Biography of Nagarjuna
Alexander Berzin
February 2006
Nagarjuna (Klu-grub),
together with Asanga (Thogs-med), were the two great pioneers
of the Mahayana tradition. Nagarjuna transmitted the
lineage teachings of the profound view of voidness from
Manjushri, while Asanga transmitted the lineage teachings of the
extensive bodhisattva practices from Maitreya.
Nagarjuna was born into a brahmin family
probably around the mid-first or early second century C.E. in South
India in Vidarbha, a kingdom lying in present-day Maharashtra and Andhra
Pradesh. He was predicted in various sutras, such as The
Descent into Lanka Sutra (Lan-kar gshegs-pa’i mdo, Skt. Lankavatara
Sutra). At birth, a soothsayer predicted he would live only seven
days, but if his parents made offerings to a
hundred monks, he could live to be seven years old. Fearing for his
life, at age seven, his parents sent Nagarjuna to Nalanda Monastic
University in North India, where he met the Buddhist master Saraha.
Saraha told him that if he became a renunciate and recited the Amitabha mantra, he would
lead a long life. Nagarjuna did so and then joined the monastery,
receiving the name “Shrimanta.”
At Nalanda, Nagarjuna studied sutra and tantra with Ratnamati – an emanation of Manjushri –
and, with Saraha, especially The Guhyasamaja Tantra (dPal
gsang-ba ‘dus-pa’i rgyud). In addition, he learned alchemy from a
brahmin, and gained the ability to transmute iron into gold. Using this
ability, he was able to feed the Nalanda monks during famine.
Eventually, Nagarjuna became the abbot of Nalanda. There, he expelled
eight thousand monks who were not keeping the vinaya monastic rules of discipline
properly. He also defeated five hundred non-Buddhists in debate.
Two youths, who were emanations of the
sons of the naga king, came to Nalanda. They had about them the natural
fragrance of sandalwood. Nagarjuna asked how this was so and they
confessed to him who they were. Nagarjuna then asked for sandalwood
scent for a statue of Tara and the nagas’ help in constructing
temples. They returned to the naga realm and asked their father, who
said he could help only if Nagarjuna came to their realm beneath the sea
to teach them. Nagarjuna went, made many offerings, and taught the
nagas.
Nagarjuna had known that the nagas had The
Hundred Thousand Verse Prajnaparamita Sutra (Shes-rab-kyi
pha-rol-tu phyin-pa stong-pa brgya-pa, Skt. Shatasahasrika-prajnaparamita
Sutra) and requested a copy. When Buddha had taught Prajnaparamita, far-reaching
discriminating awareness (the perfection of wisdom), the nagas
had taken one version of it back to their realm for safekeeping, the
gods another, and the yaksha lords of wealth yet another. Nagarjuna
brought back the hundred thousand verse version, although the nagas kept
the last two chapters to ensure that he would return and teach them
further. Later, the last two chapters were filled in with the last two
chapters of The Eight Thousand Verse Prajnaparamita Sutra (Shes-rab-kyi
pha-rol-tu phyin-pa brgyad stong-pa, Skt. Ashtasahasrika-prajnaparamita
Sutra) . This is why the last two chapters of these two
recensions are the same. Nagarjuna also brought back naga clay and built
many temples and stupas with it.
Once, when Nagarjuna was teaching
Prajnaparamita, six nagas came and formed an umbrella over his head to
protect him from the sun. Because of this, the iconographic
representation of Nagarjuna has the six nagas over his head. From this
event, he got the name Naga. And from the fact that his skill
in teaching Dharma went straight to the point, like the
arrows of the famous archer Arjuna (the name of the hero in the Hindu
classic, Bhagavad Gita), he got the name Arjuna.
Thus, he became called “Nagarjuna.”
Nagarjuna later traveled to the Northern
Island (Northern Continent) to teach. On the way, he met some children
playing on the road. He prophesied that one of them, named Jetaka, would
become a king. When Nagarjuna returned from the Northern Island, the
boy had in fact grown up and become the king of a large kingdom in South
India. Nagarjuna stayed with him for three years, teaching him, and
then spent his last years elsewhere in his kingdom, at Shri Parvata, the
holy mountain overlooking modern-day Nagarjunakonda. Nagarjuna wrote
for the King A Precious Garland (Rin-chen ‘phreng-ba,
Skt. Ratnavali). This was the same king to whom Nagarjuna
wrote A Letter to a Friend (bShes-pa’i spring-yig,
Skt. Suhrllekha), namely King Udayibhadra (bDe-spyod
bzang-po).
