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A resident of Sāvatthi and friend of
Sirigutta. The latter was a follower of the Buddha, and the former of the
Niganthas. Instigated by the Niganthas, Garahadinna constantly blamed his friend
for his allegiance to the Buddha, until one day, in exasperation, Sirigutta
invited the Niganthas to his house in order to prove that their claim to
omniscience was false. To this end he had a ditch dug and filled with filth,
ropes stretched longitudinally over the ditch, and the seats so arranged that
the moment the Niganthas sat down they would be tipped over and flung into the
ditch. The Niganthas arrived, and everything happened as Sirigutta had arranged.
Garahadinna, filled with desire for revenge, hid his resentment and invited the
Buddha and his disciples with the intention of humiliating them. He employed the
same stratagem as his friend, except that the ditch was filled with glowing
coals instead of with filth. The Buddha came, knowing all that had happened, and
by an exercise of iddhi-power caused large lotus flowers to spring up from the
bed of coals. Sitting thereon, he created an abundant supply of food and
preached the Dhamma. Garahadinna, Sirigutta, and many others became sotāpannas
(DhA.i.434f).
On this occasion was also preached the
Khadirangāra Jātaka. (But see the introductory Story of the Jātaka).
It is said (Mil..350) that when the
Buddha preached at Garahadinna's house, eighty-four thousand beings realised the
Truth.

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