Abstract:
The aims of this paper are to examine and figure out the supportiveness of animal cries in order to
acquire one’s spiritual progress. A remarkable amount of scholastic issues have already been put
forward by modern Buddhist scholarship with regard to environmental awareness, especially of flora
and fauna for the spiritual progress of the human beings. Nonetheless, no substantial literary piece has
yet been issued that pays adequate attention to the effectiveness of animal cries for one’s spiritual
attainment as reflected in the Pali canon.
Accordingly, this paper will present the Buddhist standpoint of animal cries especially with regard to
their progressive/positive influence on the human psyche. However, due to the extensiveness of its
scope, this study is delimited to the accounts of Theragāthā in the Pali canon. Similarly, a selected
amount of Buddhist hybrid Sanskrit sources also will be scanned in support of this issue.
The Buddha, as we see in many accounts of the Pali canon, encourages his disciples who attained
their ultimate liberation, i.e. nibbāna, to perform a tremendous service to society and become ideal
social beings. However, as we are told by many substantial discourses of the Buddha, the common
society is of a quantity of certain obstructive nature to acquire one’s final liberation. Thus, the Buddha
insisted that a monk should temporarily shun society and should stay in one of three specific
circumstances until he or she acquires the final goal of Buddhism. The first, out of these three specific
circumstances refers to the forest while the second also represents a module of the forest, i.e. the treefoot
(rukkha-mūla).The main reasons for the inappropriateness of the common society in order to
reach spiritual progress are irrelevant association complexity. Furthermore, society is corrupted with
noise and hustle and bustle whereas the forest, as Buddhism mentions, is of fewer sounds and noises
(appa-sadda and appa-nigghosa) and the breeze in the forest that we breathe is not polluted due to the
activities of the people (vijana-vāta).
However, very significantly, an adequate amount of Pali canonical evidence categorically speaks of
the helpfulness of animal cries for the person’s spiritual development. It can be deemed that, the
Buddha seeing the utility of this factor, has persuaded his disciples to go to the forest to build up their
mental culture, i.e. bhāvanā. At the first sight, one may think that the Buddha instructed his disciples
to delight in forest life since it is extremely calm and quiet. However, perhaps, the forest maybe more
noisy than a township since the former often consists of the variety of sounds such as the rustling
sound of the wind that blows through the leaves, falling and twisting sounds of trees, etc. Especially
various animal cries such as the lion’s roar, elephant’s trumpet, tiger’s growl, crow’s caw, peacock’s
scream etc. are highly strident in the forest. Yet, the Buddha nowhere mentioned these sounds as
disturbances for one’s concentration. On the contrary, as the Buddha and his disciples insist, those
sounds are extremely instrumental in order to attain the final liberation. Besides, Pali commentaries,
as the most trustworthy hermeneutic source material for the Pali canon, provide a mass of elaborations
to prove the aforementioned idea.