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A recluse, once a co-disciple of
the Buddha in the holy life. Once, when the Buddha visited Kapilavatthu and
wanted lodging for the night, Mahānāma suggested that he should go to the
hermitage of Bharandu. The Buddha acted on this suggestion and spent the night
there.
When Mahānāma arrived the next morning, the Buddha talked to him about
the three kinds of teachers:
- those who have full comprehension of sense desires only but not of objects
of sense or of feelings;
- those who have full comprehension of sense desires and of objects of
sense; and
- those who have comprehension of all three.
Would their conclusions coincide, or would they
differ?
Here Bharandu chimed in and asked Mahānāma to say they would be the
same. But the Buddha contradicted him, whereupon Bharandu said they would be
different; but the Buddha again contradicted him, and even, also, a third time.
Grieved at being slighted by the Buddha in the presence of Mahānāma, an
important Sākiyan, Bharandu left
Kapilavatthu, never to return (A.i.276 f).
The Commentary explains (AA.i.458) that he had lived in
the same hermitage as the Buddha, when they were both pupils of
Alārakālama.
Bharandu had the reputation of being able to secure the
best and choicest alms in the city.

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