The Buddha Purnima festival is a triple whammy
celebrating the Buddha's birth, enlightenment and death all in
one. Buddhist sacred sites and temples all over India are
inundated with pilgrims. The crowds tend to be made up of more
than just Indians - devotees from all over the world journey
to their favourite place for this event...
This is the most sacred day in the
Buddhist calendar and is celebrated with great enthusiasm.
Although Buddhists regard every full moon as sacred, the moon
of the month of Vaisakh / Baisakh (April - May) has special
significance because it was on this day that the Buddha was
born, attained enlightenment and Nirvana. This three-fold
coincidence, gives Buddha Purnima its unique significance.
| Month: |
May |
| Celebrated on: |
Full Moon of the Baisakh / Vaisakh month |
| Reason of Celebration: |
To commemorate birth, attainment of knowledge, and the
death of Lord Buddha |
| Significance: |
Thrice-blessed day for the Buddhists |
| Special Events: |
Fair at Lumbini, the birth place of Lord Buddha |
Buddhist Legend Buddhas wife
Yashodhara, his first disciple Ananda, his charioteer Channa,
and the horse Kantaka on which he renounced his kingdom to
'find some answers to life', were all born on Buddha Purnima.
CELEBRATION
Buddhist pilgrims from all over the world flock to Bodh Gaya
to attend the Buddha Poornima celebrations. The day is marked
with prayer meets, sermons on the life of Gautam Buddha,
religious discourses, continuous recitation of Buddhist
scriptures, group meditation, processions, worship of the
statue of Buddha and symposia. The Mahabodhi Temple wears a
festive look and is decorated with colourful flags and
flowers. On this holy day, the Buddhists bathe and wear only
white clothes. They gather in their viharas for worship and
give alms to monks. Many spend their entire day at the vihara
listening to discourses on the life and teachings of the
Buddha or invite monks to their homes.
On Buddha Purnima, Buddhists eat kheer, rice cooked in milk
and sugar, which they share with the poor. They set up stalls
in public places to offer others clean drinking water and also
show kindness to animals.
RITUALS
Birds are freed from cages. Fruits and clothes are
distributed among the sick and abstinence is observed on
eating meat.
The Bodhi tree is revered. Its branches are decorated
with garlands and coloured flags. Rows of lamps are lit around
the tree, and milk and scented waters are sprinkled on its
roots.
The rituals include prayers, sermons on the life of
Gautam Buddha, continuous recitation of Buddhist scriptures,
meditation by monks and devotees, and worship of the statue of
Buddha.
Offerings of incense, flowers, candles and fruit are
made by believers, who prostrate several times in front of the
idol.
On this holy day, the Buddhists bathe and wear only
white clothes. They gather in their viharas for worship and
give alms to monks.
Buddhists also reaffirm their faith in the five
principles called PANCHSHEEL.
These five principles are:
Not to take life
Not to steal
Not to lie
Not to consume liquor or other intoxicants
Not to commit adultery
The Buddha trail related to his life - It is believed that
Queen Mayadevi, the mother of Lord Buddha, gave him birth
while emerging from a bath at the Pushkarni pool at the
Lumbini garden and the place has been venerated thereafter.
Legend has it that the Buddha was born fully awakened on a
night of full moon in Lumbini. He could speak and told his
mother he had come to free all mankind from suffering. He
could stand, and he walked a short distance in each of the
four directions. The miraculous boy was named Siddhartha,
which means 'he who has attained his goals'.
ENLIGHTENMENT
In the town of Bodh Gaya, Siddhartha decided that he would
sit under a certain fig tree as long as it would take for the
answers to the problem of 'sufferings in human life'. He sat
there for many days, first in deep concentration to clear his
mind of all distractions, then in mindfulness meditation,
opening himself up to the truth. He began to recall all his
previous lives. He could see everything that was going on in
the entire universe. On the full moon of May, with the rising
of the morning star, Siddhartha finally understood the answer
to the question of suffering and became the Buddha, which
means 'he who is awake'.
THE PEEPAL / BODHI TREE
The present Bodhi tree is probably the fifth succession of
the original tree under which the Buddha had attained
enlightenment. The Mahabodhi Temple stands east to the Bodhi
Tree. Its architectural effect is superb. Its basement is 48
square feet and it rises in the form of a slender pyramid,
till it reaches its neck, which is cylindrical in shape. The
total height of the temple is 170 feet and on the top of the
temple are Chatra which symbolize sovereignty of religion.
Four towers on its four corners rise gracefully giving the
holy structure a poise and balance. This sacred edifice is
like a grand banner unfurled by time to proclaim to the world
the pious efforts of Buddha to solve the knots of human
miseries to ascend above worldly problems and to attain
transcendental peace through wisdom, good conduct and
disciplined life. Inside the temple is the main sanctum, on an
altar, is a colossal image of Buddha in a sitting posture
touching the earth by his right hand. It is the posture Buddha
accomplished the supreme enlightenment. The statue is of black
stone but it has been guided by the devotees. The entire
courtyard of the temple is situated with a large number of
varieties of stupas - votive, decorative, memorative. These
stupas are of all sizes, built during the past 2500 years ago.
Most of them are extremely elegant in structural beauty.
Five years after the Enlightenment in Bodh Gaya, Lord Buddha
came to Vaishali, the capital of one of the first republican
states in the world. He delivered his first sermon at Sarnath
near Varanasi.
NIRVANA
When the Buddha was 80 years old, he told his friend and
cousin Ananda that he would be leaving them soon. And so it
came to be that on the night of full moon, in Kushinagara, he
ate some spoiled food and fell ill. He went into deep
meditation under a grove of sala trees and died. His last
words were...
"Impermanent are all created things; Strive on with
awareness."
Please note that Buddha trail can be worked on two counts,
one on sites specific to his life and times and the other
related to Buddhist culture elsewhere. The latter would
include Ladakh where Buddha Purnima happens to be a visual
spectacle, Sikkim monasteries, Buddhist caves of Udaygiri and
Khandagiri in Orissa and Nagarjunakonda in Andhra Pradesh
apart from the ones already mentioned above.
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