Bodh Gaya (Bihar)
Before his death, the Buddha enjoined his followers to make
pilgrimages to four sites [ SEE
LINK ]: Lumbini, where he was born; Uruvela (modern
Bodh Gaya), the site of his enlightenment; Sarnath, the place
of his first sermon; and Kushinara, where he died. Each of these
sites may be visited today, and Bodh Gaya remains the most sacred
of the four.
After the decline of Indian Buddhism in the 12th century, most
Buddhist sites were destroyed or fell into disrepair. In 1891
the Sri Lankan Anagarika Dharmapala founded the Mahabodhi Society,
which set out to reclaim Bodh Gaya for Buddhism; this was achieved
in 1949. Bodh Gaya today is a busy centre of pilgrimage with
monasteries and meditation centres run by Tibetan, Burmese,
Thai and Vietnamese communities. Visitors will see a remote
descendant of the bodhi tree, the magnificent but greatly restored
7th-century Mahabodhi temple, the Buddha's stone seat (vajra-asana)
and a museum of Buddhist and Hindu materials.
Sarnath (Uttar Pradesh)
The Deer Park at Sarnath just north of Varanasi was the
site of the Buddha's first discourse and today contains some
of the most impressive Buddhist monuments in India. The beautiful
park is dominated by the 5th-century Dhamekh stupa: one of two
stupas marking the spot where the Buddha is said to have first
taught the Dharma. The remains of smaller stupas, shrines, five
monasteries and the lower half of an inscribed Ashokan column
are among other monuments to have been excavated since the 19th
century.
Sarnath's
archeological museum contains the Ashokan column's famous lion
capital (emblem of the modern Indian state) and many other important
works in stone, including a sublime figure of the teaching Buddha
from the Gupta period (5th century). Like Bodh Gaya, Sarnath
has a thriving international Buddhist community.
Sanchi
(Madhya Pradesh)
Perhaps the finest and most complete Buddhist monument in India
is Sanchi's great stupa with its four magnificent free
standing gates (toranas). The vast brick stupa
itself dates from around the 3rd century BC, but its carved
gates and railings were probably executed two centuries later
during the Satavahana dynasty. Sanchi was excavated in the early
19th century, and the restoration of the site by British and
French archeologists was initiated in 1912.
Visitors
today, like traditional Buddhist worshippers, can circumambulate
the stupa in a clockwise direction and contemplate the
teeming sculptural forms that fill the gate posts and their
lofty architraves. Jataka narratives, hieratic elephants and
royal lions, Hindu-Buddhist deities and exquisite female nature
spirits crowd every part of the four toranas. The small archeological
museum houses excavated sculptures; other important Sanchi pieces
are in museums in Delhi, London and Los Angeles.
Ajanta (Maharashtra)
The wild, crescent-shaped ravine pierced with more than twenty
Buddhist cave temples makes this one of India's most spectacular
sites. Many genres of early medieval sacred art, from elaborately
carved monastic halls, to sculptures and wall paintings, are
represented here, and prominent among Ajanta's glories are murals
painted in glowing reds, blues and greens. Unique to Indian
Buddhist tradition, the paintings, in high Gupta style, furnish
a vision of Mahayana generosity: a mingling of human, divine
and natural forms in a suspension of warm and life-enhancing
interplay.
Most
sublime in grace, compassion and serenity is the incomparable
figure of Padmapani, the lotus carrying aspect of the bodhisattva
Avalokiteshvara (cave 1). Scenes from Jataka narratives
adorn the walls of several other monasteries in the complex.
Kapilavastu and Lumbini
Siddhartha Gautama, the future Buddha, was born at Lumbini near
the Shakyan capital of Kapilavastu in the southern region of
Nepal known as the terai. The 5th-century Chinese pilgrim
Fa-hsien described Kapilavastu as a "great scene of empty
desolation", populated by a few monks, a score or two of
families and dangerous animals such as lions and white elephants.
Fa-hsien none the less visited well-known sites, including the
Shakyan palace, the place where the child bodhisattva's identifying
marks were discovered, and, east of the city, the garden of
Lumbini where the future Buddha's mother bathed and gave birth.
Mounds, stupas and other ruins testified to previous Buddhist
institutional prosperity. Buddhist tradition tells that the
emperor Ashoka visited Nepal in the 3rd century BC and erected
a stupa and an inscribed column at Lumbini. Recent excavations
have uncovered evidence of stupas, monastic dwellings
and the well-preserved structure of the bathing-pool. The Ashokan
column -rediscovered in 1896 but snapped in half by a lightning
bolt - may also be seen at Lumbini. Theravada and Tibetan monasteries
have been built in the past two decades near Lumbini, re-establishing
the site as an important, although geographically remote, devotional
centre.
Svayambhunath and Bodhnath (Kathmandu)
To commemorate his missionary visit, the emperor Ashoka is said
to have built innumerable stupas in Nepal. Two surviving
examples, much restored, may derive from the Ashokan period.
