Showing posts with label robe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label robe. Show all posts

Monday, October 28, 2024

Buddhist Lent: Kathina ceremony (10/27)

Golden Buddha from ancient Gandhara, modern Afghanistan (from Saving Mes Aynak)

Golden Buddha polished to brilliance in Burma
The Buddhist holiday season has just begun in the Theravada Buddhist world, as the Lent period comes to a close with a culminating ceremony called the Kathina ("Unshakeable") robe offering. It is a kind of Mardi Gras (Fat Tuesday) after the fast rather than before it.

It is said that this is the most meritorious ceremony lay people participate in, generating a great deal of beneficial karma (punya, kusala kamma).

What happened?

The new facilities can hold ~1,000 people
The Buddhist temple (Mindfulness Meditation Center) was never more crowded. Both lots were full with cars overflowing onto the neighboring suburban streets.

Nearly everyone was dressed in white just like at the time of the Buddha. There were giant tents and chairs set up near the bodhi tree (a descendant of the original tree wandering ascetic Siddhartha sat under to become the Buddha, the "Awakened One"). Snack boxes were being given out, and monks were gathering in the hall.

Two Vietnamese Theravada nuns were filming the abbot, who is said to be over 100 years old. Abbot Ahangama Dhammarama may not be a centenarian yet, but he does hold the record for the longest person (more years in robes) than anyone in America. Although he may have committed defeat offenses as some say, he is still credited with the longest ordination period or years of seniority (more than 80).

The nuns gathered around him to take selfies as the monks assembled in the pews before lining up to go outside and take their seats at long tables under a giant tent. They chanted (having chanted until midnight the night before) blessings (parittas). Then the parade (perihera) began on the boulevard in front of the temple complex. We lined up to give offerings (dana) to the monastic who walked by with bowls and robes and large gift bags.

The monastics were then served delicious foods, both hard and soft, and devotees offered them their fill so they could return to their meditation. But this day marks the end of the intensive retreat period ("Lent"), so it was on to the awarding of the ceremonial "durable robe" for the temple's monastic resident who had best adhered to the Discipline in the preceding three months of the Rains.
Marvels of monumental Chinese Buddha statue
Knowing Our Festivals 005: KATHINA
International Buddhist flag with Dharma wheel
(HARMONICO) 𝗞𝗻𝗼𝘄𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗢𝘂𝗿 𝗙𝗲𝘀𝘁𝗶𝘃𝗮𝗹𝘀: 𝗞𝗔𝗧𝗛𝗜𝗡𝗔. Kathina is a Buddhist festival, which comes at the end of the Rains Retreat (Vassa), the three-month rainy season retreat for Theravada Buddhists.

Let’s watch this episode from the KNOWING OUR FESTIVALS series to understand more about the festival.

This looks at Malaysia, but this holiday festival is celebrated around the world in every country with a Theravada Buddhist population (Thailand, Burma, Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Laos, India, Malaysia, Singapore, America, Germany, England, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Australia, Vietnam...)
Penang Harmony Corporation (HARMONICO) would like to thank the Malaysian Buddhist Meditation Centre, Nandaka Vihara, Bukit Mertajam, and Dr. Li Feng for contributing to the production of this video, Oct. 30, 2021.

Saturday, September 24, 2022

Ananda as a young teacher (Robe Sutra)

Bhikkhu Bodhi (trans.), Cīvara Sutra, "Connected Discourses with Kassapa" (SN 16.11), "The Robe" Discourse; edited by Dhr. Seven, Amber Larson, Wisdom Quarterly

The Robe*
Ven. Ananda was a stream enterer.
(SC 1) On one occasion Venerable Maha Kassapa was living in Rajagaha (Rajgir) in the Bamboo Grove, in the Squirrel's Sanctuary.

On that occasion Ven. Ānanda [who was not yet appointed the Buddha's personal attendant] was wandering on tour in Dakkhiṇagiri together with a large community (saṅgha) of monks (bhikkhus).

