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- $Unique_ID{how00591}
- $Pretitle{}
- $Title{Civilizations Past And Present
- Early India}
- $Subtitle{}
- $Author{Wallbank;Taylor;Bailkey;Jewsbury;Lewis;Hackett}
- $Affiliation{}
- $Subject{india
- indian
- caste
- world
- vedic
- age
- called
- life
- gods
- hinduism
- see
- pictures
- see
- figures
- }
- $Date{1992}
- $Log{See The Ancient East*0059101.scf
- See States And Empires 200AD-West*0059102.scf
- See States And Empires 200AD-East*0059103.scf
- See Ancient India*0059104.scf
- }
- Title: Civilizations Past And Present
- Book: Chapter 4: The Asian Way Of Life
- Author: Wallbank;Taylor;Bailkey;Jewsbury;Lewis;Hackett
- Date: 1992
-
- Early India
-
- Ancient India And China To A.D. 220
-
- [See The Ancient East]
-
- [See States And Empires 200AD-West]
-
- [See States And Empires 200AD-East]
-
- Introduction
-
- This chapter will trace the genesis and development of the two oldest
- continuous civilizations - the Indian and the Chinese - in order to obtain an
- understanding of the Asian way of life and allow comparison with the West. In
- addition, this chapter will examine the early trade and diplomatic exchanges
- between East and West. These exchanges provide us with our first view of
- historical development on a global scale.
-
- A modern Indian scholar has said: "All that India can offer to the world
- proceeds from her philosophy." Indian thinkers have consistently held a
- fundamental belief in the unity of all life, establishing no dividing line
- between the human and the divine. This pervasive belief in the unity of life
- has made possible the assimilation and synthesis of a variety of beliefs and
- customs from both native and foreign cultures. Thus, despite its almost
- continual political disunity, India has achieved and maintained a fundamental
- cultural unity.
-
- While political disunity has characterized most of India's history, China
- has been united for more than 2000 years - the longest-lived political
- institution in world history. While religion had dominated the customs and
- attitudes of India's people, the Chinese have been much more humanistic and
- worldly. "We find in China neither that subordination of the human order to
- the divine order nor that vision of the world as a creation born of ritual and
- maintained by ritual which are part of the mental universe of India." ^1 The
- Chinese attitude toward life had led to a concern for the art of government,
- the keeping of voluminous historical records, and the formulation of
- down-to-earth ethical standards.
-
- [Footnote 1: Jacques Gernet, A History of Chinese Civilization (New York:
- Cambridge University Press, 1982), p. 28]
-
- This chapter traces the important threads of Indian and Chinese history
- to the beginning of the third century A.D., a time when the Pax Romana in the
- West was coming to an end. This was the formative age of both civilizations,
- the period in which the major elements of the Indian and Chinese way of life
- were established.
-
- Early India
-
- About 2500 B.C. a counterpart of the civilizations that had emerged
- earlier along the Tigris-Euphrates and the Nile rivers appeared along the
- Indus River in India. Coinciding with the collapse of this Indus civilization,
- Indo-European invaders - the Aryans - began a conquest that produced numerous
- contending states in northern India by 326 B.C. Long before that date, Aryan
- and native Indian beliefs and customs had undergone a process of assimilation
- and development that produced what is called classical Hinduism - an amalgam
- of religious and philosophical ideas (humankind's relation to the cosmic
- order) and socioeconomic institutions (the caste system in particular). Most
- of the elements that today are characteristic of Indian thought and action are
- the products of this period.
-
- Geography Of India
-
- We can think of India* as a gigantic triangle, bounded on two sides by
- the warm waters of the Indian Ocean and on the third by the mountain wall of
- the Himalayas. The highest mountains in the world, the Himalayas and their
- western extensions cut India off from the rest of Asia, making it an isolated
- subcontinent as large as Europe. Through the Khyber and other mountain passes
- in the northwest have come the armed conquerors, restless tribes, and
- merchants and travelers who did much to shape India's turbulent history.
-
- [Note *: Until the text deals with the creation of the separate states of
- India and Pakistan in 1947, the word India will refer to the entire
- subcontinent.]
-
- In addition to the northern mountain belt, which shields India from cold
- Arctic winds, the Indian subcontinent comprises two other major geographical
- regions, both characterized by India's most important ecological feature, an
- enervating subtropical climate.