Some Western scholars identify King
Udayibhadra with King Gautamiputra Shatakarni (ruled 106 – 130 C.E.) of
the Shatavahana Dynasty (230 B.C.E. – 199 C.E.) in present-day Andhra
Pradesh. Some identify him with the next king, Vashishtiputra Pulumayi
(130 – 158 C.E.). It is difficult to identify him exactly. The
Shatavahanas were patrons of the stupa in Amaravati, where Buddha had
first taught The Kalachakra Tantra and which was close to Shri
Parvata.
King Udayibhadra had a son, Kumara
Shaktiman, who wanted to become king. His mother told him that he could
never become king until Nagarjuna died, since Nagarjuna and the King
have the same lifespan. His mother said to ask Nagarjuna for his head
and since Nagarjuna was so compassionate, he would undoubtedly agree to
give it to him. Nagarjuna did in fact agree, but Kumara could not cut
his head off with a sword. Nagarjuna said in a previous life, he had
killed an ant while cutting grass. As a karmic result, his head could
only be cut off with a blade of kusha grass. Kumara did this and
Nagarjuna died. The blood from the severed head turned into milk and the
head said, “Now I will go to Sukhavati Pure Land, but I will enter this
body again.” Kumara took the head far away from the body, but it is
said that the head and the body are coming closer together each year.
When they join, Nagarjuna will return and teach again. All in all,
Nagarjuna lived six hundred years.
Among the many texts on sutra topics
that Nagarjuna wrote are his Collections of Reasoning (Rigs-pa’i
tshogs), Collections of Praises (bsTod-pa’i tshogs),
and Collections of Didactic Explanations (gTam-pa’i
tshogs).
The Six Collections of Reasoning
(Rigs-tshogs drug) are:
- Root Verses on Madhyamaka,
called "Discriminating Awareness" (dBu-ma rtsa-ba
shes-rab, Skt. Prajna-nama-
mulamadhyamaka-karika),
- Precious Garland (Rin-chen ‘phreng-ba, Skt. Ratnavali),
- Refutation of Objections (rTsod-pa zlog-pa,
Skt. Vigrahavyavarti).
-
Seventy Verses on Voidness (sTong-nyid bdun-bcu-pa,
Skt. Shunyatasaptati),
-
Sutra Called “Finely Woven” (Zhib-mo rnam-‘thag
zhes-bya-ba’i mdo, Skt. Vaidalya-sutra-nama),
-
Sixty Verses of Reasoning (Rigs-pa drug-cu-pa,
Skt. Yuktishashtika),
Included among his Collections of
Praise are:
-
Praise to the Sphere of Reality (Chos-dbyings
bstod-pa, Skt. Dharmadhatu-stava),
-
Praise to the Deepest
Truth (Don-dam-par bstod-pa, Skt. Paramartha-stava),
-
Praise to the Supramundane (Buddha) (‘ Jig-rten-las
‘das-par bstod-pa, Skt. Lokatita-stava).
Included among Nagarjuna’s Collections
of Didactic Explanations are:
-
A Commentary on (the Two) Bodhichittas (Byang-chub sems-kyi ‘grel-ba,
Skt. Bodhichittavivarana),
-
Anthology of Sutras (mDo kun-las btus-pa, Skt.
Sutrasamuccaya),
-
Letter to a Friend (bShes-pa’i spring-yig, Skt.
Suhrllekha).
Also attributed to Nagarjuna are several
two commentaries to The Guhyasamaja Tantra, including:
-
Method for Meditating on the Generation
Stage of the Mahayoga Tantra Guhyasamaja
Mixed with Its Textual (Sources) (rNal-‘byor chen-po’i
rgyud dpal gsang-ba ‘dus-pa’i bskyed-pa’i rim-pa’i bsgom-pa’I thabs
mdo-dang bsres-pa, Mdo-bsres, Skt. Shri-guhyasamaja-mahayogatantra-utpattikrama-sadhana-sutra-
melapaka).
-
The Five Stage (Complete
Stage) (Rim-pa lnga-pa, Skt. Pancakrama).
Nagarjuna’s most famous disciple was
Aryadeva (‘ Phags-pa lha), author of Four Hundred Verse Treatise on the Actions of a Bodhisattva’s
Yoga (Byang-chub sems-dpa’i
rnal-‘byor spyod-pa bzhi-brgya-pa’i bstan-bcos kyi tshig-le’ur byas-pa,
Skt. Bodhisattvayogacarya-catu:shatakashastra-karika)
and several commentaries on The Guhyasamaja Tantra.