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A Paribbājaka who joined the Order and soon after left it.
He then went about proclaiming in Rājagaha that he knew the Dhamma and Vinaya of
the Sākyaputta monks, and that was why he had left their Order. The Buddha,
being told of this, visited the Paribbājakārāma, on the banks of the Sappinikā,
and challenged Sarabha to repeat his statement. Three times the challenge was
uttered, but Sarabha sat silent. The Buddha then declared to the Paribbājakas
that no one could say that his claim to Enlightenment was unjustified, or that
his dhamma, if practised, did not lead to the destruction of Ill. After the
Buddha's departure, the Paribbājakas taunted and abused Sarabha (A.i.185ff).
It is said (AA.i.412 f ) that Sarabha joined the Order at
the request of the Paribbājakas. They had failed to find any fault with the
Buddha's life, and thought that his power was due to an "āvattanīmāyā," which he
and his disciples practised once a fortnight behind closed doors. Sarabha agreed
to find it out and learn it. He therefore went to Gijjhakūta, where he showed
great humility to all the resident monks. An Elder, taking pity on him, ordained
him. In due course he learned the pātimokkha, which, he realized, was what the
Paribbājakas took to be the Buddha's "māyā." Having learned it, he went back to
the Paribbājakas, taught it to them, and with them went about in the city
boasting that he knew the Buddha's teaching and had found it worthless.

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