Om Sweet Om

Om Sweet Om

When the Prince is the Pauper

posted by Vineet Chander

England’s Prince William spent a cold winter’s night  on the streets of central London last week. Along with others from the homelessness charity Centrepoint (which William is a patron and spokesperson of), the dashing young heir-to-the-throne slept in an old sleeping bag laid out on the city street, and used  cardboard boxes asshelter. Temperatures fell to below-freezing lows, and the Prince (and the others in his group) faced dangers ranging from drug dealers and pimps to zooming cars and street cleaners.

Here’s a short news report from CBS.com’s coverage:

Prince William commented that the experience was eye-opening for him: “I cannot, after one night, even begin to imagine what it must be liketo sleep rough on London’s streets night after night.”

While the more cynical among us might be tempted to label this move a publicity stunt, I commend Prince William for it. In fact, his gesture of leaving the comforts of Buckingham Palace to understand the sufferings of the homeless in his city brings to mind another Prince: Gautama Siddhartha, who later came to be known as the Buddha.
   

buddha3.jpg

In addition to the sacred position he holds in Buddhist traditions, Buddha is celebrated within Hinduism and revered by many Hindus as an avatar, or incarnation of the Divine.

According to one popular narrative, Siddhartha was born to royal parentage, and at his birth an astrologer was summoned. The soothsayer predicted that the boy would either grow up to be a great king or renounce the material world altogether. Fearing the loss of their beloved son and heir, the King and Queen conceived of a plan to keep the young prince from coming into contact with the cold hard realities of the material world. They had tall walls constructed all around the palace’s perimeters, and resolved to keep their son within the walls throughout his life.

Siddhartha was raised with all the comforts and pleasures one could imagine. Under his parents’ watchful eyes and by their orchestration, he experienced no discomfort and did not so much as hear of problems or anxiety. He grew into a young man knowing nothing but the plush interiors of the palace. 

One day, however, he became restless. He could sense a world outside of his walled utopia and wanted to experience it. Confiding in his most trusted assistant, he begged to be taken out for the afternoon. Reluctantly, the assistant sneaked the Prince out the palace walls.

Everything in the town outside the palace walls seemed to pulsate with a strange, new energy. Soon, Siddhartha found himself face-to-face with a most unusual sight. He saw a man, his skin slack and wrinkled, a few wisps of white hair sprouting from his head, his frame bent and gnarled.

“What is this?” the Prince asked.

“This is old age,” the old man said slowly, his voice barely a whisper, “and all must face it.”

The Prince, shaken and disturbed, walked on. Within a few minutes, he found a group huddled around the doorway to a small hut. Peeking inside, he saw a boy wrapped in tattered sheets lying on a bed. Pale and limp, the boy coughed weakly. Those surrounding the boy looked on with helpless, pained looks on their faces. An older couple standing closest to him quietly cried.

“And what is this?” the Prince exclaimed.

One of the onlookers put an arm on Siddhartha’s shoulder. “This is disease, young man, and all must face it.”

Siddhartha couldn’t believe what he was hearing. But before he could ask anything more, the boy coughed violently, let out a sigh, and went still. The boy’s family members began to weep, and several began to beat their chests in mourning.

“But what is this, then?” the Prince asked his assistant.

“Your highness, this is death,” the assistant, his voice choked with emotion, replied, “and all must face it.”

Siddhartha could hardly walk. His limbs were burning and his mouth was dry. What he had just heard exploded in his mind. He had wandered only a few yards away, when he heard a most peculiar sound. He followed the sound to a nearby hut, and found another crowd huddled within. Again he saw a bed, but now a young lady lay in it, exhausted but cradling a tiny infant in her arms. The sound had been the piercing cries of the baby. Siddhartha could see that among those present in the hut was a sadhu, a holy man. He walked up to him.

“Oh sage,” the Prince said respectfully, “what is this?”

The holy man smiled gently. “This is birth, my child. All have gone through it, and all must face it. For what is born is certain is die. And what dies is certain to take birth again. Such is the cycle of samsara, life in the material world.”  
  
Departing, Siddhartha deeply considered this. Suddenly, a deep inspiration arose in his heart. With his assistant, he quickly returned to the home of the boy who had just died. He placed his costly shawl over the boy’s body, and gave the family members his jewels. In exchange, he asked them only for the sheet that had been covering the boy.

