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1. Anojā. Wife of Mahākappina, while he
was king, before he entered the Order. She had been his wife in former births as
well and had helped him in his good works. In this age she was of equal birth
with Mahākappina and became his chief consort. She was so called because her
complexion was the colour of anoja-flowers.
When Kappina made his renunciation, she
and her companions followed him in chariots, crossing rivers by an act of truth
(saccakiriyā), saying "the Buddha could not have arisen only for the benefit of
men, but for that of women as well."
When she saw the Buddha and heard him
preach, she and her companions became Stream-enterers. She was ordained by
Uppalavannā (AA.i. pp.176ff. ; SA.ii., pp.178ff). In the Visuddhimagga it is
said that Mahākappina was present when she heard the Buddha preach, but the
Buddha contrived to make him invisible. When she asked whether the king was
there, the Buddha's reply was "Would you rather seek the king or the self?" "The
self " was the answer (p.393. The conversation on the "self" seems to have been
borrowed from Vin.i.23.
2. Anojā. See Anujjā.

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