These are the remarkable Svayambhunath and Bodhnath stupas
in Kathmandu. Both stupas share unique Nepalese architectural
features. Surmounting the conventional dome is a "steeple"
raised on thirteen diminishing tiers to symbolize the thirteen
Buddhist heavens. Yet more striking is the design of the square
base (harmika) from which the tiers rise. The harmika
is gilded, and a face gazes with immense eyes of inlaid metal
and ivory from each side. One explanation for this unique Nepalese
iconography is that the eyes suggest a solar cult expressed
on some Hindu temples by "sun-faces". A second idea
is that the temple represents the "Primal man" (mahapurusha)
of early Hinduism. Buddhist theory would suggest that the eyes
are a sign of the "all-seeing" Buddha. Visitors are
certainly struck by the way in which the eyes follow them as
they move round the stupa precincts.
Anuradhapura (north-central
Sri Lanka)
Today's Anuradhapura is a huge park containing the ruins of
the Great Monastery (Mahavihara) established 250
B.C.E. on the outskirts of the ancient Singhalese capital.
Anuradhapura is connected by an eight-mile (1 3km) pilgrim's
path to Mihintale where the missionary Mahinda first preached
and where an excavated stupa can be visited. Disinterred earlier
this century from the jungle growth of more than a millennium,
Anuradhapura's stupas, monastic ruins, sculptures, reservoirs,
and a descendant of the original bodhi tree, provide an intense
experience of ancient Buddhism. Dominating the site are two
vast stupas with characteristic Singhalese "bubble
domes". The Thuparama, although much restored, is probably
the oldest monument in either India or Sri Lanka. The Ruwanweli
Dagoba, is also heavily restored, and is clad in the undecorated
white plaster which differentiates Singhalese stupa architecture
from the more ornate Indian style.
At
Anuradhapura a wonderful convergence of the modern and the archaic
may be experienced. On May and June full moon days, the festivals
of Wesak and Poson celebrate, respectively, the Buddha's birth,
enlightenment and parinirvana, and the introduction of Buddhism
to Sri Lanka. At such festivals, Anuradhapura is enlivened by
hundreds of thousands of devotees. For the modern day visitor,
one of the great pleasures is touring Anuradhapura on a rented
bicycle.
Polonnaruwa (northeastern Sri
Lanka)
While Anuradhapura
evokes the austerity of early Singhalese Buddhism, the later
site of Polonnaruwa, wonderfully situated on Lake Topawewa,
offers an unparalleled view of medieval Buddhist sculpture and
architecture. There the visitor may see the immense recumbent
parinirvana Buddha and the 25-foot (7.5m) rock-cut figure of
Ananda standing by the head of the Master. There too is the
colossal meditating Buddha, and the famous sculptured portrait
of the sage-king Parakramabahu overlooking the lake and in contemplation
of a manuscript.
Equally
dazzling are the early 13th-century monuments situated on the
"Great Quadrangle". These include the classically
proportioned pyramidal brick stupa (Sat Mahal Pasada),
the carved stonework of the "temple of the tooth relic"
(not to be confused with the Temple of the Tooth in Kandy) and
the waving lotus-stem-shaped columns of the Nissanka Lata Mandapaya.
Just
as Anuradhapura was abandoned by the 8th century, Polonnaruwa
was finally conquered by the Tamils in the 15th century. The
art of Polonnaruwa represents the final flowering of Singhalese
Buddhist art, still matchlessly preserved in land-locked jungle.
Bangkok and Ayutthaya
Much
important early and medieval Thai architecture was ruined in
southeast Asian wars, but impressive 19th and 20th century Buddhist
temples abound in Thailand, and in many parts of the country
there are lovely archeological sites. In Bangkok, the Wat Phra
Kaeo temple, built by King Rama 1 (1782-1809) in the precincts
of his Grand Palace, is a spectacular monument to the Theravada
Buddhist revival initiated in the 19th century. This temple
is a centre of Thailand's religious life, symbolizing the close
bond between the sangha
(religious community) and state, and houses the "Emerald
Buddha", a figurine of national importance to modern Thai
people.
The
southern Thai Ayutthaya period of the 14th to 18th centuries
brought an influx of new architectural ideas from Sri Lanka.
Perhaps the most beautifully preserved of Thailand's medieval
monuments are at the Ayutthaya historical park, north of Bangkok.
Of special interest are stupas with characteristic Thai
"lotus bud" domes, and temple towers showing the influence
both of medieval Khmer design and of "honeycombed"
south Indian shikhara towers.
Angkor Wat
After a horrifying period of war, the Hindu temple complex of
Angkor Wat and the Buddhist Angkor Thom are again accessible.
