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Setaketu Jātaka (No. 377)
The Bodhisatta was once a far famed teacher, with five
hundred pupils, chief among whom was Setaketu, an Udicca-brahmin, who prided
himself on his high caste. One day, meeting a Candāla, Setaketu told him to pass
on his leeward side, but the Candāla refused, challenging Setaketu to answer a
question. Setaketu accepted the challenge, and he was asked what were the four
"quarters." Setaketu gave the usual answer, whereupon the Candāla forced him
between his feet. When this was reported to the teacher, he told Setaketu that
the four quarters were parents, teachers, generous householders, and deliverance
from misery. Later, Setaketu left for Takkasilā, and, after finishing his
studies there, went to Benares with five hundred ascetics. There they practised
false penances and won the king's approval; the king's chaplain, however, warned
him against them, saying that they possessed only false knowledge and had no
morality. The chaplain persuaded Setaketu and his followers to become laymen and
enter the king's service.
The story was related in the same circumstances as the
Uddāla Jātaka (q.v.). Setaketu is identified with the false priest, the Candāla
with Sāriputta, and the king's chaplain with the Bodhisatta. J. iii.232-7.

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