The
Swat Valley
in northern Pakistan
is definitely not the sort of place you would want to be visiting nowadays. Malala
Yousafzai, the girl who was shot in the head by the Taliban in 2012 for
attending school is from Swat. But it wasn’t always the case. Going back 1500
years ago the valley was known as Udyyana, the Buddha’s Garden. The monks have long vanished, their sonorous
chants silenced forever and their monasteries and stupas now nameless neglected
ruins. But even here the Buddha’s words, though no longer understood by the
locals, can still encountered. If you
take the main Malamjaba road some 5 k north of Manglaur you will eventually see
two huge rocks on the side of the hill, one
known locally as Oba Ghat and the other as Khazana Ghat. There are two
inscriptions on the first of these rocks and one on the second. The first
inscription reads: Sarvva pāpasyākarana, kusalasy opasampada, svacitta vyavadānam,
caetad budanu sasanam, which is of course the Buddha’s famous summery of his
teachings from Dhammapada verse 183.
The
second inscription is on the upper portion of the rock far beyond reach and reads:
Vācānurakst samvrtahk kāyana caiva kusalan na kurvan tāstrāyin karma pathānu isokya
āraghyen mārgam rpippraveditam. This verse can be found at Dhammapada 281.
Moving
on to the second rock one will find a
third inscription which reads: Anityā vava
(sic! for vata) samskārā utpāda vyaya dharmina
hutpadyahinirud (dh)yantetepā (read tesām) vyupasamas sukham.
This
passage can be found in the Mahasudassana Sutta (D.II,1990 and is repeated in
the Mahaparinibbana Sutta where it is recited by Indra. Each
of these inscriptions is in Sanskrit, although in the case of the last one with
rather poor spelling. The first two are in Gupta period Brahmi characters from
about the 2nd or 3rd century CE, and the third was
written in the 6th century CE judging by the characters.
Who
wrote these verses we do not know. Clearly they were literate, they knew the
Dhammapada and the Digha Nikaya and they thought the verses important enough to
make them known, so chances they were monks or perhaps nuns. What would they
think of Swat, one of the loveliest valleys
in the Himalayas, if they came back today?
3 comments:
Thanks for this one Bhante. It goes to show just how long lasting the Dharma is, once The Dharma Wheel has been set in motion.
And, of course, this valley is where Tibetan Buddhists believe Padmasambhava, who established Vajrayana Buddhism in Tibet, was born. What a bizarre "evolution."
Hmm wonderful piece Bhantey, the Dharma has spread from these ancient and rural places to all over Asia, predominantly towards countries like Japan, Burma, Sri Lanka, Thailands among the others. The Buddha Statues and the Buddha Images from these countries have flourished from the spread of dharma.
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