On that occasion 30 monks — pupils of Ven. Ānanda — most of them youngsters, had given up the monastic training and had returned to the lower life. (sn.ii.218)

(SC 2) When Ven. Ānanda had wandered on tour in Dakkhiṇagiri as long as he wanted, he came back to Rajagaha, to the Bamboo Grove, the Squirrel Sanctuary.

He approached Ven. Maha Kassapa, bowed, and sat respectfully to one side. Ven. Maha Kassapa said: “Friend Ānanda, for how many reasons did the Blessed One lay down the rule that monks should not take meals among families in groups of more than three?”

(SC 3) “The Blessed One laid down this rule for three reasons, Ven. Kassapa:
  1. for restraining ill-behaved persons and for the comfort of well-behaved monastics,
  2. with the intention, ‘May those of harmful wishes, by forming a faction, not create a schism in the Monastic Saṅgha!’
  3. out of sympathy towards families.
It is for these three reasons, Ven. Kassapa, that the Blessed One laid down this rule.”
(SC 4) “Then why, friend Ānanda, are you wandering about with these young monks who are unguarded in their sense faculties, immoderate in eating, and not devoted to mindfulness [wakefulness, vigilance, bare awareness, presence of mind]?

Painting of Ven. Maha Kassapa with beard and hair, Kizil Caves, carbon dated to 422-529 CE
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“One would think you were wandering about trampling crops. One would think you were wandering about destroying families. Your retinue is breaking apart, friend Ānanda. Your young followers are slipping away. But still this youngster does not know his measure!”

(SC 5) “Grey hairs are growing on my head, Ven. Kassapa. Can’t one avoid being called 'youngster' by Ven. Maha Kassapa?” (sn.ii.219)

(SC 6) “Friend Ānanda, it is just because you wander around with these young monks who are unguarded in their sense faculties…. But still this youngster does not know his measure!”

Rahula, the Buddha, and Ananda (but no Bimba)
(SC 7) The Buddhist nun Ven. Thullananda heard: “Master Maha Kassapa has disparaged Master Ānanda, the Videhan Sage, by calling him 'youngster.'”

Then, being displeased at this, she expressed her displeasure in this way: “How can Master Maha Kassapa, who was formerly a member of another sect, think to disparage Master Ānanda, the Videhan Sage, by calling him 'youngster'?”

(SC 8) Ven. Maha Kassapa overheard the nun Ven. Thullananda making this statement and said to Ven. Ānanda: “Surely, friend Ānanda, the nun Thullananda made that statement rashly, without consideration. For since I shaved off my hair and beard, put on saffron robes, and went forth from the home life into the left-home life, I do not recall ever having acknowledged any other teacher except the Blessed One, the Arhat, the Supremely Awakened One.

(SC 9) “In the past, friend, when I was still a householder, it occurred to me: ‘Household life is confinement, a path of dust, whereas going forth [into the left-home life] is like the open air. It is not easy for one living at home to lead the perfectly complete, perfectly purified supreme life [of a Buddhist monastic], which is like polished conch.

“Let me then shave off my hair and beard, put on saffron robes, and go forth from the household life into the left-home life.’ Some time later (sn.ii.220) I had an outer robe made from patches of cloth; then, acknowledging those who were arhats [fully enlightened ones] in the world as models, I shaved off my hair and beard, put on saffron robes, and went forth from the household life into the left-home life.

(SC 10) “When I had thus gone forth, I was travelling along a road when I saw the Blessed One sitting by the Bahuputta Shrine between Rajagaha and Nalanda. Having seen him, I thought: ‘If I should ever see the Teacher, it is the Blessed One himself that I would see. If I should ever see the Fortunate One, it is the Blessed One himself that I would see. If I should ever see the Supremely Enlightened One, it is the Blessed One himself that I would see.’

“Then I bowed right there at the Blessed One’s feet and said to him: ‘Venerable sir, the Blessed One is my teacher, and I am his disciple. Venerable sir, the Blessed One is my teacher, and I am his disciple.’

(SC 11) “When I had said this, the Blessed One said to me: ‘Kassapa, if one who does not know-and-see should say to a disciple so single-minded as yourself: “I know, I see,” his head would split [into seven pieces]. But knowing, Kassapa, I say, “I know”; seeing, I say, “I see.”

