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The
Sakyans
9.
The Ganges River flows through a broad flat plain bordered on
its northern side by the Mahabharat Hills, beyond which lie the
Himalayas. Just where the plain meets the hills was the homeland
of the Sakyans, the tribe into which the Buddha was born. The
Sakyans belonged to the warrior caste (khattiya) and had
a reputation for hot-headedness and pride. Compared with the other
states, the Sakyans were rather unsophisticated, on the outer
edge, as it were, of the civilisation that was rapidly developing
in northern India at that time. The Sakyans had no cities as such
but rather large towns and villages, the main ones being Kapilavatthu,
the capital, Catuma, Komadussa and Silavati.
10.
Like all peoples of the time, the Sakyans had legends about their
origins, a mixture of fact and fiction, meant to emphasise their
prowess and nobility. They traced their origins back to the mythical
King Okkaka. According to the legend, Okkaka had five queens and
numerous children but only the offspring of the chief queen, Bhatta,
were in line for the throne. These princes were Okkamukha, Karakanda,
Hatthinika and Sinipura. When the chief queen died, Okkaka married
a much younger woman and made her chief queen, passing over his
other wives and creating much jealousy.[ N1
] When the new chief queen delivered a son, Okkaka was
so pleased he offered to give her anything she wished. Immediately
she replied, "I want my son to inherit the throne."
The king couldn't do this because his four other sons were legally
entitled to the throne, but the queen insisted that he keep his
promise. Not being able to back down, he regretfully made his
new son Jantu crown prince and expelled his other four sons. Their
sisters were disgusted with this decision and as a protest they
joined their brothers in exile. The princes and princesses wandered
through the jungle looking for a suitable place to stay. Eventually,
they came to the hermitage of the sage Kapila who welcomed them
and invited them to live nearby, which they did, calling their
small settlement Kapilavatthu in honour of the sage. There were
isolated villages in the area but the young princes were too proud
to marry outside their own tribe and so they made the oldest sister
Piya, mother, and married the other sisters, something for which
the Sakyans were, in later centuries, often teased. Later Piya
married Rama, the king of Benares, and their offspring were the
ancestors of the Koliyans, the Sakyans' relations to the east.
It was the learning of this story and others related to the history
of the tribe that probably formed a part of the young Prince Siddhartha's
education.
11.
The Sakyans had a council (sabha) that was made up of warriors
of the tribe respected for their military prowess or wisdom. The
council met regularly in Kapilavatthu's assembly hall (sala)
to discuss the running of the state [ N2
] The council would have also settled disputes and acted
as a law court. A man who had proven himself in battle, who was
rich in land and cattle, and who was known for his wisdom, tact
and conciliatory skills would be elected as the president of the
council and act as ruler of the Sakyans.
12.
Suddhodana, whose name means 'pure rice', fulfilled all these
requirements and had ruled the Sakyans for many years, as had
probably many members of his family before him. He was the son
of Sihanu and his wife Kaccana, and was one of five brothers,
the others being Dhotodana, Sakkodana, Sukkodana and Amitodana.
The Sakyans practised endogamy, marriage between cousins, and
polygamy, so Suddhodana married two sisters, Maha Maya and Maha
Pajapati Gotami, both of whom were his close cousins. This type
of arrangement was encouraged because the Sakyans, being very
proud, felt it was beneath their dignity to marry non-Sakyans
and also because it kept property within the family.
13.
The Buddha was not attached to his tribe but he did have an affectionate
regard for them. Once, the young Brahmin Ambattha abused the Sakyans
in the presence of the Buddha. When the Buddha asked him why he
was so angry with the Sakyans, he said: "Once, I went to
Kapilavatthu on some business for my teacher, the Brahmin Pakkharasati,
and I came to the Sakyans' assembly hall. At that time, a crowd
of Sakyans was sitting on high seats in their assembly hall, poking
each other with their fingers, laughing and playing about together,
and I am certain that they were making fun of me. No one even
offered me a seat. It is not proper that they do not respect Brahmins."
The Buddha defended the Sakyans saying: "But, Ambattha, even
the quail, that little bird, can say what she likes in her own
nest."
Kapilavatthu is the Sakyans' home. They do not deserve censure
for such a minor slight."[ N3
] Many members of the Buddha's family and other Sakyans
became prominent in the Sangha, and it was likely that in some
ways the Buddha favoured them, although not when it came to spiritual
matters. He made his foster mother, Maha Pajapati Gotami, head
of the Sangha of nuns. Of the nine different attendants that the
Buddha had during his life, one, Ananda, was a cousin and two
others, Nagasamala and Meghiya, were Sakyans.
14.
