Dhammapada Stories - The Abusive Brothers
Once there was a Brahmin whose wife loved to
praise and speak kindly of the Buddha. He did not
mind it at first, but soon his wife’s increased
fondness for
the Buddha caused him to become jealous.
One day he went to where the Buddha was staying,
armed with a question he thought would leave the
Buddha baffled and humiliated. In that way, he
thought his wife would realize how misplaced her
admiration for the Buddha was.
The husband asked the Buddha, “What do we have to
kill to be able to live happily and peacefully?” The
Buddha’s reply was simple but one that left the
angry man appeased and inspired. “To be able to live
happily and peacefully,”
the Buddha replied, “one has to kill anger, for
anger itself kills happiness and peace.” The man
reflected on the Buddha’s answer and decided to
become a bhikkhu himself. Finally he became an
arahat.
When the younger brother heard that his elder
brother had become a monk, he in turn became very
angry. He went and confronted the Buddha, abusing
him badly. When he had finished his string of
abusive words, the Buddha asked him, “If you offered
some food to a guest who came to your house, and the
guest left without eating any of it, who would the
food belong to?”
The brahmin conceded that the food would belong to
him. The Buddha then said, “In the same way, I do
not wish to accept your abuse, so the abuse belongs
to you.”
The man realized his mistake and felt great respect
for the Buddha because of the lesson he had taught
him. He, too, became a bhikkhu and later also
attained
arahatship.
The bhikkhus remarked how wonderful it was that the
Buddha could make those who came to abuse him
realize the Dhamma and take refuge in him. The
Buddha replied, “Because I do not answer wrong with
wrong, many have come to take refuge in me.”
He who without anger endures abuse, beating and
punishment, and whose power of patience is like the
strength of an army, him do I call a holy man.
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