Angkor Thom was the creation of the Khmer "god-king"
Jayavarman VII (1181-1219), who converted to Mahayana following
the destruction of Angkor by the Cham (Vietnamese) during his
father's reign. Jayavarman's Buddhism seems to have been a revised
version of the Brahmanical religion which previous Khmer kings
had exploited to deify their own persons. The central deity
in Jayavarman's religion was Lokeshvara, "Lord of the Worlds",
and rebuilding Angkor Thom on a stupendously grand scale, the
king created a "Buddhist" city as a monument to Lokeshvara,
who was an aspect of Jayavarman's divine self. This convergence
of king and deity is still visible in the portrait masks of
Jayavarman carved on the four faces of the Bayon temple towers
of Angkor Thorn.
Like
Borobudur and many other southeast Asian temples, Angkor Thom
was conceived as a model of the Buddhist universe. At the centre
of an immense complex of shrines is the great Bayon temple with
its cluster of five towers, the tallest of which represents
Mount Meru, the cosmic axis. The whole of Angkor was moated
with 100 yards (90m) of water and criss-crossed by a brilliantly
engineered system of canals: the water motif symbolizing the
cosmic ocean and the world's four sacred rivers and - not least
- acting as an irrigation system. Much of the power of Angkor
Thom emanates from a profusion of hybridized
Hindu-Buddhist iconography, carved in a wild, sweet style on
the gates and terraces of Jayavarman's temple-mountain. The
god-king's portrait gazing across his shattered domain adds
sinister pathos.
Borobudur
The Borobudur Temple complex is one of the greatest monuments
in the world. It is of uncertain age, but thought to have been
built between the end of the seventh and beginning of the eighth
century A.D. For about a century and a half it was the spiritual
centre of Buddhism in Java, then it was lost until its rediscovery
in the eighteenth century. The structure, composed of 55,000
square metres of lava-rock is erected on a hill in the form
of a stepped-pyramid of six rectangular storeys, three circular
terraces and a central stupa forming the summit. The whole structure
is in the form of a lotus, the sacred flower of Buddha.
Besides
being the highest symbol of Buddhism, the Borobudur stupa is
also a replica of the universe. It symbolises the micro-cosmos,
which is divided into three levels, in which man's world of
desire is influenced by negative impulses; the middle level,
the world in which man has control of his negative impulses
and uses his positive impulses; the highest level, in which
the world of man is no longer bounded by physical and worldly
desire. It is ancient devotional practice to circumambulate
around the galleries and terraces always turning to the left
and keeping the edifice to the right while either chanting or
meditating. In total, Borobudur represents the ten levels of
a Bodhisattva's life which a person must develop to become a
Buddha or an awakened one.
Lhasa
Visitors may currently enter Tibet from mainland China, Hong
Kong or Nepal, if they have a visa for China; the Chinese authorities
maintain "closed" areas, but most of the country is
accessible. In the holy city of Lhasa, the Dalai Lama's Potala
Palace, like many Tibetan monasteries, is now a state museum.
Unlike countless shrines and monasteries destroyed during the
Cultural Revolution, both the structure and contents of
the Potala are preserved. Symbol of the protection of Avalokiteshvara
and of the greater Tibetan Buddhist community, the Potala still
towers imposingly over Lhasa, and contains countless treasures
from the 17th century, including murals, thankas, mandalas,
altars, and the famous statue in sandalwood of Padmapani.
The
Jokhang monastery, southeast of the Potala, is the most sacred
of all Tibetan pilgrimage sites. Somehow surviving the barbarities
of the Cultural Revolution, the Jokhang retains its famous gilded
roof, and the "Four Deities Radiating Light" may still
be seen in their shrine. The Jokhang remains a living monastery;
but it may also be visited, like other sacred sites, as a "museum".
Yung-kang (Shansi) and Lung-men (Honan)
caves
Yung-kang is one of the most remarkable Buddhist sites for the
massive simplicity of its immense rock-carved Buddhas and the
delicate ornamentation of its narrative reliefs. Work on the
cave shrines was started by the emperor of the first Wei dynasty
in AD 460, in response to persecution of Buddhists over the
previous twenty years. In the next decades, in the limestone
river cliffs at Lung-men (5th-6th centuries), Wei dynasty monumental
carving achieved a spiritual and aesthetic perfection never
repeated. The giant Buddhas at Yung-kang recall Indian prototypes;
at Lung-men early Buddhist and Mahayana motifs converge in a
graceful, serene and authentically Chinese idiom.
Nara and Kyoto
Nara, the Japanese imperial capital in the 8th century, remains
one of the great centres of East Asian Buddhist history. In
and around Nara's historic park are pagodas, early Buddhist
and Shinto shrines, formal gardens, the important Nara National
Museum, and not least the Todai-ji temple with its immense bronze
Buddha statue.
The
beauty of old Kyoto lies in its numerous Zen temples dating
from the Hieian period, and the famous gardens - "hill
gardens" featuring water, and dry gardens featuring rock
and sand - of temples such as Tenryuji and Ryoan-ji. Zen is
a living tradition and Western students are accepted at some
temples in Kyoto as well as in many of the more remote monasteries
in the north of the island.
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