys life, takes the not-given, commits sexual misconduct, speaks falsehood, speaks maliciously, speaks harsh words, speaks frivolously, is covetous, has a heart of ill will, holds wrong views, with the bodys breaking up, after death, would be reborn in a plane of misery, a bad destination, a lower realm, in hellbut not a brahmin?
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speaks harsh words, speaks frivolously, is covetous, has a heart of ill will, holds wrong views, with the bodys breaking up, after death, would himself be reborn in a plane of misery, a bad destination, a lower realm, in hell. 7.9 For, master Gotama, a shudra, too, who destroys life, takes the not-given, commits sexual misconduct, speaks falsehood, speaks maliciously, speaks harsh words, speaks frivolously, is covetous, has a heart of ill will, holds wrong views, with the bodys breaking up, after death, would himself be reborn in a plane of misery, a bad destination, a lower realm, in hell. 7.10 For, master Gotama, all those from the four classes, too, who destroy life, take the not-given, [150] commit sexual misconduct, speak falsehood, speak maliciously, speak harsh words, speak frivolously, are covetous, have a heart of ill will, hold wrong views, with the bodys breaking up, after death, would themselves be reborn in a plane of misery, a bad destination, a lower realm, in hell. 7.11 Here, then, Assalyana, on what strength, on what basis, did the brahmins say that 7.12 The brahmin is the best class; any other class is inferior. The brahmin is the fair class; any other class is dark. Only brahmins are pure [purified], not the non-brahmins. Brahmins are Brahms [Gods] own sons, the offspring from his mouth, born of Brahm, created by Brahm, the heirs of Brahm?
THE GOOD KARMIC COURSE CYCLE Is it only brahmins who do good karma?
8.1 Although master Gotama speaks thus, the brahmins here still think that The brahmin is the best class; any other class is inferior. The brahmin is the fair class; any other class is dark. Only brahmins are pure [purified], not the non-brahmins. Brahmins are Brahms [Gods] own sons, the offspring from his mouth, born of Brahm, created by Brahm, the heirs of Brahm. 8.2 What do you think, Assalyana? Is it that only a brahmin who refrains from destroying life, refrains from taking the not-given, refrains from committing sexual misconduct,
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refrains from speaking falsehood, refrains from speaking maliciously, refrains from speaking harsh words, refrains from speaking frivolously, is not covetous, has a heart of lovingkindness, holds right views, who, with the bodys breaking up, after death, would be reborn in a state of joy, in a happy destination, in a heaven worldbut not a kshatriya, nor a vaishya, nor a shudra?
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so that, with the bodys breaking up, after death, he, too, would be reborn in a state of joy, in a happy destination, in a heaven world. 8.7 For, a shudra, too, is one who refrains from destroying life, refrains from taking the not-given, refrains from committing sexual misconduct, refrains from speaking falsehood, refrains from speaking maliciously, refrains from speaking harsh words, refrains from speaking frivolously, is not covetous, has a heart of lovingkindness, holds right views, so that, with the bodys breaking up, after death, he, too, would be reborn in a state of joy, in a happy destination, in a heaven world. 8.8 For, all those from the four classes, too, who refrain from destroying life, refrain from taking the not-given, refrain from committing sexual misconduct, refrain from speaking falsehood, refrain from speaking maliciously, refrain from speaking harsh words, refrain from speaking frivolously, are not covetous, have a heart of lovingkindness, hold right views, so that, with the bodys breaking up, after death, they, too, would be reborn in a state of joy, in a happy destination, in a heaven world. 8.9 Here, then, Assalyana, on what strength, on what basis, did the brahmins say that The brahmin is the best class; any other class is inferior. The brahmin is the fair class; any other class is dark. Only brahmins are pure [purified], not the non-brahmins. Brahmins are Brahms [Gods] own sons, the offspring from his mouth, born of Brahm, created by Brahm, the heirs of Brahm?
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9.5 A brahmin, too, master Gotama, is able to cultivate a heart of lovingkindness in this region, free from hate, free from ill will. 9.6 A vaishya, too, master Gotama, is able to cultivate a heart of lovingkindness in this region, free from hate, free from ill will. 9.7 A shudra, too, master Gotama, is able to cultivate a heart of lovingkindness in this region, free from hate, free from ill will. 9.8 Everyone from the four classes, too, master Gotama, are able to cultivate a heart of lovingkindness in this region, free from hate, free from ill will. 9.9 Here, then, Assalyana, on what strength, on what basis, did the brahmins say that The brahmin is the best class; any other class is inferior. The brahmin is the fair class; any other class is dark. Only brahmins are pure [purified], not the non-brahmins. Brahmins are Brahms [Gods] own sons, the offspring from his mouth, born of Brahm, created by Brahm, the heirs of Brahm?