“‘Therefore, Kassapa, train yourself thus: “I will rouse a keen sense of shame and fear of wrongdoing towards elders, the newly ordained, and those of middle status.” Thus train yourself.

(SC 12) “‘Therefore, Kassapa, train yourself thus: “Whenever I listen to any Dharma connected with the wholesome, I will listen to it with eager ears, attending to it as a matter of vital concern, applying my whole mind to it.” Thus train yourself.

(SC 13) “‘Therefore, Kassapa, train yourself thus: “I will never relinquish mindfulness directed at the body associated with joy.” Thus train yourself.’

(SC 14) “Then, having given me this exhortation, the Blessed One rose from his seat and departed. (sn.ii.221) For seven days, friend, I ate the country’s alms food as a debtor [an ordinary worldling], but on the eighth day final knowledge arose.

(SC 15) “Then, friend, the Blessed One descended from the road and went to the foot of a tree. I folded in four my outer robe of patches and said to him: ‘Venerable sir, let the Blessed One sit down here. This will lead to my welfare and happiness for a long time.’

“The Blessed One sat down on the seat I prepared and said to me: ‘Your outer robe of patches is soft, Kassapa.’

“‘Venerable sir, let the Blessed One accept my outer robe of patches, out of compassion [for me].’

“‘Then will you wear my worn-out hempen rag-robes?’

“‘I will, venerable sir.’ Thus, I offered the Blessed One my outer robe of patches and received from him his worn-out hempen rag-robes.

(SC 16) “If, friend, one speaking rightly could say of anyone: ‘He is a son of the Blessed One, born of his breast, born of his mouth, born of the Dharma, created by the Dharma, an heir to the Dharma, a receiver of worn-out hempen rag-robes,’ it is of me that one could rightly say this.

(SC 17) “Friend, to whatever extent I wish, secluded from sensual pleasures, secluded from unwholesome states, I enter and dwell in the first meditative absorption (jhana), which is accompanied by thought and examination (sn.ii.222), with rapture and happiness born of seclusion…. [As in §9, down to:]

(SC 18) “Friend, by the destruction of the taints, in this very life I enter and dwell in the taintless liberation of mind, liberation by wisdom, realizing it for myself with direct knowledge.

(SC 19) “Friend, one might just as well think that a bull elephant seven or seven and a half cubits high could be concealed by a palm leaf as think that my six direct knowledges could be concealed.”

(SC 20) But the nun (bhikkhunī) Ven. Thullananda fell away from the monastic life. Source

*Why would Maha Kassapa want the Buddha's old, worn-out hempen robe?
Together the Buddha and Maha Kassapa returned to Rājagaha. Great Kassapa bore on his body seven of the 32 Marks of a Great Being, following the Buddha who bored all 32.

On the way, the Buddha desired to sit at the foot of a tree by the roadside, so Kassapa folded his outer robe (pilotikasanghāti) for him as a seat. The Buddha sat on it and, feeling it with his hand, praised its softness.

Therefore, Kassapa asked him to accept it. "And what would you wear?" inquired the Buddha. Kassapa then begged that he might be given the rag robe worn by the Buddha. "It is faded with use," said the Buddha, but Kassapa said he would prize it above the whole world. The robes were exchanged.

(The robe which Kassapa exchanged with the Buddha was Punnā's cloak. See Punnā 6). Kassapa always recalled this incident with pride (e.g., S.ii.221).

It is said that the Buddha paid him this great honor because he knew that Kassapa would hold a recital after his final nirvana (his passing) and thus help in the perpetuation of this Dharma (SA.ii.130).

Ven. Mahākāśyapa (Wikipedia)
The earth quaked again in recognition of Kassapa's virtues, for no ordinary being would have been fit to wear the Buddha's cast-off robe.

Kassapa, conscious of the great honor, took upon himself the 13 Sane Ascetic Practices (austere vows or dhutagunā) and, after eight days, became an arhat (fully enlightened).

