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She was born in Kapilavatthu as the
daughter of the chief of the Sākiyan Khemaka and was named Nandā. Owing to her
great beauty and charm she became known as Abhirūpā-Nandā.
On the day appointed for her to select
her husband, the Sākiyan youth, on whom her choice was to have fallen, died, and
her parents made her leave the world against her will.
The Apadāna account (ii. 609) does not
mention the suitor's death, but states that many sought her hand and caused
great trouble, to avoid which her parents made her join the Order.
Even after she had entered the Order she
avoided going into the Buddha's presence, being infatuated with her own beauty
and fearing the Master's rebuke. In order to induce her to come to him, the
Buddha directed Mahā Pajāpatī to see that all the nuns came for instruction.
When Nandā's turn came she sent another in her place. The Buddha refused to
recognise the substitute, and Nandā was compelled to go herself. As she listened
to the Buddha preaching, he, by his magic power, conjured up a beautiful woman
and showed her becoming aged and fading, causing anguish to arise in Nandā's
heart. At the opportune moment, the Buddha drove home the truth of the
impermanence of beauty. Meditating on this topic, she later became an arahant
(ThigA.81f. ; SnA.i.241-2).
The two verses preached to her by the
Buddha, which she made the subject of her meditations, are given in the
Therīgāthā (vv.19, 20).
In the time of Vipassī Buddha, Nandā had
been the daughter of a wealthy burgess in the Buddha's native town of Bandhumatī.
Having heard the Buddha preach she became his pious follower, and, at his death,
made an offering of a golden umbrella decked with jewels to the shrine built
over his ashes (Ap.ii.608).
The verses quoted in the Therīgāthā
Commentary, as having been taken from the Apadāna, really belong to Mettā, and
are found in the Apadāna (ii. 515) ascribed to Ekapindadāyikā. The correct
verses are found in the Apadāna under the name of Abhirūpa Nandā, and agree with
the story given in the text of the Therīgāthā Commentary.

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