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31 Soc. Change 1 (2001)

handle is hein.journals/sclcnge31 and id is 1 raw text is: 



1-2     Social Change : March-June 2001 : Vol. 31 Nos. 1&2


The   unconventional wisdom of the tree god



Ranjit  Hoskote*



THE   JATAKA STORIES, IN WHICH THE BUDDHA RECOUNTS
HIS  PREVIOUS LIVES to his disciples,   have long passed into India's
folklore. In these tales, the Buddha appears as the Bodhisattva, the
Buddha-on-the-way,  who  exercises his energies in the service of others,
so advancing  along the path of perfection.
While  the Bodhisattva's journey towards enlightenment is the central
theme of the Jataka narratives, they also enshrine the central values of
the Buddha's teaching: compassion, selfless joy, the interdependence of
all beings.
In the retelling of the tale of the sal tree which follows, the Bodhisattva
takes the form of a tree god who holds a dialogue with Brahmadatta,
king of Kashi. In the course of this dialogue, Brahmadatta is offered a
salutary insight into virtue. He learns that, contrary to conventional
wisdom, the political conduct of a ruler is not entirely divorced from the
ethical conduct expected of a private individual.
The  Jatakas  disturb our complacency  in subtle ways. One  of  the
Bodhisattva's lessons seems to be that there is a realism of compassion
which is more significant, and more effective in the long run, than the
realism of expediency. Where expediency leads us to mutually assured
destruction by turning all against all, compassion ensures that everyone
can flourish without damaging  anyone else.
One  afternoon, as they sat in the grove of Jetavana, the Buddha told his
disciples the story of the sal tree. I
Long  ago, when  Brahmadatta  was king of  Kashi, he determined  to
build a great new palace for himself. The rulers of the neighbouring
kingdoms  have palaces that are supported by many beams, he reasoned
with the more  cautious side of his personality. But I shall build a
palace whose   roof is miraculously supported by a single column, and
live on in legend.
*  A poet, art critic and cultural commentator, Fellow of International Writing Program  at the
   University of Iowa, USA (1995), Awardee of the Sanskriti Prize for Literature (1996),
   Biographer of Pilgrim. Exile, Sorcerer: The Painterly Evolution of lehangir Sabavala (1998).
   1, Sea View, 14/A Road, Khar, Mumbai-400 052.

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