28: The 10th Rains Retreat (Pāḷileyyaka) – 973
supporter Visākhā and other high-born residents of Sāvatthī sent messages to
Ven. Ānanda saying: “Venerable sir, kindly help us to get an opportunity to see
the Fortunate One!”
Five hundred monastics who had been staying all over the place approached
Ānanda at the end of the Rains Retreat (
Vassa
) and made a request to him with
these words: “Friend Ānanda, it has been long since we last heard a discourse
from the master. Friend Ānanda, we beg you. We would like to have a chance
again to listen to the Fortunate One.”
Then Ven. Ānanda went to the Pāḷileyyaka forest leading the 500 monks, but he
thought that it would not be nice to draw near the Buddha together with such a
large crowd, as the Buddha had been living a solitary life for the whole Rains
Retreat (
Vassa
). He, therefore, left the monks somewhere else and approached
the Buddha by himself.
On seeing Ven. Ānanda, Pāḷileyyaka elephant rushed to him carrying a stick in
the grip of his trunk, for he mistook him for an enemy. When the Buddha saw
this, he stopped the elephant saying: “Go away, Pāḷileyyaka, go away! Do not
block his way. This monk is my attendant.” The elephant then dropped the stick
and made a gesture to express his desire to take Ven. Ānanda’s bowl and robe.
But Ven. Ānanda refused to hand them to him.
Then the elephant thought: “If this monk were conversant with the rules of an
attendant, he would not put his requisites on the stone slab which is the seat of
the master.” Ven. Ānanda laid down his bowl and robe on the ground.
Never does a well conducted person or a man versed in duties place his
belongings on the seat or the bed of the respected teacher.
After paying obeisance to the Buddha, Ven. Ānanda sat down in a blameless
place. “Dear son, Ānanda, did you come alone?” asked the Buddha. When
informed that he came together with 500 monks, the Buddha inquired further:
“Where are those 500 monks now?” – “I came, having left them somewhere else,
as I did not know the inclination of the Fortunate One,” replied Ven. Ānanda.
“Bring them here, dear Ānanda,” the Buddha ordered.
As had been ordered by the Buddha, Ven. Ānanda called the 500 monks who
came and paid respects to the Buddha and took their appropriate seats. When the
Buddha had exchanged friendly greetings with them, the monks said to the
Buddha: “You, Fortunate One, are gentle partly because you have become a