-
- In the north is the great plain known as Hindustan, which extends from
- the Arabian Sea to the Bay of Bengal. It forms the watersheds of two great
- river systems, the Indus and the Ganges, which have their sources in the
- Himalayas. South of this great plain rises a high plateau that covers most of
- the southern, or peninsular, part of India and is called the Deccan (the
- "South"). The mountains along the western edge of the Deccan plateau, called
- the Western Ghats ("Steps"), caused the monsoon winds that blow across the
- Arabian Sea to drop their rain on the Malabar coast. Since Roman times, the
- pepper and other spices that grow abundantly on this coast have attracted
- Western traders.
-
- Our focus is presently on western Hindustan, now part of the state of
- Pakistan, where India's earliest civilization arose. This area is made up of
- an alluvial plain watered by the upper Indus and its tributaries (called the
- Punjab, "Land of the Five Rivers"), and the region of the lower Indus (called
- Sind, from sindhu, meaning "river," and the origin of the terms Hindu and
- India).
-
- [See Ancient India]
-
- The Indus Civilization (c. 2500-1500 B.C.)
-
- The rise of civilization in the Indus valley around 2500 B.C. duplicates
- what occurred in Mesopotamia nearly one thousand years earlier. In both areas,
- Neolithic farmers lived in food-producing villages situated on the hilly
- flanks of a large river valley. Under pressure from increased population and
- the need for more land and water, they moved to the more abundant and fertile
- soil of the river valley. Here their successful adaptation to a new
- environment led to the more complex way of life called a civilization. In
- India's case, four or five of the farming villages had grown into large cities
- with as many as 40,000 inhabitants by 2300 B.C. Excavations of two of these
- cities, Mohenjo-Daro in Sind and Harappa in the Punjab, have provided most of
- our knowledge of this civilization.
-
- Although Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro were 400 miles apart, the Indus River
- made possible the maintenance of a uniform administration and economy over the
- large area. The cities were carefully planned, with straight paved streets
- intersecting at right angles and an elaborate drainage system with underground
- channels. A standard system of weights was used throughout the area. The
- spacious two-storied houses of the well-to-do contained bathrooms and were
- constructed with the same type of baked bricks used for roads. A uniform
- script employing some 400 pictographic signs has not yet been deciphered. The
- only known use of the script was on engraved stamp-seals, which were probably
- used to mark property with the name of the owner.
-
- The economy of the Indus civilization, like that of Babylonia and Egypt,
- was based on irrigation farming. Wheat and barley were the chief crops, and
- the state collected these grains as taxes and stored them in huge granaries.
- The importance of agriculture explains the presence of numerous mother-goddess
- figurines; representing the principle of fertility, they exaggerate female
- anatomy. For the first known time in world history, chickens were domesticated
- as a food source, and cotton was grown and used in making textiles. The
- spinning and weaving of cotton continues in modern times to be India's chief
- industry.
-
- Copper and bronze were used for tools and weapons, but the rarity of
- weapons indicates that warfare was uncommon. Trade was sufficiently well
- organized to obtain needed raw materials - copper, tin, silver, gold, and
- timber - from the mountain regions to the west. There is also evidence of
- active trade contacts with Mesopotamia, some 1500 miles to the west, as early
- as 2300 B.C. (the time of Sargon of Akkad).
-
- For centuries the people of the Indus valley pursued a relatively
- unchanging way of life. However, excavations of Mohenjo-Daro show clearly that
- decline had set in about 1700 B.C., when a series of great floods caused by
- earthquakes altered the course of the Indus. Harappa to the north appears to
- have suffered a similar disaster. The invaders who came through the northwest
- passes about 1500 B.C. found little remaining of a once-flourishing
- civilization.
-
- The Aryan Invasion And The Early Vedic Age (c. 1500-1000 B.C.)
-
- The invaders who brought an end to what was left of Indus civilization
- called themselves Aryans, meaning "nobles." They spoke Sanskrit, an
- Indo-European language, and were a part of the great Indo-European migrations
- of the second millennium B.C., whose profound effects on the ancient world we
- have noted in earlier chapters. The Aryans were pastoralists who counted their
- wealth in cattle and whose chief interests were war and cattle rustling. Like
- the Homeric heroes of Greece, no greater shame could befall these warriors
- than to take flight in the face of the enemy. Their horse-drawn chariots,
- which were new to India, made them invincible.