After nearly seven years of hearing nothing of his son, Suddhodana
came to know that he was staying at Rajagaha, and that he was
claiming to be enlightened. Overjoyed to know that his son was
still alive, Suddhodana sent a messenger to ask him to return
home. The messenger met the Buddha at the Bamboo Grove in Rajagaha
and was so enthralled on hearing the Dharma that there and then
he decided to become a monk, completely forgetting to pass Suddhodana's
message on to the Buddha. More messengers were sent and the same
thing happened. Finally, in exasperation, Suddhodana commissioned
Kaludayi to take the message, but told him that he had permission
to become a monk only on condition that he passed the message
to the Buddha. And so the Buddha came to know of his father's
desire to see him. Shortly after, he set out for Kapilavatthu,
accompanied by a large number of monks. When the party arrived,
they stayed outside the town in a park and in the morning entered
the town to beg for alms. Only then did Suddhodana learn that
the Buddha had arrived and was shocked that his son would sleep
under a tree rather than in the palace, and beg in the streets
rather than feast at the banquet table. "You are degrading
your family's dignity," Suddhodana said, hardly able to contain
his anger. The Buddha replied: "Suddhodana, on becoming enlightened
one becomes a member of the family of the Noble Ones and their
dignity does not depend upon outward trappings but on wisdom and
compassion." The Buddha did much teaching in Kapilavatthu
and other towns, and many Sakyans became monks while others became
enthusiastic followers of the Dharma while remaining in the lay
life. After initial resistance, Suddhodana listened to what his
son had to say and became a Once-Returner.
15.
The Sakyans' clannishness and pride eventually led to their downfall.
Although the Sakyans were free to run their own affairs, they
were controlled to some degree by their powerful neighbour to
the west, Kosala. By the Buddha's time, Kosala had so much say
in Sakyans' affairs that once he actually described his homeland
as being a part of Kosala. "Now the Sakyans are vassals of
the king of Kosala. They offer him service and salute him, stand
for him, do him honour and give him deference."[
N4 ] The Buddha's love of
personal freedom and independence was probably influenced by his
Sakyan upbringing and there is no doubt that he sympathised with
the small tribal republics in their struggles to keep their independence
from the authoritarian monarchies that were emerging at the time.
When he heard that King Ajatasattu was preparing to invade the
Vajjian republic, he asked Ananda: "Have you heard that the
Vajjians hold regular and frequent assemblies, that they meet
in harmony, conduct business in harmony, and adjure in harmony,
that they abide by the decisions they have made in accordance
with tradition, that they honour, respect, revere and salute their
elders and listen to their advice, that they do not abduct others'
wives or daughters and compel them to live with them, that they
honour, respect, revere, and salute the Vajjian shrines at home
and abroad, and do not withdraw the support given to them and
that proper provisions and protection are given to holy men so
that they can dwell there in comfort and more will come in the
future?" Ananda replied that the Vajjians did do all these
things and the Buddha said: "For as long as they do these
things, the Vajjians may be expected to prosper and not decline."[
N5 ]
16.
It seems that King Pasenadi of Kosala wished to extend his influence
amongst the Sakyans, which he chose to do by demanding a Sakyan
noblewoman as a wife for his son. No Sakyans wanted a daughter
of theirs to marry outside the tribe, but at the same time they
could not ignore the wishes of their powerful neighbour. Mahanama,
one of the Buddha's cousins, came up with a solution. He had fathered
a daughter named Vasabhakhattiya by one of his female slaves and
he suggested that this girl be passed off as a Sakyan noblewoman
and given to King Pasenadi's son in marriage. The trick worked;
Vasabhakhattiya was taken to Kosala, married and accepted into
the Kosalan royal family. Eventually she gave birth to a son who
was named Vidudabha and who became crown prince. When Vidudabha
grew up he wished to visit what he believed to be his Sakyan relatives
at Kapilavatthu but his mother persuaded him not to go, knowing
that the Sakyans would treat him with contempt. Eventually he
did go and was bewildered by the cool reception he received. Not
wanting to receive more disrespect he soon left, but just after
leaving Kapilavatthu, one of his attendants had to return to get
a sword which he had forgotten. When he arrived at the assembly
hall he saw a slave woman washing with milk the seat on which
Vidudabha had sat - an accepted way of purifying something that
had become ritually impure. The warrior asked the slave why she
was doing this. "Because the son of a slave has sat there,"
she replied. He asked her what she meant and she told him the
whole story. When Vidudabha heard the truth, that his mother was
not a noblewoman but a common slave, his humiliation and fury
knew no bounds and he vowed that one day he would punish the Sakyans
for their deception. "Let them pour milk over my seat to
purify it. When I am king, I will wash the place with the blood
of their hearts."
17.
Towards the end of the Buddha's life, Vidudabha did become king
and on several occasions he marched with his army towards Kapilavatthu,
although on each occasion the Buddha was able to persuade him
to turn back. Eventually though, Kapilavatthu and several other
Sakyan towns were attacked and Vidudabha had the personal satisfaction
of having many Sakyans massacred. After the campaign, he marched
back to Kosala loaded with loot. On their way back, the army camped
for one evening beside the bank of a river and during the night,
a heavy rainstorm further upstream sent a huge torrent down the
river, drowning most of Vidudabha's army. The Sakyans who survived
the terrible massacre rebuilt a few small towns and tried to continue
their lives, but with their numbers decimated and their independence
lost, they declined and are remembered today only because of one
of their number, the Buddha.
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