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Generally called Alindakavāsī Mahāphussadeva. For twenty
one years he practised meditation on his way up and down to the village for alms
(gatapaccāgatikavatta). People working in the fields, seeing him constantly stop
and walk back again, would wonder why he did so. But he did not heed their
curiosity, and after twenty years he became an arahant. That night the deity at
the end of his walk illuminated it with the radiance of her fingers, and Sakka,
Brahmā, and other gods came to do him honour. His colleague, Vanavāsī Mahātissa,
asked him the next day the reason for all the light, but he evaded the question
(SA.iii.154f.; Vibhā.352; MA.i.208f; SnA.i.55f).
It is said (MA.i.524) that during the period of his
meditations, he wept every pavārana day to see that he was yet a "learner."

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