-
- The native population, later called Dravidians, was either conquered by
- the Aryans as they expanded eastward into the Ganges plain, or driven south
- into the Deccan. The Aryans contemptuously referred to these darker-skinned
- but more civilized conquered people as Dasas, "slaves."
-
- We know more about the Aryans than we know about their Indus civilization
- predecessors. Our knowledge comes largely from the four Vedas ("Knowledge"),
- great collections of hymns to the gods and ritual texts composed and handed
- down orally between 1500 and 500 B.C. by the Aryan priests, the Brahmins.
- Hence this thousand-year period is commonly called the Vedic Age.
-
- The earliest and most important of the Vedas, the Rig-Veda ("Royal
- Veda"), the earliest surviving Indo-European work of literature, gives an
- insight into the institutions and ideas of the Early Vedic Age, which ended
- about 1000 B.C. Each tribe was headed by a war leader called rajah, a word
- closely related to the Latin word for king, rex. Like the early kings of
- Sumer, Greece, and Rome, the rajah was not considered divine; nor was he an
- absolute monarch. Two tribal assemblies, one a small council of the great men
- of the tribe and the other a larger gathering of the heads of families,
- approved his accession to office and advised him on important matters.
-
- The earliest hymns in the Rig-Veda mention only two social classes, the
- Kshatriyas (nobility) and the Vaishyas (commoners). But by the end of the
- Early Vedic Age two additional classes were recognized: the Brahmins, or
- priests, who because of their specialized religious knowledge had begun to
- assume the highest social rank; and the Shudras, the non-Aryan conquered
- population of workers and serfs at the bottom of the social scale. From these
- four classes the famous caste system of India was to develop during the Later
- Vedic Age.
-
- The early Aryans had an unsophisticated premoral religion. It involved
- making sacrifices to the deified forces of nature in return for such material
- gains as victory in war, long life, and many offspring. The gods were
- conceived in the image of humans - virile and warlike, fond of charioteering,
- dancing, and gambling (dice, like chess, is an Indian invention). They were
- addicted to an intoxicating drink called soma, which was believed to make them
- immortal. The most popular god of the Rig-Veda was Indra, storm-god and patron
- of warriors, who is described leading the Aryans in destroying the forts of
- the Dasas. Virile and boisterous, Indra personified the heroic virtues of the
- Aryan warrior aristocracy as he drove his chariot across the sky, wielded his
- thunderbolts, ate bulls by the score, and quaffed entire lakes of intoxicating
- soma. Another major Aryan god was Varuna, the sky-god. Viewed as the king of
- the gods, he lived in a great palace in the heavens where one of his
- associates was Mitra, known as Mithras to the Persians and widely worshiped in
- the Roman Empire. Varuna was the guardian of rita, which is the right order of
- things. Rita is both the cosmic law of nature (the regularity of the seasons,
- for example), and the customary tribal law of the Aryans.
-
- The Later Vedic Age (c. 1000-500 B.C.)
-
- Most of our knowledge about the five hundred years that comprise the
- Later Vedic Age is gleaned from two great epics, the Mahabharata and the
- Ramayana, and from the religious compositions of the Brahmin priests. The
- latter comprise three major groups: (1) the three later Vedas, containing many
- hymns along with spells and incantations designed to avoid harm or secure
- blessings to the worshiper, (2) the Brahmanas, which describe and explain the
- priestly ritual of sacrifice and reflect the dominant position achieved by the
- Brahmin class in society; and (3) the more philosophical speculations
- collectively known as the Upanishads.
-
- The kernel of the two Indian epics, which glorify the Kshatriyan (noble
- or warrior) class, was originally secular rather than religious. The core of
- the Mahabharata is a great war between rivals for the throne of an Aryan state
- situated in the upper Ganges plain in the region of the modern Delhi. Many
- passages dwell on the warriors' joy of battle as they fight for glory and
- booty. As in the Greek Iliad's account of the Trojan War, all rulers of Aryan
- India participate in a decisive battle, which rages for eighteen days near the
- beginning of the Later Vedic Age. The epic came to be used in royal
- sacrificial ritual, and a long succession of priestly editors added many long
- passages on religious duties, morals, and statecraft.
-
- One of the most famous additions is the Bhagavad-Gita (The Lord's Song),
- a philosophical dialogue which stresses the performance of duty, or dharma,
- without passion or fear. It is still the most treasured piece in Hindu
- literature. Dharma, whose broad meaning is moral law and is often translated
- as "virtue," had by this time replaced the earlier Vedic term rita which, as
- noted above, originally meant premoral customary and cosmic law.