In the past Kassapa and Bhaddā had been husband and wife and companions in good works in many rebirths. In the time of Padumuttara Buddha, Kassapa was a very rich householder named Vedeha and married to Bhaddā and very devoted to that Buddha.

One day he heard that Buddha's third disciple in rank (Ven. Nisabha) being awarded the place of preeminence among those who observed austere practices, so he registered a wish for a similar honor for himself in the future.

He learned from the Buddha of the qualities in which Ven. Nisabha excelled the Buddha himself, and he determined to obtain them. With this end in view, during rebirth after rebirth, he expended all his energies in goods deeds. More

Saturday, November 2, 2019

Kathina Ceremony, L.A. (Nov. 2-3)



Dear Dharma Friends and Family,

You are cordially invited to make merit by participating in the Kaṭhiṇa Ceremony on Nov. 2 (Saturday) and Nov. 3 (Sunday), 2019.

Join us in this special Buddhist Festival, which comes at the end of Vassa, the three-month Rains Retreat for Theravāda Buddhists.
  • Annual Kaṭhiṇa Robe Offering Ceremony 2019
  • Maha Saṅgha Dāna
  • Lankarama Buddhist Institute
  • 398 Giano Ave., La Puente, CA 91744
  • Phone: (626) 913-0775
Saturday Schedule
7:30 PM - Aṭavisi Buddha Vandanā ("Honoring the 28 previous Buddhas")
Conducted by Ven. Dr. K. Gunaratana Thera
Abbot of Mahā Karuṇā Buddhist Center,
Head of the Religious Affairs of
Lankarama Buddhist Temple, Singapore

Sunday Schedule
6:30 AM - Offering of Kaṭhiṇa Cloth to the Mahā Saṅgha
7:30 AM - Buddha Vandanā
7:45 AM - Breakfast dāna to the Mahā Saṅgha
10:00 AM - Kaṭhiṇa Perahera (Kathina robe parade)
11:15 AM - Buddha Vandanā
11:30 AM - Offering of Kaṭhiṇa robe and 
Lunch offering (dāna) to the Mahā Saṅgha
12:30 PM - Kaṭhiṇānisaṃsa ("Benefits of Kaṭhiṇa") and 
Transferring merits by Ven. Dr. K. Gunaratana Thera
1:00 PM - Free lunch for all in attendance


What is Kathina?
Kathina is a traditional Buddhist festival that comes at the end of Vassa, the three-month rainy season retreat period for Theravada Buddhists in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Laos, Burma, Thailand, and India.

The period during which a Buddhist monastery or center may hold Kathina is one month long, beginning after the full moon of the 11th month in the Lunar calendar (usually October).

It is a time of giving, for lay Buddhists to express gratitude to bhikkhus and bhikkhunis (Buddhist monastics). Lay Buddhists bring donations to temples, especially new robes for the monks and nuns. Moreover, the gift of the attha parikara (in Sri Lanka known as atapirikara අටපිරිකර ) -- the "eight monastic requisites" -- is an important part of the offerings. More

Saturday, November 3, 2018

Kathina: End of "Buddhist Lent" (Nov. 3-4)

Bhante, Ashley Wells, CC Liu (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly Wiki edit; Los Angeles Buddhist Vihara
I love my monastic robes, samanera at Shwedagon Pagoda, Buddhist Burma
Los Angeles Kathina Ceremony, 920 N. Summit Ave., Pasadena CA 91103 (LABV)
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Theravada monk in Sri Lanka (pinterest.com)
Kathina is a Buddhist festival that comes at the end of Vassa (Buddhist "Lent"), the three-month rainy season retreat for Theravada Buddhists in India, Thailand, Cambodia, Burma, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and Laos.

The time during which a monastery may hold Kathina is one month long, beginning after the full moon of the 11th month in the Lunar calendar (usually October). 
 
It is a time of giving, for lay Buddhists to express gratitude to monastics. They bring donations to temples, particularly new monastic robes for nuns and monks. In Sri Lanka Buddhists offer the "eightfold requisites" (atapirikara, අටපිරිකර). 

