shirabe.org
Settings
English
From Wikipedia
English Wikipedia

According to the earliest Indian sutra's Pindola Bharadvaja was one of four Arhats asked by the Buddha to remain in the world to propagate Buddhist law (Dharma). Each of the four was associated with one of the four compass directions. Pindola is said to have excelled in the mastery of occult and psychic powers. He was once remonstrated by Buddha for misusing his powers to impress simple, ignorant people. Along with Ananda, Pindola preached to the women of Udena's palace at Kosambi on two different occasions. In later centuries, the number of Arhats increases from four to Sixteen Arhats, then later on to 18. In Tibetan Thangka paintings depicting the 18 Arhats, Pindola Bharadvaja is usually depicted holding a book and begging bowl. Born into a family of royal chaplains, Pindola Bharadvaja became a monk because he found no meaning in his life. Although he was greedy first, this changed as he began obeying Buddha and working to help others. Pindola Bharadvaja is often depicted with a scripture in his right hand and an alms bowl in his left hand, symbolizing his aid and protection over the suffering in the lower realms. Pindola Bharadvaja lives with 1,000 arhats on the eastern continent (Purvavideha) in a mountain cave.

en.wikipedia.org · CC-BY-SA

Grammar codex

What the coloured tags mean

Hiragana

ひらがな

The rounded, flowing kana. Hiragana writes native Japanese words, grammar endings, and anything without (or alongside) kanji — it's the first script you learn. Each character stands for one syllable.

Example

ねこ — cat