-
- The other great epic, the Ramayana, has been likened to the Greek
- Odyssey. It recounts the wanderings of the banished prince Rama and his
- faithful wife Sita's long vigil before they are reunited and Rama gains his
- rightful throne. In the course of time priestly editors transformed this
- simple adventure story into a book of devotion. Rama became the ideal man and
- the incarnation of the great god Vishnu, while Sita emerged as the perfect
- woman, devoted and submissive to her husband. Her words were memorized by
- almost every Hindu bride:
-
- Car and steed and gilded palace,
- vain are these to woman's life;
- Dearer is her husband's shadow
- to the loved and loving wife.
-
- The two epics, together with the last three Vedas and the Brahmanas,
- reflect the many changes that occurred in Indian life during the Later Vedic
- Age. By the beginning of this age, the Aryans had mastered iron metallurgy,
- which they may have learned from the Near East. The Aryans had also moved
- eastward from the Punjab, conquering the native population and forming larger
- and frequently warring states in the upper Ganges valley. These were
- territorial rather than tribal states. Although some were oligarchic
- republics, most were ruled by rajahs. Despite the presence of an advisory
- council of nobles and priests, the rajahs' powers were greater than those of
- the tribal leaders of the earlier period. The rajahs now lived in palaces and
- collected taxes - in the form of goods from the villages - in order to sustain
- their courts and armies. A few small cities arose, some as administrative
- centers connected with a palace, and some as commercial centers. Trade
- contacts with Mesopotamia were renewed, and merchants probably brought back
- from the West the use of coinage and the Aramaic alphabet, which was adapted
- to Sanskrit.
-
- Village, Caste, And Family
-
- In the Later Vedic Age, the three pillars of traditional Indian society -
- the autonomous village, caste, and the joint family - were established. India
- has always been primarily agricultural, and its countryside is still a
- patchwork of thousands of villages. The ancient village was made up of joint
- families governed by a headman and a council of elders. Villages enjoyed
- considerable autonomy; the rajah's government hardly interfered at all as long
- as it received its quota of taxes.
-
- The four classes, or castes - Kshatriyas (nobles), Vaishyas (commoners),
- Brahmins (priests), and Shudras (workers or serfs) - have remained constant
- throughout India's history. But during the Later Vedic Age, the Brahmins
- assumed the highest social rank. The four castes also began to subdivide into
- numerous subcastes, each with a special social, occupational, or religious
- character. For example, such new occupational groups as merchants and artisans
- became subcastes of the Vaishyas. Furthermore, another main social division
- was formed, consisting of those whose occupations were the most menial and
- degrading - scavengers, sweepers, tanners (because they handled the carcasses
- of dead animals), and carriers of human and animal waste. These outcasts were
- called Untouchables because their touch was considered defiling to the upper
- castes.
-
- Although the inequalities of the caste system clearly contributed to the
- wealth and influence of the upper castes, the lower caste groups came to
- accept the system. One reason for this was the manner in which a caste
- performed the functions of a guild in maintaining a monopoly for the caste in
- its occupation and in securing other favorable conditions for its members. By
- maintaining discipline in accordance with caste rules, the caste leaders in
- each village also gave Indian society a stability that partially compensated
- for the lack of political stability over a wide area through much of Indian
- history.
-
- The third pillar of Indian society was the joint family, in which the
- wives of all the sons of the patriarch of the family came to live and raise
- the children. When the patriarch died, his authority was transferred to his
- eldest son, but his property was divided equally among all his sons. Women
- could not inherit property. Nor could they participate in sacrifices to the
- gods; their presence at the sacrifice was considered a source of pollution.
-
- The emphasis placed on the interest and security of the group rather than
- on the individual is a common denominator of the three pillars of Indian
- society - the autonomous village, the caste system, and the joint family. Thus
- Indian society has always been concerned with stability rather than with
- progress in the Western sense, and the Indians have had a more passive outlook
- toward life than their Western counterparts.