Taking a bath-sponge...to the river, sotti,sinni dya nadi gantv rajo,jalla pavhetu, recurs, mutatis mutandis, at Ghaikra S (M 81.6+7/2:46) = SD 49.3. Cf Buddha,vasa: Just as water pervades people, bad and good alike with its coolness, takes away dust and dirt, || even so, you, too, by cultivating lovingkindness for friend and foe alike, having attained perfection of lovingkindness, will gain self-awakening. (Yath pi udaka nma kalyne ppake jane | sama pharati stena pavheti rajo,mala || tatheva tva ahita,hite sama mettya bhvaya | metta,pramita gantv sambodhi ppuissasi, B 2.156/19). Cf washed away dust and dirt ( rajo,jalla pavhayi, J 6:588 etc); (have) washed all evil away (sabba,ppa pavheti, Tha 349). Note that rajovajalla and rajjalla (Dh 141, where Uv 33.1 has rajo,mala) are metrical forms of rajo,jalla, and more exactly, jalla is wet dirt, such as a muddy smudge: see Dh:N 96 n141. Comy notes how monks should wash in the river (MA 3:280), qu Cv 5.1.3 @ V 2:106. See also foll n. 79 Whole section: Ta ki maasi assalyana brhmaova nu kho pahoti sotti,sinni dya nadi gantv rajo,jalla pavhetu no khattiyo no vesso no suddti, also at Esukr S (M 96.15.1/2:182 f) = SD 37.9.
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used [brought along] an upper fire-stick made from a dogs trough, or a pigs trough, or a refuse bin, or castor-oil wood 11.8 would it be that his fire would have no flame, no colour, no radiance, and cannot be used as a fire should be used? 11.9 Not at all, master Gotama! 11.10 As for the fire started, heat produced, by one born into a kshatriya family, a brahmin family, a royal family, who has used [brought along] an upper fire-stick of teak have a flame, a colour, and a radiance, and be used in a way that a fire should be used or sal or salaa or sandalwood or padmaka 11.11 his fire would surely have a flame, a colour, and a radiance, and should be useful like any fire. 11.12 So, too, it is for the fire that is started, heat produced, by one born into a chandala family, or a trapper family, or a wicker-worker family, or a cartwright family, or a scavengers family, who has used [brought along] an upper fire-stick made from a dogs trough, or a pigs trough, or a refuse bin, or castor-oil wood 11.13 his fire, too, [153] would surely have a flame, a colour, and a radiance, and should be useful like any fire. 11.14 For, indeed, master Gotama, all fires have a flame, a colour, and a radiance, and should be useful as any fire should.88 11.15 Here, then, Assalyana, on what strength, on what basis, did the brahmins say that The brahmin is the best class; any other class is inferior. The brahmin is the fair class; any other class is dark. Only brahmins are pure [purified], not the non-brahmins. Brahmins are Brahms [Gods] own sons, the offspring from his mouth, born of Brahm, created by Brahm, the heirs of Brahm?
between cala and pukkusa, see D:RD 1:100. None of these are incl under worker class or shudra (sudda), which is part of the class (vaa) system. See Aggaa S (D 27/3:80-97) = SD 2.19; see also Uma Chakravarti, The Social Dimensions of Early Buddhism, Delhi, 1987:94-121. On aryas and mlecchas, see SD 30.10 (1). 88 Sabbopi hi, bho gotama, aggi accim ceva vaav ca pabhassaro ca sabbenapi sakk aggin aggi,karaya ktunti. 89 This is, in fact, the case with the brahmin youth Ambaha, as recorded in Ambaha S (D 3). It is said that the arrogant brahmin youth, Ambaha, was descended from a marriage btw a kshatriya man and a slave-girl (prob a shudra) (D 3.1.16.3/1:93), but according to Mava Dharma stra (10.8+47), he had a brahmin father and a vaishya mother: see SD 21.3 (1.3). On the kshatriyas being more strict about descent than the brahmins, see Ambaha S (D 3) @ SD 21.3 (2.2.3).
