American Buddhist Citizens' League



Buddhist Pilgrimage Sites in Sri Lanka

Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic -------- Kandy Sri Lanka

Sri Mahabodhi Tree -------- Anuradhapura Sri Lanka

Raja Maha Vihara -------- Kelaniya Sri Lanka

Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic ------- Kandy Sri Lanka

The Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic [1], located in Kandy, Sri Lanka, houses the famous tooth relic or śarīra of Buddha. The temple itself is the most important pilgrimage site in Sri Lanka. Moreover, the sacred Tooth Relic has a close relationship with many of the important historical events occurring in Sri Lanka for the past 1700 years.

 

Firstly, according to local practices, pilgrims should wear white or light-colored clothes while visiting the temple. (One should certainly not wear revealing clothing or shorts into the temple.) They must also remove their shoes before entering the temple and enter barefoot.

 

Every day around noon for a short period, the sacred Buddha relic will be open for viewing and worship. However, pilgrims may not take photographs at the same time. They have to stand a few meters away from the relic facing it from the backside to take pictures.

 

Besides viewing the relic, the temple also offers many other worthwhile activities. For example, one can view the austere Buddha statues, the exquisite murals and relief carvings, other sacred relics, and so on.

 

In September, the garden outside the temple abounds with beauty and rich religious significance, as the many śāla trees are abloom with beautiful large pinkish flowers. The flowers of the śāla tree wither away quickly. Therefore, they remind us that the world is transient. Moreover, according to the Pali Tripitaka, Buddha was born next to a śāla tree, and he reached parinirvāa while resting between two śāla trees.

 

Every year around July or August, the Sri Lankans celebrate the ten-day long festival of Esala Perahera with a gorgeous and lively five-section parade organized and sponsored by the Temple of the Sacred Tooth and four nearby devales.

 

The first section of the parade comes from the Temple of the Sacred Tooth. On display are male dancers attired in colorful costumes beating small hand-held drums while dancing traditional local dances, a group of elephants in exquisite clothing walking in a procession – one of them has a relic stupa duplicate on its back, and so on.

 

The second section of the parade comes from the Nātha Devale. Nātha is the Sri Lankan name for Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva.[2] Although Sri Lanka is a Theravada Buddhist country (and in general, Theravada Buddhists only worship the Buddha and Maitreya Bodhisattva), Sri Lanka’s people have had a long history with Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva. Hence some aspects of the original belief in Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva have been retained and localized. After that, it transformed into the belief in Nātha. Nowadays, Sri Lankans believe that Nātha is the future Buddha. That is why some Sri Lankans believe Nātha is most probably Maitreya Bodhisattva, the next Buddha to come after the parinirvāa of Gautama Buddha.  However, some others believe Nātha is Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva, the next Buddha to come after the parinirvāa of Amitābha Buddha.

 

Also, not so long ago, every March or April during the Sri Lankan New Year, because the Sri Lankans regarded Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva as a bodhisattva who cured diseases, Nātha Devale would distribute free herbal medicine to the people. There is still the custom among local pilgrims to first visit Nātha Devale to make a vow and then visit the Temple of the Sacred Tooth to worship Buddha. 

 

 

 



[1] The Temple of the Sacred Tooth is also known as the Sri Dalada Maligawa.

[2]When I mentioned the subject of visiting an Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva temple in Sri Lanka with a Sri Lankan friend, he suggested the Nātha Devale in Kandy.



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