Origins
Robert, we should follow? - Yes, your holiness
Kathina is a Pali (the exclusively Buddhist language) word referring to the sturdy wooden frame used to measure the length and width by which the special monastic robes are cut.

As the legend goes 30 Buddhist monastics (at that time "wandering ascetics" or shramans) were journeying with the intention of spending the Rains Retreat with the Buddha.

However, the rains began before they reached their destination, so they had to stop at Saketa. According to the Buddha's guidelines for the Rains, mendicant wandering ascetics should refrain from traveling during the rainy season as they might unintentionally harm crops and the prolific insect life during their journeys. As such, they had to stop.

The monastics passed their time together without conflict, practicing Dharma. Therefore, afterwards, the Buddha rewarded them by demonstrating a way to practice sharing and generosity (dana).

A lay disciple had previously donated pieces of cloth to the Buddha, so he gave the pieces to the group of monastics and told them to cut and sew it into a robe and then offer it as a gift to one of them who had practiced most assiduously... More

Rains Retreat in Los Angeles
  
Dear Friends in Dhamma:
 
We [Los Angeles Buddhist Vihara] are delighted to inform everyone that the Rains Retreat Dharma Program offered by LABV was a great success. It was a great opportunity for a lot of people to learn and practice the supreme teachings of the Buddha. 

All the Dharma talks delivered in Sinhalese and English have been uploaded into the temple's YouTube channel. The Dharma talks were conducted on various interesting Dharma topics 
by erudite and virtuous monks.
 
We would like to extend our sincere and respectful thanks to all the venerable monks who generously shared their Dharma knowledge by conducting these talks. At the same time, we sincerely appreciate all the devotees who sponsored the talks by proving facilities for the monks and all of the participants.

Finally, we would like to thank everyone who attended these spiritual programs and those who helped us to make this Dharma program a success. With metta, LABV
Links to listen to Dhamma Talks

Sunday, October 1, 2017

Kathina Ceremony in Pasadena, Oct. 14-15

Los Angeles Buddhist Vihara on Facebook; Bhante, editors, Wisdom Quarterly

Now that the traditional Indian rainy season, Vassa ("Rains Retreat") comes to an end, Buddhists that follow these oldest traditions celebrate Kathina.
  • Kathina or Katina is a Buddhist festival that comes at the end of Vassa, the three-month rainy season retreat of intensive practice for Theravada Buddhists in Bangladesh (known as Kaṭhina Cībar Dān), Cambodia, Laos, Burma, Sri Lanka, and Thailand. The season during which a monastery may hold the Kathina ceremony is one month long, beginning after the full moon of the eleventh month in the Lunar calendar (usually October). This is a time of giving, for lay Buddhists to express gratitude to monastics (Buddhist nuns and  monks). Lay people bring donations to temples, like new saffron robes and other monastic requisites.
Tall statue in Sri Lanka
This is a very significant robe offering that may seem trivial to us. But the Buddha regarded it as the most meritorious act of giving lay persons could engage in.

It is the donation of a sturdy or durable robe to the Monastic Sangha, which presumably will always contain "noble ones," enlightened individuals along the various stages of awakening from stream-entry to arhatship, making this donation particularly meritorious.

All Theravada Buddhist temples from Thailand, Sri Lanka, Burma, Cambodia, Laos, India, Bangladesh, Indonesia will be celebrating this month.


The great Buddhaghosa in Sri Lanka
Pasadena's Los Angeles Buddhist Vihara (920 N. Summit Ave. 91103) -- whose abbot Ven. Dhammarama just celebrated his 92nd birthday this weekend, making him the most senior Theravada Buddhist monk in the western hemisphere with 78 "rains" as a monk under his belt -- will be celebrating from Oct. 14-15, 2017.

Happy birthday, Ven. Dhammarama!

Saturday, November 21, 2015

Merit: the Sturdy Robe Offering (video)

Maya, Dhr. Seven, Ashley Wells, Wisdom Quarterly; Dhammakaya, Los Angeles (dimc.net)
Vision: "World peace through inner peace." (Image: Karl von Moller, 2015/flickr.com)
(Boonsong Sri Burin) As in Italy, so in LA: the Kathina Robe Offering, Wat Phra Dhammakaya.
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Thai woman makes a heartfelt offering.
On Sunday (Nov. 22) the ancient Theravada tradition set down by the Buddha called the kathina will be celebrated free in Los Angeles at the Dhammaykaya International Meditation Center.

