Dharamsala:Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama on Wednesday said although the world has changed substantially since the time of Buddha, yet the essence of his teaching remains as relevant today as it was 2,600 years ago.Offering greetings to fellow Buddhists to commemorate Buddha's birth, enlightenment and attainment of Mahaparinirvana, the spiritual leader said the Buddha's teaching is essentially practical.
"It is not just for one group of people or one country, but for all sentient beings. People can follow this path according to their ability and inclination. I, for instance, started my Buddhist education as a child and although I am now nearly 86 years old, I am still learning," he said.
"Therefore, whenever I can, I encourage Buddhists I meet to be 21st century Buddhists, to discover what the teaching really means and to put it into effect. This entails listening and reading, thinking about what you have heard and read and making yourself deeply familiar with it," the Dalai Lama said in a message.Buddha Shakyamuni took birth as a prince of the Shakya clan in ancient India about 2,600 years ago.
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The Pali and Sanskrit traditions declare that the Buddha attained enlightenment at dawn of the full moon day that is called Buddha Purnima.Both the traditions agree that he was not enlightened from the beginning but became the Buddha through meeting the right conditions and striving to accumulate merit and wisdom.
According to Sanskrit tradition, a Buddhist's complete absorption in meditation on emptiness is the wisdom truth body, from which he manifests in different forms.The complete enjoyment body appears to arya bodhisattvas, while the emanation body is visible to all. Buddha Shakyamuni was the supreme emanation body, the source of a continuous flow of activities to benefit sentient beings.