-
- The Brahmanas And The Upanishads
-
- Radical changes in Indian religion and thought occurred during the Later
- Vedic Age, producing what became one of the world's most complex religious and
- philosophical systems. The first phase of this development is clearly seen in
- the Brahmanas. It began about 1000 B.C. and is often called Brahmanism because
- it was the product of the emergence of the Brahmin priests to a position of
- supreme power and privilege in society. During the Early Vedic Age, sacrifice
- had been only a means of influencing the gods in favor of the offeror; now it
- became the means of compelling the gods to act, provided the correct ritual
- was employed. Since only the priests possessed the technical expertise to
- perform the complex and lengthy rites of sacrifice (some of which lasted for
- months), and since the slightest variation in ritual was thought to turn the
- gods against people, the Brahmins strengthened their position over the nobles
- and rulers of the Kshatriya class.
-
- Equally important, the priests gave the caste system a religious sanction
- by extending the concept of dharma, moral duty, to include the performance of
- caste functions as social duty - behavior suitable to a person's hereditary
- caste.
-
- The more than 250 Upanishads were composed between 800 and 600 B.C. by
- some members of the Brahmin and Kshatriya classes who rejected both the simple
- nature worship of the Rig-Veda and the complicated sacrificial system of the
- Brahmanas. The Upanishadic thinkers speculated on the nature of reality, the
- purpose of life, and immortality. (The Rig-Vedic Aryans, pursuing their heroic
- warrior values, had not been particularly interested in life after death.)
-
- These first Indian gurus wandered in the forests as hermits, where they
- meditated and taught their disciples. One of them summed up their quest as
- follows:
-
- From the unreal lead me to the real!
- From darkness lead me to light!
- From death lead me to immortality!
-
- The following beliefs ultimately became an integral part of Indian
- religion and philosophy:
-
- 1.The fundamental reality, the essence of all things, is not something
- material, as most of the early Greek philosophers at about the same time
- concluded, but spiritual - the World Soul.
-
- 2.Each individual possesses a soul, which is a part of the World Soul.
-
- 3.The material world is an illusion (maya) and the cause of all
- suffering. As long as such earthly goals as fame, power, and wealth are
- sought, the result will be pain and sorrow.
-
- 4.Salvation, or deliverance from maya, can only come through the
- reabsorption of the individual soul into the World Soul.
-
- 5.This release from maya is part of a complicated process of
- reincarnation. The individual soul must go through a long series of
- earthly reincarnations from one body to another.
-
- 6.Intertwined with the doctrine of reincarnation is the immutable
- law called karma (meaning "deed"). This law holds that the
- consequences of one's deeds determine one's future after death. A
- person's status at any particular point is not the result of chance
- but depends on his or her soul's actions in previous existences.
- Together with the doctrine of maya, karma gives a satisfactory
- explanation to the question of why suffering exists, a question that
- has troubled thoughtful people all over the world. The Indian answer is
- that the wicked who prosper will pay later, while the righteous who
- suffer are being punished for acts committed in former existences.
-
- Hindusism: A Religious Synthesis
-
- Upanishadic thought became a part of Hinduism, the developing religion of
- India, when the Brahmin priests incorporated it into their teaching. In doing
- so they gave the caste system additional religious support by linking it to
- karma and the process of reincarnation. In effect, caste became the essential
- machinery for the educative process of the soul as it went through the long
- succession of rebirths from the lowest categories in caste to that of the
- Brahmin, who presumably is near the end of the cycle. The priests made
- individual salvation, now a conspicuous part of Indian religion, dependent on
- the uncomplaining acceptance of one's position at birth. Marriage outside
- one's caste was forbidden.
-
- But because the Upanishadic doctrine of salvation by absorption of the
- individual soul into the World Soul was too intellectual and remote for the
- average person to grasp fully, devotion to personal redeemer gods emerged.
- This new devotion centered on gods who, as manifestations of Brahman (the
- World Soul), stood in close relationship to their worshippers.
-
- The major Aryan gods gradually faded away, and Hinduism acquired a
- trinity consisting of Brahma the Creator, Vishnu the Preserver, and Shiva the
- Destroyer. Brahma, the personification of the World Soul whose name is the
- masculine form of Brahman, never acquired the popular following achieved by
- Visnu and Shiva, a position they continue to maintain. These two popular
- deities evolved from Vedic and Dravidian origins.
-
- In the old Vedic pantheon of the Aryans, Vishnu was a god associated with
- the sun. He now evolved into the friend and comforter, the savior who works
- continuously for the welfare of humanity. "No devotee of mine is lost," is
- Vishnu's promise. His followers believe that he has appeared in ten major
- "descents" in human form to save the world from disaster. Two of Vishnu's
- incarnations are described in great Indian epics. As Krishna in the
- Mahabharata, he is the friend and adviser of princes and the author of The
- Lord's Song (Bhagavad-Gita). As Rama, the hero of the Ramayana, he saves the
- human race from the oppressions of a great demon before returning to the "City
- of the Gods" and resuming the form of Vishnu.