The kathina is a special robe offered to a monastic, a nun or monk who has faultlessly maintained the Rains Retreat, when Buddhist monastics are enjoined to remain in one location in observance of vassa or the rainy season that annually drenches Asia, or in any case used to prior to the climate chaos we have created by our pollution and karma.
White-clad devotees (dayakas) gather to offer the monastic Sangha support (dimc.net).
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Temporary ordination at Dhammakaya
The extraordinary aspect of this celebration -- since every Theravada temple celebrates this offering as the culmination of the Buddhist "Lent" period for monastics -- is that the Thai Dhammakaya temples invites monastics from EVERY Buddhist country.
 
Hundreds of ordained bhikkhus (Buddhist ascetics) and bhikkhunis (nuns) from the
  • A shraman needs a robe and bowl.
    United States
  • Thailand
  • Sri Lanka
  • Burma
  • Cambodia
  • Laos
  • Vietnam
  • Tibet
  • Japan
  • China
  • Taiwan
  • Malaysia
  • Indonesia
  • Bangladesh
  • England
  • Germany
  • Australia
  • Singapore
  • Korea
  • Russia
  • Kalmykia
  • Mongolia
  • Nepal
  • Bhutan and
  • India
have been invited to attend. They will chant to white-clad lay Buddhists holding candles symbolic of world peace, who then circumambulate and participate in the most meritorious act of giving for lay devotees, the offering of the sturdy kathina robe.
 
Los Angeles, particularly the foothill area of the San Gabriel Valley near the watershed San Gabriel River next to the Dhammakaya Temple complex, is windy today with cool temperatures and a tiny chance of rain, reminding us of the original need of a sturdy and durable outer robe the Buddha called for.

The Buddha wrapped in golden robe, Chiang Mai, Thailand (WeGoTwo/flickr.com)
 
Why would there be more merit?
Burmese monk, Saffron Revolution (WQ)
The reason this is the most meritorious offering is because conscientious monastics have been practicing meditation and teaching Dharma for three straight months in a kind of cloistered retreat, and the intensive practice is likely to have resulted in the attainment of jhana and/or the first, second, third, or fourth stage of enlightenment for those who practice in accordance with the Dharma!

Gifts (dana) to these extraordinary persons, given their "change of lineage" (gotrabhu) becomes much more meritorious by a special impersonal law of karma and the universe.
 
  • Dhammakaya Int'l Meditation Center (DIMC)
  • Temple Robe Offering Ceremony (FREE)
  • 865 E. Monrovia Place, Azusa, CA 91702 (MAP)
  • (626) 334-2160; email: dimc_azusa@dimc.net
  • Just east of Azusa Pacific University
  • Sunday, Nov. 22, 2015, 9:00-4:00 PM
    World Peace Through Inner Peace
    About dimc.net

    Seven resting points for the mind.
    The Dhammmakaya International Meditation Center (D.I.M.C.) is a non-profit organization that has as its primary purpose teaching meditation.

    DIMC's conviction is that individual peace of mind underlies our collective potential for harmony and peace in the world.

    DIMC operates under the Dhammakaya Foundation, a non-governmental organization of the United Nations headquartered in Thailand.

    It was founded in California in 1992 by a group of Theravada lay Buddhists interested in the practice of meditation without becoming monastics or retiring from the world. A Los Angeles meditation center is located in the beautiful city of Azusa, California (San Gabriel Valley) at the foothills of the Angeles National Forest, in northeastern L.A. County. The center is surrounded by nature, a settled atmosphere that creates a tranquil environment perfectly suited for meditation, serenity, and concentration so rare in our busy lives.

    The special Dhammakaya Meditation technique (derived from a revival of the ancient Thai Forest Tradition) is effective and easy to learn. Everyone can benefit from it regardless of age, gender, race, or religion. More