Buddha: The Light of Asia
S.M. wijayaratne
(Kurunegala Daily News Corr.)
Most
Western readers of the older generation had their
impression of the Buddha from this poem.Sir Edwin used
the image of a tree to represent mankind, and the
Fully-Awakened One was depicted as a flower on that
particular tree.
This flower blooms only once in a myriad years, which
means that humanity would have to wait for an immense
period of time for this extra ordinary flower to bloom.
But once it blooms, it fills the whole universe with its
fragrance of wisdom. And the love and compassion
contained in it, is as sweet as honey.The analogy of a
flower is apt to describe the
Fully-Awakened One. A flower emerges from a tree
complete in its own glory. “This
is that Blossom on our human tree
Which opens once in many myriad years
But opened, fills the world with wisdom’s scent
And Love’s dropped honey.”
We find this great verse in Sir Edwin Arnold’s famous
poem on the life of the Budha, ‘Light of Asia’. When it
was first published, more than a century ago, it took
England and the United States by storm.
It ran to sixty editions in England and 80 editions in
the United States in the course of a few years.
Few hundred thousand copies were sold at a time when
there were neither best-seller lists, nor the
Book-of-the-Month Club.
Most Western readers of the older generation had their
impression of the Buddha from this poem.
Sir Edwin used the image of a tree to represent mankind,
and the Fully-Awakened One was depicted as a flower on
that particular tree.
This flower blooms only once in a myriad years, which
means that humanity would have to wait for an immense
period of time for this extra ordinary flower to bloom.
But once it blooms, it fills the whole universe with its
fragrance of wisdom.
And the love and compassion contained in it, is as sweet
as honey.
The analogy of a flower is apt to describe the
Fully-Awakened One.
A flower emerges from a tree complete in its own glory.
Even though it gets strength and sustenance from the
tree, it does so off its own effort, without the
assistance of any supernatural creator.
It is not necessary to explain why it is enchanting.
The Buddha too, simply ‘is’ the Buddha, the fully self
Enlightened One, who depends on no god or follower of
his existence.
The fragrance of wisdom and the honey-sweet loving
kindness of the Buddha are attested to by many
well-known poets, scholars, philosophers, historians,
scientists, psychologists, free-thinkers, rationalists
and even by agnostics.
They have identified Him as an enlightened and liberal
religious teacher who had rendered a great service to
the mankind through His rational interpretation of the
ultimate truth.
Can he be considered as a human being after
enlightenment?
The answer was given by the Buddha to Drona, a brahmin,
who noticed his footprints and realised at once that he
could be no ordinary being. He went up to the Buddha and
asked if he was a god, a heavenly musician or a demon. T
he Buddha answered, ‘No’ to all these questions. when he
was asked whether he was a human being, the Buddha again
answered that he was not.
When asked who he was, the Buddha replied calmly to the
Brahmin Drona that he had eradicated all defilements
which condition rebirth as a god, heavenly musician, a
demon or a human being. He further said.
‘As a lotus, fair and lovely,
By the water is not soiled,
By the world I am not soiled
Therefore, Brahmin, I am Buddha.”
When the Buddha attained Enlightenment, he could no
longer be regarded as an ordinary human being in the
normal sense of the world. He had attained the absolute
state of the Unconditioned, the Eternal unlike a normal
human being who is bound to this planet by time and
space.
In addition, his mental state was at the supermundane
level, not at the mundane level of unenlightened beings.
He did not belong to any category of beings who were
still bound in the cycle of births and deaths.
What meaning has the Enlightenment of the Buddha for us?
Firstly, the Buddha made us realize our true potential
for Enlightenment, that is, our Buddha nature. He
dispelled the darkness of ignorance and encouraged us to
develop our wisdom to the fullest.
Through the practise of the Dhamma, we can develop
spiritual insights into the real nature of things and
hence, be no longer enslaved by delusion and selfish
motivations in the mind.
He gives full credit to human intelligence and urges us
to awaken the vast potential for spiritual growth and
transformation that lie hidden in everyone of us. The
great human tragedy is our failure to understand this
vast potential.
We are like the farmer who lives a miserable life not
realising that there is a pot of gold hidden in his own
paddyfield.
Through systematic spiritual cultivation, we can cast
away our self-imposed limitations and be totally
liberated.
He, the Buddha opens the gate to liberation to all
without discrimination. Caste, class, race, sex or
religious labels meant little to Him.
All can benefit immensely from the Dhamma if we strive
diligently to cultivate various noble virtues,
self-discipline and the mind. May all beings be well and
happy. May all of you realise the Four Noble Truths in
no time. |