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A family in Rājagaha was afflicted with
plague and all its members died except one woman. She broke through a wall (that
being the customary method of avoiding infection) and went and lived in the
backyard of another house. The inmates of the house, having compassion on her,
gave her the remnants of their food.
One day, Mahā Kassapa, rising after seven
days and nights from nirodha-samāpatti, knowing that he could be of use to the
poor woman, appeared before her asking for alms. Having nothing but rice-water
to give him, she asked him to go elsewhere, but the Elder showed his desire to
accept her gift and refused alms offered to him by Sakka and by the inmates of
the house behind which the woman lived.
With great joy she gave him the
rice-water, and the Elder then told her that three births earlier she had been
his mother. That same night she died and was born in a vimāna among the
Nimmānaratī gods.
Her story forms the basis of the Ācāma-dāyikā-Vimāna Vatthu.
Vv. p.17; VvA.99ff.

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