-
- Shiva, the other great popular god of classical and modern Hinduism,
- evolved from a minor Aryan Vedic god who was the guardian of healing herbs but
- whose arrows also brought disease. Another prototype of Shiva was a pre-Aryan
- fertility god who was worshipped in the cities of the Indus civilization. For
- this reason, Shiva is often associated with phallic symbols. His spouse is the
- pre-Aryan mother goddess who under various forms, from grossly sexual to
- gentle and benevolent, often plays a more important role than her husband.
-
- With such a background, Shiva is a very different character from Vishnu.
- Shiva personifies the cosmic force of change that destroys in order to build
- anew. He exemplifies another major characteristic of Hinduism, the
- reconciliation of extremes - violence and passivity, for example, and
- eroticism and asceticism. Some representations portray Shiva in terrifying
- guise, garlanded with skulls; others show him as the Lord of Dancers, whose
- activities are the source of all movement within the cosmos.
-
- Most Hindus are devotees of either Vishnu or Shiva and their respective
- emanations, wives, and children. However, animals - especially the cow -
- vegetation, water, and even stones are also worshiped as divine. In time
- literally thousands of deities, demigods, and lesser spirits came to form the
- Hindu pantheon, the world's largest. Hindus, however, do not think of their
- religion as polytheistic, for all gods and spirits are viewed as
- manifestations of Brahman, the World Soul, which pervades everything.
-
- Hinduism is probably the world's most tolerant religion. It possesses no
- canon, such as the Bible or the Koran; no single personal founder, such as
- Christ or Muhammad; and no precise body of authoritative doctrine. Hindus can
- believe what they like, and they remain Hindus as long as they observe the
- rules of their caste. Depending on one's intellectual and spiritual needs and
- capacities, Hinduism can be a transcendental philosophy, a devotional
- adherence to a savior god such as Vishnu, or simple idolatry. From its
- earliest origins, Hinduism has exhibited an unusual organic quality of growth
- and adaptation. The last major element in the Hindu synthesis was provided by
- Gautama Buddha.
-
- The Middle Way Of Gautama Buddha
-
- By taking over Upanishadic thought, the Brahmins had laid the foundations
- of classical Hinduism, but they continued to place great emphasis upon the
- importance of sacrifice, priestly ritual, and magical spells. This led in the
- sixth century B.C. to the rise of more ascetics and reformers who sought to
- pursue the goals of Upanishadic thought by bypassing the priests and other
- mechanical ceremonialism. To achieve salvation from the cycle of birth and
- death, most of these dissenters lived as hermits, meditating on the true
- nature of human beings as part of the World Soul. They demonstrated by their
- indifference to worldly matters that they had realized their oneness with the
- underlying essence of all things. The most important of these ascetics, who
- soon rejected extreme asceticism and found his own "Middle Way" to salvation,
- was Guatama, who called himself the Buddha ("The Enlightened One").
-
- Gautama (c. 563-483 B.C.) was the son of a leading noble in a small
- oligarchic republic located at the foot of the Himalayas. In his twenty-ninth
- year, according to tradition, Gautama was deeply shocked by the misery,
- disease, and sorrow that he saw as he walked through the streets of his native
- city. He renounced his wealth and position and, forsaking his wife and child,
- determined to seek a meaningful answer to the question of human suffering. For
- six years he lived in a forest, practicing the self-mortification rites of the
- ascetics he found there. Gautama almost died from fasting and self-torture and
- at last concluded that these practices did not lead to wisdom.
-
- One day, while sitting beneath a sacred fig tree meditating on the
- problem of human suffering, Gautama received "enlightenment." The meaning, the
- cause, and the conquest of suffering became clear to him. From this insight,
- he constructed a religious philosophy that has affected the lives of millions
- of people for 2500 years.
-
- Dressed in a simple yellow robe, with begging bowl in hand, he wandered
- through the plain of the Ganges, speaking with everyone regardless of caste
- and attracting disciples. At last, when he was eighty years old and enfeebled,
- he was invited by a poor blacksmith to a meal. According to legend, the food
- was tainted, but Gautama ate it rather than offend his host. Later in the day
- the Buddha had severe pains, and he knew death was near. Calling his disciples
- together, he gave them this parting message: "Be ye lamps unto yourselves. Be
- a refuge to yourselves. Hold fast to the truth as to a lamp. Look not for
- refuge to anyone beside yourselves."
