June 3, 2024 at 8:26 pm
#50043
Keymaster
“Raja” (not “rāja,” which means “king”) means “dirt.” Furthermore, “hara” means to “remove.” Thus, “rajoharaṇaṁ” means to “cleanse something of dirt/contamination.”
- The Buddha compared defilements (kilesa) that arise in the mind (greed, anger, ignorance) to dirt that makes a cloth or anything else dirty.
- When the Buddha showed a dirty cloth to Ven. Cūḷapanthaka, he probably said something like this: “This dirty cloth can be cleaned. In the same way, a mind can be cleaned too.” The Buddha is also likely to have instructed Ven. Cūḷapanthaka on how to clean a mind with Anapanasati or Satipatthana.
I could not find that account in the Tipitaka. It is probably in the Vinaya Pitaka.
However, the following suttas indicate how “raja” is used for “dirt.”
- “Sīhanāda Sutta (AN 9.11)“: “Seyyathāpi, bhante, rajoharaṇaṁ sucimpi puñchati asucimpi puñchati gūthagatampi … muttagatampi … kheḷagatampi … pubbagatampi … lohitagatampi puñchati, na ca tena rajoharaṇaṁ aṭṭīyati vā harāyati vā jigucchati vā.”
- “Sāriputta Sutta (AN 10.52)“: “Seyyathāpi, āvuso, itthī vā puriso vā daharo yuvā maṇḍanakajātiko ādāse vā parisuddhe pariyodāte acche vā udapatte sakaṁ mukhanimittaṁ paccavekkhamāno sace tattha passati rajaṁ vā aṅgaṇaṁ vā, tasseva rajassa vā aṅgaṇassa vā pahānāya vāyamati.”
- English translations in the links are good enough to get the idea.