Chapter 26
Prince Bodhi caused The Construction of A Palace known as Kokanda
Prince Bodhi caused the construction of a palace with a turreted roof known as
Kokanada. The turret was of peculiar and unprecedented design and won the admiration of
the people. The Prince asked the master builder: ‚Have you constructed a turret of a similar
design elsewhere or was it the first of its kind ever constructed by you?‛ He replied: ‚Your
Majesty .... this is the first of its kind I have ever constructed.‛ Whereupon, Prince Bodhi
was worried with the thought: ‚Should the carpenter build a similar turreted mansion for
someone else, my palace would no longer be the object of praise and wonder by the
people.‛ An evil, cruel thought entered his head to plot the destruction of the architect and
deprive others of having a similar palace built for themselves. He was thinking of doing
away with the builder either by killing him, or by cutting off his hand and feet or
extracting his eye-balls.
Prince Bodhi happened to confide his brutal plot against the carpenter to one of his close
boyhood friend, named Sanjikaputta, who was of kindly disposition and considerate.
Sanjikaputta felt certain Prince Bodhi meant what he said, but he was quite against the idea
of destroying an innocent man of arts and crafts of great prominence. He made up his mind
to avert the imminent danger and so he went to the carpenter and asked: ‚Have you
finished with the work of constructing the turreted palace for prince Bodhi or is there
anything still left to be done?‛ When the carpenter said: ‚All complete,‛ he confided,
‚Prince Bodhi wishes to do away with you, please be careful about your own security.‛
The master carpenter said words of gratitude: ‚O dear Lord .... you have, indeed, done
very well by such words of kindness,‛ and he told him: ‚I will do everything as demanded
by the circumstances.‛ When Prince Bodhi asked him: ‚Big master carpenter .... is there
anything yet to be done in connection with the turret?‛ ‚Your Majesty, not completed yet,
there is a lot to be done,‛ was the reply. Whereupon, the Prince asked: ‚What kind of job
was left to be done?‛ The carpenter said in reply: ‚Your Majesty .... details will be given
later, just provide me with necessary timber immediately.‛ The prince demanded: ‚What
kind of timber do you want me to supply?‛ ‚Your Majesty .... just light wood, such as
Yamane.. those light and dry wood,‛ was the reply. The Prince, not suspecting anything,
supplied him with light and dry wood as demanded.
The master carpenter subsequently asked the prince: ‚Your Majesty .... please do not visit
my place of work forthwith, as the kind of job I am about to handle is very delicate, so
much so that I will have no leisure to enter into conversation with anybody, excepting my
wife charged with the task of conveying food.‛ The prince gave his consent, saying: ‚Very
well.‛
The master carpenter stayed in a work cabin and cut the soft wood to measurement and
built a ‘Flying Vehicle’ in the form of a Garuda bird. On completion of the job, he asked
his wife to turn their assets (household property) into hard cash and jewellery and to have
the family kept in a state of readiness. Prince Bodhi posted security forces around the place
where the turret was supposed to be under construction. When everything was ready, the
master carpenter had his family gathered together at the workshop and after taking their
morning meal, went aboard the flying vehicle and flew away. Even as the guards were
reporting the matter to the Prince: ‚Your Royal Highness... the master carpenter is gone..‛
the carpenter and his family had descended in a region of the Himalayas and settled there
permanently. The new settlement developed into a city and he ruled the region as its king.
He was known as King KathÈ Vahana.
The Inauguration of Prince Bodhi’s Turreted Palace
Prince Bodhi had in mind to invite the Buddha and His Sangha to the inauguration of his
palace Therefore, he caused it to be decorated and smeared profusely with sweet scents.
Then he had a white carpet laid from the lowest rung of the ladder. (The prince had no off-
springs. He thought that there was the chance of getting a son or a daughter should the
Buddha care to tread on the white carpet; if not otherwise. That was the idea behind the
laying of the white carpet.)