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Sarabhanga Jātaka (No. 522)
The Bodhisatta was once born as the son of the purohita of
the king of Benares. He was called Jotipāla because, on the day of his birth,
there was a blaze of all kinds of arms for a distance of twelve leagues round
Benares. This showed that he would be the chief archer of all India.
After having been educated in Takkasilā, he returned to
Benares and entered the king's service, receiving one thousand a day. When the
king's attendants grumbled at this, the king ordered Jotipāla to give an
exhibition of his skill. This he did, in the presence of sixty thousand archers.
With the bow and arrow he performed twelve unrivalled acts of skill and cleft
seven hard substances. Then he drove an arrow through a furlong of water and two
furlongs of earth and pierced a hair at a distance of half a furlong. The sun
set at the conclusion of this exhibition, and the king promised to appoint him
commander in chief the next day. But during the night, Jotipāla felt a revulsion
for the household life, and, departing unannounced, went into the Kapittha vana
on the Godhāvarī and there became an ascetic. On Sakka's orders, Vissakamma
built a hermitage for him, in which he lived, developing great iddhi powers.
When his parents and the king with his retinue visited him, he converted them to
the ascetic life, and his followers soon numbered many thousands.
He had seven pupils Sālissara, Mendissara,
Pabbata, Kāladevala, Kisavaccha, Anusissa and Nārada. When Kapitthavana became
too crowded, Jotipāla, now known as Sarabhanga, sent his pupils away to
different parts of the country: Sālissara to Lambacūlaka, Mendissara to Sātodikā,
Pabbata to Añjana Mountain, Kāladevala to Ghanasela, Kisavaccha to Kumbhavatī
and Nārada to Arañjara, while Anusissa remained with him. When Kisavaccha,
through the folly of a courtesan, was ill treated by King Dandakī of Kumbhavatī
and his army, Sarabhanga heard from the king's commander in chief of this
outrage and sent two of his pupils to bring Kisavaccha on a palanquin to the
hermitage. There he died, and when his funeral was celebrated, for the space of
half a league round his pyre there fell a shower of celestial flowers.
Because of the outrage committed on Kisavaccha, sixty
leagues of Dandakī's kingdom were destroyed together with the king. When the
news of this spread abroad, three kings Kalinga, Atthaka and
Bhimaratha recalling stories of other similar punishments that had
followed insults to holy men, went to visit Sarabhanga in order to get at the
truth of the matter. They met on the banks of the Godhāvarī, and there they were
joined by Sakka. Sarabhanga sent Anusissa to greet them and offer them
hospitality, and, when they had rested, gave them permission to put their
questions. Sarabhanga explained to them how Dandaka, Nālikira, Ajjuna and Kalābu,
were all born in hell owing to their ill-treatment of holy men, and went to
expound to them the moral law. Even as he spoke the three kings were filled with
the desire for renunciation, and at the end of Sarabhanga's discourse they
became ascetics, under him.
The story was told in reference to the death of Moggallāna
(q.v.). It is said that after Moggallāna had been attacked by brigands and left
by them for dead, he recovered consciousness, and, flying to the Buddha,
obtained his consent to die. The six deva worlds were filled with great
commotion, and, after his death, the devas brought offerings of flowers and
incense to his pyre, which was made of sandalwood and ninety nine precious
things. When the body was placed on the pyre flowers rained down for the space
of one league round and for seven days there was a great festival. The Buddha
had the relics collected and deposited in a shrine in Veluvana. The Buddha
identified Moggallāna, with Kisavaccha and related this Jātaka. Of the others,
Sālissara was Sāriputta, Mendissara Kassapa, Pabbata Anuruddha, Devala
Kaccāyana, and Anusissa Ananda. J. v.125 51.

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