Page 9 - Understanding Buddhism
P. 9

Sometime in the late spring of 528           “I saw beings
               BCE, the earnest young seeker of life’s          passing away
               truths was walking through a wide, lush          and being
               meadow and noticed a lone banyan                 reborn, low
               tree. Beneath its branches he sat down
               to rest and meditate. He had no way of           and high.”    10
               knowing that it would later become fa-           —The Buddha
               mous and revered as the Bodhi Tree, or
               “Tree of Wisdom.”
                   Siddhartha now meditated so intently that he entered into a
               trancelike state in which he was able to clear his mind of all thoughts
               unrelated to his special intellectual quest. While in this state, he
               closely examined concepts like unhappiness, illness, old age, and
               death and their meaning to humanity. “I saw beings passing away
               and being reborn, low and high,” he later recalled. Some of those
               beings were happy, while others dwelled in abject misery. He said
               that his intellectual journey was guided by an abiding belief in the
               “universal law by which every act of good or evil will be rewarded
               or punished in this life or in some later incarnation of the soul.” 10





                                                                       At about age thirty- ve,
                                                                       Siddhartha sat down
                                                                       under a banyan tree
                                                                       to rest and meditate.
                                                                       When he emerged from
                                                                       his meditation, he had
                                                                       realized the reasons
                                                                       for human suffering,
                                                                       thereby becoming
                                                                       the Buddha, or the
                                                                       Enlightened One.
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