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The Story of Buddha
compiled from Holidays and Holy Days,
by Brotman Marshfield and Buddhism by Madhu Bazaz Wangu.
Characters:
Siddhartha Guatama
Queen Maya
An elephant
A charioteer (Channa)
A sick man, an old man and a dead man (one person)
A monk
Siddhartha's wife and child
A large tree
Mara, the evil spirit
Props:
an umbrella
a large tree
a belt with sword
paper flowers
cane
bathrobe
Scene 1: Buddha's birth, 563 BCE in India
Characters: Queen Maya, elephant, Siddhartha
Props: paper flowers
One night Queen Maya had a wonderful dream in which an elephant with
six tusks, carrying a lotus flower in its trunk, touched her right side.
At that moment a child was miraculously conceived. When Queen Maya told
her husband of this dream he called the Brahmins (or wise men) to interpret
it. They predicted that a son would be born who would become either a
great king or a great religious leader. His name would be Siddhartha,
which means "he whose aim is accomplished." According to legend,
Siddhartha later emerged as an infant from his mother's right side, walked
seven steps in the four directions of the compass and said, "No
further births have I to endure, for this is my last body. Now shall I
destroy and pluck out by the roots the sorrow that is caused by birth
and death." According to tradition, it rained flowers at the
time of Siddhartha's birth.
Scene 2: Siddhartha grows up
Characters: Siddhartha
Props: umbrella
The King very much wanted Siddhartha to grow up to become a great king,
not a religious leader. So he decided to give him everything he desired
and protect him from all sorrows and trouble, so he would never want to
leave the palace. The prince was never allowed to go alone outside the
palace grounds. He never saw sick, injured, or old people, and he was
never told of death. He learned all the arts of royalty: to shoot with
a bow and arrow, drive a chariot. ride a horse. He wore silk clothes and
always carried an umbrella over his head to protect him from the sun and
dust. At age 16 he married a beautiful princess. In time they had
a child and were very happy together.
Scene 3: The "Four Sights" that changed Siddhartha's life
Characters: Siddhartha, Channa (charioteer), old man, monk
Props: cane, bathrobe
At age 29, Siddhartha called his faithful charioteer Channa to take him
for a secret ride outside the palace grounds. As they drove through
the city, Siddhartha saw three things he had never seen before. One was
an old man lying on the road, groaning with pain. "What is the
matter with this man?" he asked Channa. "He is sick and in pain,"
Channa answered. "But why should anyone have to suffer such pain?"
Siddhartha asked. Channa shrugged his shoulders, "It is the way of
life." And they traveled on. Soon they came to another man, all
bent over and hobbling: along with a cane. "What is the matter
with that man?" Siddhartha again asked. "He is old" answered
Channa. "It is something that comes to all people who live a long
time. Bodies become tired and weak." Finally, they came on a man
in rags, Iying beside the road as if he were asleep. "What is
wrong with this man?" asked Siddhartha. "He is dead," came
the answer. "What does "dead" mean?" Channa answered,
"I cannot tell you, but it happens to all people, rich or poor."
Later that same night, when Channa and Siddhartha returned to the city,
they saw a man dressed in a yellow robe with a shaven head, begging
for food. Siddhartha stopped the chariot and questioned the man, "I
am a monk," he replied, "I have adopted a homeless life to win
salvation. I search for the most blessed state in which suffering, old
age, and death are unknown."
Scene 4: Siddhartha leaves the palace
Characters: Siddhartha, Channa, Siddhartha's wife and child,
Props: belt with sword, bathrobe
Shocked, Siddhartha returned to the palace and thought about what he had
seen. For the first time he was aware of suffering in life, and he felt
he could no longer enjoy his own life of ease and riches. That very night
Siddhartha decided to leave the palace. "If I were to live like one
of these monks, perhaps I could learn the truth about suffering and how
to end it." Silently kissing his wife and child goodbye. he asked
Channa to drive him to the outskirts of the city. There he took off his
jeweled sword and cut off his hair and beard. He took off his Princely
clothes, put on the yellow robe of a monk, and told Channa to take
his possessions back to his father.
Scene 5: Siddhartha's wanderings
Characters: Siddhartha
For years Siddhartha wandered throughout northeast India, seeking holy
men who taught him, among other things, techniques of meditation. He studied
the teachings of Hinduism, the ancient religion of India. He was most
interested in Samsara, or reincarnation, the idea that after death
a person's soul is born again in a new body. The common Hindu belief at
the time was that only by leading a highly spiritual life (or several
lives) could a person break the endless cycle of birth, life, death, and
rebirth. Siddhartha was attracted by this idea and he adopted a life of
extreme self-denial, not eating or sleeping and meditating constantly.
For six years he stayed along the bank of the Nairanjana River, eating
and drinking only enough to stay alive. He was determined to force himself
to this highest state of being through self-denial. But over time he only
became extremely weak.
Scene 6: Under the Bo Tree
Characters: Siddhartha, evil spirit Mara, Siddhartha's wife and child
props: large tree
One day, Siddhartha realized that his years of denial had weakened his
body to the point where he could not think clearly about the world or
religion. So he started to eat normally again. Refreshed by food, he
sat down under a fig tree (known to Buddhists as the Bo Tree, the Tree
of Enlightenment) and entered a state of very deep meditation. Buddhist
scriptures say that during this meditation an evil spirit, Mara, tempted
Siddhartha with all sorts of pleasures to distract him. But he was
not swayed. His deep meditation continued until he had recalled all of
his previous rebirths (550 previous states of existence). He gained knowledge
of his cycles of births and deaths, and was able to cast off the things
that bound him to the world. He had attained enlightenment, "Nirvana,"
the end of suffering.
From that day on Siddhartha was known as the Buddha, "the enlightened
one," or "the one who has found the light." The light that
Buddha found was not the kind that you see with your eyes. It was an inward
light that makes you feel peaceful and helps you to think more clearly.
Tradition says that when Buddha reached Nirvana, he could have cast off
his body and his existence. Instead he turned back to the world, determined
to share his enlightenment with others so that all living things could
end the cycles of their own rebirth and suffering.
During his lifetime Buddha institutionalized his teachings by forming
Sangha, a community of monks and nuns who practiced the religion and taught
it to others. Buddha's wife and son joined him in the Sangha, as
well as other relatives. Today members of the Sangha continue this tradition
and provide an important link with the religion's founder.
THE END
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