38b: The Destruction of the Sakyans – 1362
and passed judgment, declaring who the rightful owner was. The people joined
in their loud approval of the righteous judgment.
King Pasenadi of Kosala heard the sound and asked what it was. On being told
about it, the king was very pleased and placed him in charge of the court of
justice; the former justices were all removed from service. Bandhula thus got an
additional duty as judge which he discharged with uprightness.
The disgraced judges, being deprived of their usual bribes, plotted against
Bandhula, the commander-in-chief. They conspired to make false allegations
that Bandhula was aspiring to the throne. The king believed the words of the
disgraced judges. He was greatly ill at ease. He wanted to do away with
Bandhula but since Bandhula was a popular figure he dared not put Bandhula to
death in the city. So he invented a wicked ploy. He had his trusted men stage an
uprising at the border regions. Bandhula, the commander-in-chief, and his 32
sons were ordered to put down the fake uprising, and to bring back the
insurgents. The king sent along his chosen generals with Bandhula, with orders
to murder Bandhula and all his sons.
When Bandhula got to the so-called area of unrest, the king’s men inserted
themselves as insurgents fled. Bandhula carried out measures to turn the remote
region into flourishing settlements, and returned to the city. When they were a
good distance away from the city, the captains, who were sent along with them,
beheaded Bandhula and his 32 sons.
Mallikā’s Story
On that day, Mallikā, the wife of the commander-in-chief, was preparing to
offer a meal to the two chief disciples, Ven. Sāriputta and Ven. Mahā
Moggallāna together with 500 monastics at her home. Early that morning, she
had received a message that her husband Bandhula, the commander-in-chief,
and her 32 sons had been beheaded. She kept the news to herself, having slipped
the note containing the message inside her jacket. While she was attending on
the two chief disciples at table, her maids, after having offered rice, were
bringing ghee to the table, when they accidentally broke the vessel containing
ghee. The two chief disciples witnessed this. Ven. Sāriputta asked Mallikā:
“What has the nature of breaking up, has broken up. Don’t let it prey on
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your mind.” Thereupon, Mallikā produced the grim message from inside her
jacket and said: “Venerable sir, they sent me this message to tell me that my 32