TALES DE
BUDDHA Gautama is one of the greatest religious leaders the world has known. Born a prince, he turned his bac...
1298 downloads
3693 Views
9MB Size
Report
This content was uploaded by our users and we assume good faith they have the permission to share this book. If you own the copyright to this book and it is wrongfully on our website, we offer a simple DMCA procedure to remove your content from our site. Start by pressing the button below!
Report copyright / DMCA form
TALES DE
BUDDHA Gautama is one of the greatest religious leaders the world has known. Born a prince, he turned his back on worldly pleasures which he realised, hid the sources of human misery. He .was convinced that penance and meditation as mere rituals without the accompanying sincerity and, contemplation were futile. After ' years of search he became the Buddha, the Enlightened One. He realised that fear and misery spring from attachment and desire and liberation lay in freeing oneself from the bonds of desire · and attachment. A supreme compassion for his fellow beings prompted him to propagate his view. Amrapali and Vasavadatta were two women-disciples of Buddha who gave up a life of pleasure and took to asceticism. The compassionate benevo lence of Buddha was potent enough to bring about a change of heart even among the condemned and the fallen. Angultmala, the d~eaded highway robber who plundered and killed travelling traders, was one such sinner who was transformed into a saint.
© India
Book House 'Education Trust. Bombay-400 039 . All rights reserved. August 1 982
Pub lished by H .G. MirchanClani for India BOok Houso Education Trust, Rus i Mansion, 29 Nathalal Parekh Marg, Bombay 400 039 and printed by him et IBH Printers. Marol Na ka, Mathuredas Vissanji Road. Andheri (East). Bombay' 400 059.
Editor: Anant Pai
Cover : Madhu Powle
Buddha Script: Prof. S. K . Ramachandra Rao
Artworks: Souren Roy
,(\ngulimala
Script: Subba Rao
Artworks: Pratap Muli.ck
IN THE HlMALAYAIV FOOTHILL61 KAPILAVASTO WAO' A .9MALL BOT PROSPER(}(/S KIN60OM. THE SAKYA.9 RLlL€O OVER IT. t . .svOOHODANA WAS THEIR KIIVG'.
,~----------------~ ""EDITOR: ANANT PAl RETOLD B~: f'1otlb ·5.K.RAMACHANDRA RAG A RTWORK:SOUREN RO\J ..2
TEN MONTIf6' L-4TER TIfE &UEBV u/-4~ ON IIER ,w-4V TO IIER ~-4TIIER'S' IfOUSE. A$' .WE ,w/loo PAl6'S'ING' TIlRObI:W AI 8MUT/FilL 6ROUE ON 711£ U//IV 70 LOMBINI ~~~R.rl
CHANNA,WHO 18 THIS? HIS HEAD IS ' WHITE. HE SEEMS VERY WEAK,HIS SKIN IS WRINKLED.
MOTHER. I HAVE LEARNT THAT ALL Tf-UN6S ALIVE AND BEAUTIFUL KEEP CHANGIN6. MEN GROW OLD. MEN FALL ILL AND DIE . I FEEL UNHAPPV WHEN I THIN K OF THESE
THINGS.
//S' 6'OOIV /16' TilE ME6'6'EM5'ER6' BROQ6IIT IVEW., AB()(IT SIOOII;t}RTIf/l, KIIVG' BIMBI..,/IR/l WEIVT TO MEET 111M.
YOU SEEM TO BE - ~~~!!~ LONG TO A NOBLE r FA/VIILY. 'lOUR HAND SHOULD NOT HOLD A BEGGING BOWL, BUT THE REINS OF AN EMPIRE. I WILL GIVE YOU A HIGH POSITION IN /VIV KINGDOM. COME.
BUT AS' H£ BE6AN 7lJ WALK AWAV FROfIIl THE BANK, fI£ FELT W£AK ANt) FELL DOWN.
,------------------------, r----------------------- ~ ,)'IOOHI9RTHIl NO/ll/ LIVED 19
LONEt.YUFE.
HE MOt/EO TO/ll/I9ROS> 19 800111 TREE I9IVO ~I9T BENEI9TH IT.
I ~----------------------------------~ NE O'PENT O'EI/EN WEEKS' CINDER TilE TREE ENv'O