Motivational Video in Bangla from real life incidents of Siddhartha Gautama the Buddha Enlightenment Story Biography in Bengali
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About twenty-five hundred years ago, in the Himalayan foothills of present-day Nepal, there lived in a great palace a king named Śuddhodana with his queen named Maya devi. They gave birth to a special child who exhibited the marks of a great man. He was given the name Siddhartha Gautama. A prophecy indicated that if the child stayed at home he was destined to become a world ruler. If the child left home, however, he would become a universal spiritual leader. To make sure the boy would be a great king and world ruler, his father isolated him in his palace and he was raised by his mother's younger sister, Maha Pajapati, after his mother died just seven days after childbirth.
For this son the king had a particularly grand idea: he would make the child’s life perfect. The child would never know a moment of suffering-every need, every desire, would be accounted for at all times. The king built high walls around the palace that prevented the prince from knowing the outside world. The king lavished the child with food and gifts, surrounding him with servants who catered to his every whim. And just as planned, the child grew up ignorant of the routine cruelties of human existence. All of the prince’s childhood went on like this. At the age of 16 he got married to a beautiful princess named Yashodhara. After a few years of their marriage they gave birth to a child name Rahul. The prince had everything in the world.
But at the age of 29, he decided to run away. But the prince was more like his father than he knew. He had grand ideas too. He wouldn’t just run away; he would give up his royalty, his family, and all of his possessions and live in the streets, sleeping in dirt like an animal. There he would starve himself, torture himself, and beg for scraps of food from strangers for the rest of his life. The next night, the prince snuck out of the palace again, this time never to return. And as planned, the prince suffered greatly. He suffered through disease, hunger, pain, loneliness, and decay. He confronted the brink of death itself, often limited to eating a single nut each day. A few years went by. Then a few more. And then . . . nothing happened. Siddhartha followed this life of extreme asceticism for six years, but this did not satisfy him either; he still had not escaped from the world of suffering. The prince began to notice that this life of suffering wasn’t all that it was cracked up to be. It wasn’t bringing him the insight he had desired. It wasn’t revealing any deeper mystery of the world or its ultimate purpose. Soon the prince came to the conclusion that his grand idea, like his father’s, was in fact a terrible idea and he should probably go do something else instead. So he decided to break his long fast by accepting milk and rice pudding from a village girl named Sujata.
Then totally confused, the prince cleaned himself up and went and found a big pipal tree near a river-now known as the Bodhi tree-in Bodh Gaya, India. He decided that he would sit under that tree and not get up until he had found the truth of life. As the legend goes, the confused prince sat under that tree for forty-nine days. In that time the prince came to a number of profound realizations. One of those realizations was this: that life itself is a form of suffering. The rich suffer because of their riches. The poor suffer because of their poverty. People without a family suffer because they have no family. People with a family suffer because of their family. People who pursue worldly pleasures suffer because of their worldly pleasures. People who abstain from worldly pleasures suffer because of their abstention. This isn’t to say that all suffering is equal. Some suffering is certainly more painful than other suffering. But we all must suffer nonetheless. After a reputed 49 days of meditation, at the age of 35, Gautama attained Enlightenment, and became known as the Buddha or "Awakened One”.
*THIS BIOGRAPHY IS BASED ON OUR INTERNET RESEARCH. IT MAY NOT BE 100% ACCURATE*
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