Sarnath- The First
Teaching

After attaining enlightenment
at Bodh Gaya the Buddha
went to Sarnath; and it
was here that he preached
his first discourse in
the deer park to set in
motion the 'Wheel of the
Dharma'. It is one of
the most holy sites as
in this place the stream
of the Buddha's teaching
first flowed.
At this place, the Buddha
encountered the five men
who had been his companions
of earlier austerities.
On meeting the enlightened
Buddha, all they saw was
an ordinary man; they
mocked his well-nourished
appearance. "Here comes
the mendicant Gautama,"
they said, "who has turned
away from asceticism.
He is certainly not worth
our respect." When they
reminded him of his former
vows, the Buddha replied,
"Austerities only confuse
the mind. In the exhaustion
and mental stupor to which
they lead, one can no
longer understand the
ordinary things of life,
still less the truth that
lies beyond the senses.
I have given up extremes
of either luxury or asceticism.
I have discovered the
Middle Way". Hearing this
the five ascetics became
the Buddha's first disciples.
Gautama Buddha started
teaching not to debate
but for the advantage
of and out of compassion
for human beings. He explained
the middle way which avoids
extremes, the Four Noble
Truths, and prescribed
the Eight-fold path. The
Four Noble Truths are:
1. There is suffering;
2. Suffering has a cause;
3. The cause is removable,
and 4. There are ways
to remove the causes.
So as to remove the causes
the Buddha prescribed
an Eight-fold Path: Right
speech, Right action,
Right livelihood, Right
effort, Right mindfulness,
Right concentration, Right
attitude and Right view.
A Monastic tradition flourished
for over 1,500 years on
the site of the deer park
at Sarnath. In the third
century BC Ashoka erected
a column 15.24 m in height
which had four lions as
its capital which is now
treasured in the archaeology
museum. The lion symbolises
both Ashoka's imperial
rule and the kingship
of the Buddha. The four-lion
capital was adopted as
the emblem of the modern
Indian republic. The last
and largest monastery
constructed before the
Muslim invasion was Dharma-Chakar-Jina
Vihar, erected by Kumardevi,
wife of King Govinda Chandra,
who ruled over Benares
during 1114 to 1154. In
1194 AD, Kutubuddin Aibak,
the Muslim conqueror,
leveled the city to the
ground. Sarnath became
a forest of debris below
which the historical ruins
remained buried. Of the
two great stupas which
adorned the city only
the Dhamekha remained
which is of the 6th century.
Buddhist
Tour Packages
|| Buddhist
Sites in India
Buddhist
Destinations
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| Buddhist
Destinations in India |
| Delhi,
Agra,
Varanasi
& Sarnath, Sankasia,
Bodhgaya,
Nalanda,
Rajgir,
Kushinagar,
Lumbini,
Ajanta
and Ellora, Sanchi,
Sravasti
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