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13.2 Should the son born of the kshatriya maiden by the brahmin youth be like the mother or like the father? Should he be called a kshatriya or a brahmin? 13.3 The son, master Gotama, born of the kshatriya maiden by the brahmin youth should be both like the mother and like the father, too. He should be called a kshatriya and a brahmin, too. 14.1 PARABLE OF THE MARE AND THE ASS. What do you think, Assalyana? Here, a mare were to mate with an ass, and as a result of the mating, a foal90 were born.91 Should the foal born of the mare by the ass be like the mother or like the father? Should he be called a horse or an ass? 14.2 On account of the cross-breeding, he should be called a mule.92 14.3 For, here, [154] master Gotama, I see the reason for difference, but I see no reason for any difference in the other (two) cases.93
THE PARABLE OF THE TWO BRAHMIN BROTHERS The initiated reciter and the uninitiated non-reciter
15.1 What do you think, Assalyana? Suppose there were two brahmin youths who are uterine brothers, one is an initiated reciter (of the Vedas), the other neither initiated nor a reciter.94 15.2 Here95 which would the brahmins first feed the ancestral offering (saddha),96 or the fire oblation (thl,pka),97 or the sacrifice (yaa),98 or the guest meal (phuna)?99 15.3 Here, master Gotama, it is the brahmin youth who is an initiated reciter who would be the first to be fed the ancestral offering, or the fire oblation, or the sacrifice, or the guest meal. 15.4 For, master Gotama, what great fruit would there be here in a gift to the uninitiated non-reciter?
Foal, kisora (Skt kiora, a colt), vll kissera, kissara. Idha vaava gadrabhena sampayojeyyu, tesa sampayogam anvya kisoro jyetha. 92 Ce Ee (also Pischel 1880) vekurajaya* hi so bho gotama, assataro hoti. (*) Be kua hi; WT kua hi; Se kumrau pi. Neumann (1900) suggests reading vekuranvya = Skt vaikriynvayya, change due to mutation (2:881). 93 Ida hissa bho gotama nn,karaa passmi, amutra ca panasna [so Ee; Be Ce panesna; Se pana sna] na kici nn,karaa passmti. This is a difficult sentence: the tr is conjectural. 94 Ta ki maasi assalyana idhssu dve mavak bhtaro sodariy, eko ajjhyako upanto eko anajjhyako anupanto. 95 A similar ref to these 4 offerings occurs in Ambaha S (D 3.1.24-27/1:97 f) = SD 21.3. 96 Skt rddha (D 1:97; A 1:166, 5:269-273; J 2:360; DA 1:267); making such an offering: V 1:7; D 2:39; Sn 1146. Traditionally, this is an annual ancestral ritual for the fathers ( pit; P peta) or ancestors, done in the 6th month, ie, Bhdra,pada (Aug-Sep). See (Saddha) Jussoi S (A 10.177/5:269-273) @ SD 2.6a (2). See Gonda 1980:441-456. 97 Skt sthl,pka (lit cooked in an earthern vessel), a Vedic ritual consisting of an offering of barley or rice cooked in milk used as an oblation: see Bhad-rayaka 6.4.19 (V 3:15; D 1:97 = DA 1:267; S 2:242, 5:384; A 1:166; J 1:186; Miln 249). Comy say this was food offered during blessing rituals, etc (magaldi,bhatte, DA 1:267).The sthl,paka is performed on every Prathama (the first day of lunar month). Sthl is the pot in which rice is cooked, and which must be placed in the aupasana (the familys sacred fire). The cooked rice, called charu, must be offered to the same fire. See Gonda1980:423-427. 98 Skt yaja: D 1:129 f, 137 f; DA 1:204-107. See Pasenadi Yaa S (S 3.9/1:75 f) = SD 22.11. On mah yaa, see M 2:204; DhsA 145 (cf DhsA:PR 193). A yajna (meaning sacrifice) is a Vedic ritual, which may be simply an offering of clarified butter into a fire, or it may involve 17 priests in an elaborate 12-day ritual incl the building of a large fire altar as in the agni,cayana (piled fire, ie, a fire altar on a raised level, such as bricks) . The yajna always includes a fire, Sanskrit mantras (Vedic verses), and some sort of offering. In the larger public rituals, it was common to have animal sacrifice/s. See PED: yaa. 99 Phuna, D 1:97 = M 2:154; Vism 230; DA 1:267. Skt prhavana, meal for a guest; from Skt prhuna or prghna, guest; cf prhavanya (P phuneyya), worthy of being received as a guest. Cf huna,phuna (sacrifice and offering), VvA 155. See Aha Puggala S 1 (A 8.59/4:292) = SD 15.10a (4).
