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He belonged to a brahmin family and studied under
Bāvarī
as an ascetic. He was one of the sixteen pupils sent by Bāvarī to the Buddha.
When Mogharāja had asked his question of the Buddha and had received the answer,
he attained arahantship. He then attained distinction by wearing rough cloth
which had been thrown away by caravaners, tailors, and dyers, and the Buddha
declared him foremost among wearers of rough clothing (See also A.i.25). Later,
through want of care and former kamma, pimples and the like broke out over his
body. Judging that his lodging was infected, he spread a couch of straw in the
Magadha field and lived there even during the winter. When the Buddha asked him
how he fared in the cold, he replied that he was extremely happy (Thag.207f).
In the time of Padumuttara Buddha, Mogharāja first
resolved to win the eminence which was his. In the time of Atthadassī Buddha he
was a brahmin teacher, and one day, while teaching his students, he saw the
Buddha, and having worshipped him with great solemnity, he uttered six verses in
his praise and offered him a gift of honey. Later, after sojourn in the deva
worlds, he became a minister of King Katthavāhana, and was sent by him, with one
thousand others, to visit Kassapa Buddha. He heard the Buddha preach, entered
the order, and lived the life of a monk for twenty thousand years
(ThagA.ii.181ff.; Sn. vs. 1006). The Samyutta Nikāya contains a stanza spoken by
Mogharāja and the Buddha's answer thereto (S.i.23).
Buddhaghosa explains (SA.i.49f) that Mogharāja was present
during the discussion of Pasuraparibbājaka (q.v.) with Sāriputta. At the end of
Sāriputta's explanation, Mogharāja wished to settle the matter and uttered this
stanza.
Mogharāja is given as an example of one who attained
arahantship by the development of investigation (vimāmsam dhuram katvā)
(SA.iii.201).
The Apadāna contains two sets of verses in reference to
Mogharāja. They seem to be parts of the same Apadāna which have become
separated. The first set (Ap.i.87f ) gives an account of the meeting of
Mogharāja with Atthadassī Buddha (see above) and includes the verses uttered by
Mogharāja in praise of the Buddha. The second set (Ap.ii.486f) contains an
account of his meeting with Padumuttara Buddha and the resolves he made before
him. It further mentions that, for one thousand years, in a later birth,
Mogharāja suffered in hell, and that for five hundred births he suffered from
skin diseases. This was because he had lighted a fire in the Buddha's cloister
and had made the floor black. In his last birth, too, he suffered from a
kuttharoga and could not sleep at night, hence his name (mogharajjasukham yasmā
Mogharājā tato aham). These verses also include the Mogharājamānava pucchā.
In the Milinda-Pańha (p. 412) appears a stanza attributed
to Mogharāja, but not found in the stanzas mentioned in connection with him
either in the Sutta Nipāta or in the Theragāthā. See also
Mogharā-jamānava-pucchā.

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