-
- What is "the truth" that the Buddha believed could be discovered by
- individual effort, without the need for priestly assistance? The answer had
- been revealed to him during the Great Enlightenment in the form of the Four
- Noble Truths: (1) existence is suffering; (2) suffering springs from desire
- and craving; (3) the cure for suffering is the extinction of desire; and (4)
- to achieve the absence of desire, there is an Eightfold Path of right conduct,
- which is the Middle Way between worldly pursuits and extreme asceticism. The
- Buddha offered Five Moral Rules of right conduct: do not kill any living
- being; do not take what is not given to you; do not speak falsely; do not
- drink intoxicating drinks; do not be unchaste.
-
- Like so many reform movements in the history of religion, the Buddha's
- teaching aimed at restoring the purity of an existing creed. The Buddha sought
- to strip the Upanishadic teachings of the corruptions that had enveloped them.
- Thus he restored the ethical basis of the doctrines of karma and
- reincarnation, which the priests had made dependent on the performance of
- ritual rather than on moral behavior. He also repudiated the belief that only
- members of the Brahmin caste could attain release from the wheel of birth and
- rebirth, insisting that release was possible for everyone regardless of caste.
- Nor was there any place in his system for the popular gods of Hinduism.
- Indeed, what the Buddha taught was more a philosophy than a religion. Thus,
- Buddhism became a movement separate from Hinduism.
-
- The Buddhists came to form two groups - monks and laity. The Buddha's
- close disciples, who included women as well as men, renounced the world,
- donned yellow robes, and lived for part of the year in the world's first
- monastic communities (many in caves cut out of rock), with staves and begging
- bowls as their only possessions. By means of a strict discipline of mind and
- body, they aspired to achieve "the supreme peace of nirvana" - release from
- the wheel of birth and rebirth. The literal meaning of nirvana is "to
- extinguish," and it refers to the extinguishing of desire, which feeds on
- sensual pleasures and is the cause of suffering. Nirvana is also a state of
- superconsciousness, attained by a type of yoga concentration in which the
- individual personality or ego dissolves and becomes united with the spirit of
- life, which the Buddha taught exists in all creatures.
-
- To the ascetic monks, Buddhism's major purpose is the dissolution of the
- ego and the sense of release and spiritual joy that results. To the ordinary
- Buddhist laity, who continue to live in the world (although they often
- "retreat" to a monastery for short periods), the Buddha's ethical teachings
- serve as a guide to right living.
-
- The Buddha was a reformer who censured the rites and dogmas of the
- Brahmins, broke with the rules of caste, taught that all people are equal, and
- proclaimed a code of ethics whose appeal is universally recognized. Buddhism
- reached its height in India in the third century B.C. Soon thereafter Buddhism
- began to decline, and ultimately it disappeared in its homeland.
-
- One reason for this development was a successful counterreformation of
- Hinduism. For most people accustomed to elaborate ritual and the worship of
- benevolent personal gods, original Buddhism seemed stern and austere, and in
- time the Buddha's simpler followers began to worship him as a god and the
- savior of humanity. Temples were built and statues were erected honoring the
- savior, and nirvana was viewed as a sort of heaven. Then when the Brahmins
- proclaimed the Buddha to be the ninth incarnation of the Hindu god Vishnu,
- Buddhism began to fade as an independent religion in India. (Destroyed
- completely by persecution following the Muslim conquest of India in the eighth
- century A.D., Buddhism revived on a small scale in the mid-twentieth century.)
-
- Buddhism's impact on Hinduism was nevertheless profound, for it served to
- rejuvenate and purify the older religion. More emphasis was henceforth placed
- on ethical conduct as a means of salvation and less on sacrifices, ritual
- prayers, and magic spells.
-
- Another order of monks and lay followers who reject the authority of the
- Brahmin priests was Jainism. Its founder was Mahavira, a younger contemporary
- of the Buddha. Jainism has much in common with Buddhism, but it has never
- attained Buddhism's popularity. It places far more emphasis on asceticism and
- the doctrine of nonviolence (ahimsa) toward any living creature. It is
- probably more through the influence of Jainism than of Buddhism that
- nonviolence became a significant aspect of Hinduism.
-
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