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Assalyana is silenced
17.1 First, Assalyana, you took your stand on birth [jati]; going from birth, you took a stand on the mantras; going from mantras, you took a stand on asceticism; going from asceticism, you went back to your stand on the purity of the four classeswhich is what I have prescribed!100 17.2 When this was said, the brahmin youth Assalyana sat cross-legged, silent, dismayed, his shoulders drooping, hanging his head, downcast and bewildered.101
Pubbe kho tva assalyana jti agamsi; jti gantv mante agamsi; mante gantv tape agamsi; tape gantv ctu,vai suddhi paccgato, yam aha paapemti. 101 This defeated figure pericope is said of Ariha (M 22.7/1:132,28-30), Saccaka (M 35.22/1:234,1-2), Sti (M 38.6/1:258,28-30), Assalyana (M 93.17.2/2:154) = SD 40a.1, and Mra (S 4.24.11/1:124) = SD 36.5. 102 As noted earlier [6.1], Assalyana apparently sees himself only as a spokesman for the brahmins, and in fact has some respect for the Buddha [4.2, 4.4, 4.7]. As such, there is no head -splitting incident (Vajira,p threatening to hurl his glowing iron at the deceptive challenger) here, as found in Ambaha S (D 3.1.20-21/1:94 f) & SD 21.3 (4); also Ca Saccaka S (M 35.13b/1:231), SD 26.5. 103 Comy says that this was before the Buddhas time (MA 3:411). A parallel account is found in E 40.9 and Abhidharma,koa,upyik-nma k [1.2.1]. 104 Comy says that Asita mean klaka (vl kaka, dark), and Devala was his name, and he was the Bud dha then (and Assalyana was one of the brahmin seers). Comy construes this as if the Buddha were telling Assalyana rather haughtily: In the past, when you were of superior birth and I was of inferior birth, you could not answer a question I asked you on the birth-doctrine (jti,vda). Now here that you are inferior to me, for I have become a Buddha, how could you answer it? (MA 3:411: this is not Buddha Word, but a comy gloss). The word klaka prob identifies Asita with Kla (or Ka) Devala of Indriya J (J 423/3:466). His namesake, Asita, who lived to see the infant Siddhattha, is named in Nlaka S (Sn 3.2/679). He is the seer who prophesizes the child Siddhattha s destiny as buddha,
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SD 40a.2
seven brahmin seers [rishis] were consulting one another in a leaf-hut in their forest-dwelling, a bad wrong view such as this arose to them: 18.4 The brahmin is the best class; any other class is inferior. The brahmin is the fair class; any other class is dark. Only brahmins are pure [purified], not the non-brahmins. Brahmins are Brahms [Gods] own sons, the offspring from his mouth, born of Brahm, created by Brahm, the heirs of Brahm. 18.5 Then, Assalyana, the seer Asita Devala, having, groomed his hair and beard, dressed in crimson cloths, put on multi-layered sandals,105 and taken his golden staff, appeared in the compound106 of the brahmin seers.107 18.6 Then, Assalyana, while the seer Asita Devala was walking up and down in the seven brahmin seers compound, he said this: Where now have these worthy brahmin seers gone? Where now have these worthy brahmin seers gone?
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18.12 Formerly, when we cursed someone, Turn into ash, lowly wretch! Turn into ash, lowly wretch! he indeed becomes ashes. 18.13 But the more we curse the seer Asita Devala, all the more comely, all the more lovely, and all the more charming, he becomes!
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SD 40a.2
18.27 But, sirs, do you know for sure if that being-to-be-born is a kshatriya, or a brahmin, or a vaishya, or a shudra?115 No, sir, we do not know for sure if that being-to-be-born is a kshatriya, or a brahmin, or a vaishya, or a shudra. 18.28 That being the case, sirs, do you know what are you? That being the case, sir, we do not know who we are!
Qu by Vasubandhu in Abhidharma,koa (3.12, Pradhan 1967:121,22+25; 121/22-25, Gretil ed), where it is identified as the intermediate state (antar,bhava). Note that the Buddhas statement here confirms that gandhabba (its key sense) means a being or consciousness seeking to be reborn. It is clearly a synonym for sambhaves (a being seeking birth) (M 38.15/1:261; S 12.64.2-3/2:101; Sn 147/26 = Khp 9/8,20): see (Karaya) Metta S (Sn 8.1) @ SD 38.3 (5.6.2) & Is rebirth immediate = SD 2.17 (7). 116 Te hi nma assalyana satta brhmaisayo asitena devalena isin sake jti,vde samanuyujyamn samanugghyamn samanubhsyamn na sampyissanti. 117 Yesa tva scariyako na puo dabbi,ghti. Comy explains that Puna was the name of a servant of the seven brahmin seers. Using a ladle, he cooked some leaves. He knew the art of handling a ladle. However, he was not one of the teachers that Assalyana has. As such, Assalyana does not even know the art of ladle-handling! (MA 3:412). Pv Comy gives kaacchu (ladle, serving-spoon) as a synonym for dabbi (PvA 135). Dabbi,gh occurs in Akura Pv (Pv 21.54/310/35). The phrase scariyaka also occurs in Udumbarik S (D 25.19.6/3:52) = SD 1.4.
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Bibliography
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