Sri Pada and the path to purification
Sugath Rajapakse
The devout Buddhists for centuries have climbed the Sri
Pada to worship the Foot Print of the Enlightened One.
The approach and the climb up the mountain to the peak,
and the landmarks on the way up, reminds a person the
path to purification. Given below are the key landmarks
which signifies many stages to the path to purification.
Lihini Hela and the rest of the approach - Signifies the
journey through the Samsara and the many vicissitudes
one faces in Samsara.
Seetha Gangula - Just like the life which takes the path
of least resistance and indulgence in sense pleasures,
and where no one place ever the same just as in life,
the downward path or Anusothagami while the traveller is
climbing in the opposite direction to the flow or
Patisothagami.
Indikatupaana/Geththampaana - Letting go of the views
and beliefs, as humans and other are engulfed in a mesh
of views.
Dharmarajagala - The truth or Dhamma is as firm as the
rock is.
Heramitipaana - Letting go of the walking stick. One
uses the six senses under the notion “I” and this I
making grasp things as I and mine. This inability to be
without this I or Sakkaya Ditti is the Heramitiya or the
walking stick. You let go of Sakkaya Ditti, and that is
the first fetter of the lower five of the ten fetters.
Aadiya Mala Thenna - Aadiya is a person who practises
many rituals and steeped in beliefs shrouded in doubt.
Death of Aadiya means letting go of the rituals and
practices and the associate doubt. Thus at this point
one has let go of the first three fetters and attain
Sothapanna or stream entry.
Ehela Kanuwa - This is based on the reasoning would be
Eya Hala Kanuwa which later would have become Ehela
Kanuwa. This means letting go and letting go of the next
two fetters, sense pleasures and ill will. At this point
one has shed the first or lower five fetters while
ascending the rock or the Patisothagami path.
Ahas Gawuwa - With this one enters the upper five of the
fetters and with gradual ascendance, climbing the
Mahagiridambe clears the five upper fetters, desire for
fine material, immaterial, the subtle level of conceit,
restlessness and ignorance thus reaching the pinnacle or
attaining Bodhi or Arahath. The Ahas Gawuwa would mean
the Anidassana nature of the Arahaths Vinnana or
consciousness.
Thus it shows that climbing Sri Pada is not climbing a
rock to worship the Enlightened One but traversing this
Patisothagamai path for deliverance or Nibbana. May all
beings be peaceful, contented and happy. |