With tears in his eyes, Siddhartha wrapped the tattered cloth around his body and spoke to his assistant:

“Thank you for giving me the gift of this day. I had been living a life of illusion, sheltered from the reality of this world. I had foolishly believed that I knew what wealth was, but now I understand that whether one is a prince or a pauper, one must face birth, old age, disease, and death. If they cannot save one from these, then what value do the jewels and gold coins and silks of the palace have? Real wealth must lie beyond birth, old age, disease, and death. That treasure can only be found by transcending this material world. Please tell my parents that I thank them for the love and care they have given me, but I can no longer stay in the palace. I must seek out that treasure which my heart yearns for.”

And with that, the Prince walked off.

The story may strike us as a bit extreme, but it does serve as a reminder. How often do we isolate ourselves in our own palaces, however ornate or modest they may be? We erect our own walls to keep the cold realities of material life out.

The irony is that in playing the role of princes, we often become the realpaupers — the impoverished of spirit, of empathy, of substance.

And perhaps the story of Siddhartha (and of William) teaches us something else: when we do make the effort to step outside of ourselves and experience the suffering of others — as Prince William did last week –  we break down our palace walls just a little bit. We are humbled. We are a tiny step closer to the real treasure that awaits us beyond this material world. 



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"Shady"

posted December 24, 2009 at 4:25 am


Bless you for sharing this, Vineet. I appreciate the reminder of the story of the Buddha at this time.



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Your Name

posted December 26, 2009 at 3:58 pm


Think of the cross where Jesus Christ embraced to die for.He had said to His Father,it is done,it’s already done.Little by little,when we give alms to the poor,we are building our own stairways to get to the Father who is in heaven,waiting and with the saints cheering for us to build more of that stairway,after that,all is well.



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Anan E. Maus

posted December 27, 2009 at 8:38 am


excellent blog. The English royal family has been very involved in a number of wonderful charities…going back decades.



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Your Name

posted December 27, 2009 at 11:20 am


Thank you for this lovely post. It reminds me of how Glenn Beck interrupted his reign in the celestial kingdom to come down to teach us how to think and live and bring us to truth. It is truly an inspirational story that we need to hear again and again.



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The Barking Unicorn, Denver, CO

posted December 27, 2009 at 12:22 pm


AYFKM? Gautama spent YEARS “sleeping rough” and you dare compare him to Wee Whining Willy?
WWW is absolutely right: he cannot begin to imagine what homelessness is like after just one night of it… especially with nice warm TV camera lights on you and armed guards watching your back, front, and the soles of your precious royal feet!
Nobody needs to know what homelessness is like. Everybody needs to just put an end to it. A mindful, compassionate being with a lick of sense would have invited all the homeless into the bloody PALACE!



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Your Name

posted January 2, 2010 at 6:50 am


very interesting that this story is chosen. the Untouchables have suffered 100000+ lifetimes. why? they can never move up to better themselves why? does this religion have an inkling of human kindness? prince & pauper? enlightenedment? what a joke. i hope that there really is a Karma. are the Untouchables (dalits) exempt from karma?
“Nobody needs to know what homelessness is like,” but apparently hindus believe different. i cannot believe these barbaric savages are our ally. an ancient religion with ancient ways. When all else fails, one can depend on religion to deliver them from the evils of the world;not if you are at the bottom of a caste. it must be the will of god? people get hurt due to ignorance, but to observe a group of people hurt in the name of religion? what a crying shame. i bet mother teresa did more for the poor of india than any wealthy indian. what a shame, a foreigner cares more about the life of a pauper. i wish that all the people of the lower caste would unite and leave that religion. they have been enslaved for so long that they probably have no idea that they have a choice. who would want to be in a religion that won’t allow u to worship in a temple due to social status? this religion is a farce



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Human

posted January 2, 2010 at 12:40 pm


The practice of every religion has an element of hypocrisy involved with it. That is because humans practice it. The Hindu religion does not say anything about castes. It is stupid society that divided the people. It is similar to the many denominations of the Christian church and further divisions based on white or black church. Does the pope really care about the hungry children in the world? Does he invite them to his home and feed them daily? If he was truly compassionate, he would not wear his rich robe that could be cut up and cover up atleast 10 babies. He would walk around like Christ with minimal clothes on his body. But he is fat and pompous indicating that he eats more than he should and wears expensive robes to cover his overweight body. Is that the model of Christian religion? He is a freaking fraud.
In the name of Christianity millions have been killed. That is not what Christ advised people to do. He asked to spread love and compassion. Same goes with the Muslim religion. All religions end up becoming barbaric when barbaric people practice it.
Search your own mind and find out for yourself how many levels of hypocrisy do you practice. Self realization is truly liberating.



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