Mustard seeds are the smallest seeds of all seeds. They
are also very important spice especially in Indian cuisine. They are popularly
known as Rai or Sarson India. Mustard is also a very popular flavor when comes
to salads, sauces, hot-dogs, sandwiches, etc. This spice also has taught many
life lessons, one of which being the truth of life. The earliest mention of
mustard seed is in the time of Gautama Buddha in the popular narrative of Kisa Gotami.
Kisa
Gotami and Mustard seed.
Kisa Gotami was the wife of a very wealthy man of Savatthi,
which was one of the largest cities during the times of Gautama Buddha. Gotami
was so lean that a suffix Kisa was added before her name, and she was known as
Kisa Gotami or lean Gotami. Kisa gave birth to a son. When her son barely
started to walk he fell and died. Gotami was now grief stricken with the loss
and she wandered places asking for medicines and way to revive her only son.
Kisa clasped the child to her hip and roamed for days. Once a wise man saw her
and felt compassionate for her. So he said to her: 'I know of a doctor who will
help you, go to the Buddha and ask Him for medicine for your child. Kisa
visited Buddha and asked him for medicine.
Kisa Gotami with her Dead Child |
Buddha said “I will surely help you but for the medicine
I require some mustard seeds from a house where there had been no death”. Kisa
over joyed by this went to every house begging for mustard seeds. Everyone was
willing to help her, but when she asked that whether death had occurred in the
houses she went, everyone said that they had many people they lost. Someone had
lost their child, parent, siblings, etc. she could not find a single house
where death did not occur. The day went by and she now started to realize that,
she was not the only one who had lost someone. Every house had gone through
what she is now facing.
Realizing that the death is truth of life, every-thing
that is born has to die. She lost the attachment with the dead body of her son
and buried her son in the forest. Kisa then went to Buddha and paid him homage.
Buddha said to her “Did you get those mustard seeds, were you able to find a
house where death had not occurred?” Kisa replied “ I found that living were few
but dead were many” Buddha then Sang the
following verse.
“Whoso hath set his heart on sons or flocks
and herds.
To worldly pleasures given o'er whose
thoughts, —
Even as a torrent sweeps away a sleeping
town.
So him the Prince of Death doth take and bear away.”(Verse
287)
Buddha said that before you are able to fulfill all your
desires, death come and take you away, just as a flood sweeps a village away
the same way death takes away life.
Gotami realizing the truth of life became a Bhikkhuni , renunciate
and followed the way of Buddha and attained Arahatship.
(Book 8, story 14, Dhammapada 114)
Interpretation
In this narrative Mustard seeds play a very important
role. Mustard seed is most finite of things and is easily available. Every
house would have mustard seeds for sure as it is important part of cuisine. When Buddha asks her to bring mustard seeds
from house where death had not occurred, has a great philosophical message.
Death is something that no one can escape, and anyone who is born has to die. No
one can escape death. It was very certain that Kisa would find no such house. Here Mustard seeds signify desire, even
smallest desire of size of mustard seeds would not last in front of death. To which
later Buddha gives the analogy of flood sweeping the village. The Buddha here insists on curbing the attachment
and desire. Not finding the mustard seeds also indicates that there should be
no t even a single worldly desire of size of mustard seeds. The heart and mind
should be only striving for enlightenment. Kisa’s struggle to find mustard seeds is
actually the struggle that soul has to go through to move towards the path of enlightenment.
Here Kisa’s son can also symbolically mean bodily consciousness, Just as Kisa
when realizes the truth of life she buries her son and moves to become enlightened.
The same way, one should burry the bodily consciousness in order to move towards
the path of self-realization and attain enlightenment. Once we realize that
everything that has been created will certainly be destroyed we automatically
are motivated to rise above the bodily consciousness. This Parable really teaches a lot of things.
This parable can also be interpreted in overcoming
challenges. The death can be interpreted as challenges, there are bound to be challenge in life just as death. No easy
way ahead. Mustard seeds can signify effort; even a smallest effort put forth
can help you overcome challenges. The struggle that Kisa had here means the
road towards the overcoming challenges, there are is going to be a
roller-coaster ride. The son and burial of the son indicates over coming of the challenge
and then you achieve enlightenment.
There can be as many interpretations of the teaching that
Buddha is imparting taking the Analogy of mustard seeds.
Dear Mehul...๐
ReplyDeleteVery well interpreted...๐
Share some more seeds of your wisdom...
Hugs...
Love...
๐
Interesting Mehul..Do post more articles and stories about spices. Keep them coming.
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