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Pindola
A Pacceka Buddha, given in a nominal list. M.iii.69; ApA.i.106.
Pindola Sutta
The Buddha explains to some monks at the Ghositārāma that Pindola Bhāradvāja
had realized truth through having cultivated three controlling abilities:
mindfulness, concentration, and insight. These accomplish the destruction of
birth, old age, and death. S. v.224f.
Pindola Bhāradvāja
The son of the chaplain of King Udena of
Kosambī. He belonged to the
Bhāradvājagotta. He learnt the Vedas and
became a successful teacher, but, finding his work distasteful, he went to
Rājagaha. There he saw the gifts and favours
bestowed on the Buddha's disciples and joined the Order. He was very greedy, and
went about with a large bowl made of dried gourd, which he kept under his bed at
night and which made a scraping sound when touched; but the Buddha refused to
allow him a bag for it until it should be worn down by constant contact. Later
he followed the Buddha's advice, conquered his intemperance in diet, and became
an arahant. He then announced before the Buddha his readiness to answer the
questions of any doubting monks, thus uttering his "lion's roar." The Buddha
declared him chief of the "lion roarers." (A.i.23; AA.i.112f.; ThagA.i.245f.;
UdA. 252; SA.iii.26). The Udāna (iv.6) contains the praise uttered by him of the
Buddha, because of his perfected self mastery.
Pindola was in the habit of taking his siesta in Udena's park at Kosambī. (He
had been king in a former birth and had spent many days in that park.) One day
Udena's women, who had come to the park with him, left him asleep and crowded
round Pindola to hear him preach. Udena, noticing their absence, went in search
of them, and, in his anger, ordered a nest of red ants to be put on Pindola's
body. But Pindola vanished and returned to
Sāvatthi, where the Buddha related the Mahānāga Jātaka* and also the
Guhatthaka Sutta (SnA..ii.514f). Later,
(S.iv.110f.; SA.iii.26) we find Udena consulting him at the same spot and
following his advice regarding the control of the senses.
* J. iv.375 ff.; SA.iii.26 says that when the king went to fetch the red
ants from an asoka tree, the ants fell on him and started to sting him. The
women, under pretence of helping him, picked up the ants that fell from him
and replaced them on his body, because they were angry at his rudeness to
Pindola.
In the Vinaya (Vin.ii.110f.; the story is given in greater detail at
DhA.iii.201ff.; see also J. iv.263) we find the Buddha rebuking Pindola for
performing a cheap miracle. The setthi of Rājagaha had placed a sandal wood bowl
on a high pole and challenged any holy person to bring it down. Pindola heard of
this and, at Moggallāna's suggestion, rose in the air by magic power and brought
it down. The Buddha blamed him for using his great gifts for an unworthy end.
The bowl was given to the monks to be ground into sandal paste.
In the time of Padumuttara Buddha,
Pindola had been a lion in Himavā. The Buddha
visited the lion in his cave, who waited on him for seven days, paying him great
honour. Later, the lion died and was reborn in
Hamsavatī, where he heard the Buddha preach and declare one of his disciples
chief of the "lion roarers." Eight kappas ago he was a king named Paduma.
AA.i.111f.; Ap.i.50f.; ThagA.i.244f.; the last seems to identify him with
Piyālaphaladāyaka of the Apadāna. (ii.444).
The Theragāthā contains two verses
(vs.123 4) of Pindola, uttered by him to a former friend, to convince him that
he was no longer greedy and self-seeking. The
Milindapañha (pp. 398, 404) contains two
other verses not traced elsewhere.
Dhammapāla says (UdA.252; see also
SA.iii.26) that Pindola was so called because he entered the Order from love of
food (pindam ulamāno pariyesamāno pabbajito ti, Pindolo)

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