Buddha in the deer park
It is told about Gautama Buddha that he spent many lives in
animal form, as various animals of the forest, before being born
in human form as the prince, Siddhartha of the Sakhya clan. This
story is about his life as King of the Deer.
Three kings come into our story. One is Brahmadatta, a man,
King of Benares, who had a "deer park" -- a large private
hunting ground where roamed a thousand deer. The second is the
future Buddha, king of the Banyan Deer and golden in color, the
third the king of another herd, the Branch Deer.
There were five hundred Banyan deer and five hundred Branch
deer in the preserve.
Brahmadatta used to ride through this forest with bow and arrow
uplifted, frightening and scattering the deer in all directions,
in his quest for deer meat. Some fell while running away and,
crippled, died of starvation; for all of them life was made miserable.
Finally the two deer kings got together and the Banyan King (the
Bodhi-sattva) said, "Friend, to avoid all this fright and
loss of life, let us make an arrangement. Every day we shall draw
lots, one day from your herd, one day from mine, and whosoever's
turn it is will go to the chopping block and lay down his or her
head for the executioner's axe. That way the King will have his
meat." King Brahmadatta was getting old and hunting was now
difficult for him, so he was satisfied. But he said that the two
beautiful king deer were never to be killed (royalty recognizing
royalty, you see).
One day it fell to the lot of a doe of the Branch Deer to lay
her head on the block. She went to the Branch Deer King and said,
"Lord, please put off my turn because I am going to have
a little one. I am sure the lot is not meant to kill two at once.
After the fawn is born I will take my turn."
But the Branch Deer King replied, "You know that I cannot
pass your turn on to others, like that. Don't upset things. Go
on your way."
Not getting any help from him, the doe went to the King of
the Banyan Deer, bowed before him and told him her plight. He
was moved with pity and compassion. He said he would take her
turn. (It was the very nature of this great soul, who would one
day become the Buddha, to give his own life to save that of another.)
He then went to the chopping block and lay down with his head
upon it. When the King's cook arrived and saw him he was astonished
and ran to tell King Brahmadatta what had happened.
The King came on his chariot followed by a crowd of people.
"Friend," he said, "King Deer, did I not grant
you that you would not be killed? Why then are you lying here?"
"Oh, Great King," said he, "a doe whose little
one was just about to be born, came to me and said, 'Please change
my turn to that of someone else.' Now it was impossible for me
to deny such a pitiable request, so I have taken her turn."
At this, Brahmadatta's heart melted. In his face and his voice
it was seen that new feelings of compassion and remorse were coming
over him. He commanded that there should be no more killing of
the deer in his park. The influence of the Bodhi-sattva totally
transformed his life.
To this day, the place is called the Deer Park, to remind us
of how the deer were saved from the huntsmen.
[Many people think that only human beings know right from wrong,
rescue and defend others, and give their places and even their
lives for their sake.
Buddhists believe that animals sometimes do it too, and this
is illustrated in such stories of the past lives of the Enlightened
One.]
Jataka Tales
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