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One
day a Brahmin was walking through the countryside when he
was surprised to hear a voice coming from a pipal-tree.
The voice spoke to him several times bidding him not to
bathe in a tank, not to perform his evening worship, not
to eat and not to go away.
So
he cried out:
"Who
are you to forbid me to do things which have no harm in
them?"
The
voice from the pipal-tree replied:
"I
am a Brahma-Rakshasa. In my last life I was a Brahmin and
very learned in the art of music, but I was unwilling to
impart my learning to others. I kept my knowledge to myself.
And now I am doomed to be a Brahma-Rakshasa and every day
I have to listen to a piper, and I cannot tell you how badly
he plays. It is terrible. How often I have wished I could
come out of the tree, snatch away his instrument and show
him how to use it, where to place his fingers, how to use
his breath. But it is not possible and I am forced to hear
his awful tunes..."
I
cannot tell you the rest of the story here, except to add
that fortunately a way was found to rescue him from his
torment. But you see how miserable we can be as a result
of the bad work, the bad art, the bad music of people around
us.

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Rantideva
who was a king, became a hermit in the forest. He
had given his wealth to the poor and lived a simple
life in the solitude of the jungle. He and his family
had only the bare necessities of life.
One
day, after a fast of forty-eight hours, a light meal
of rice with milk and sugar was prepared for him.
A
poor Brahmin came up to the door of the hut and asked
for food. Rantideva gave him half of his rice. Then
came a Sudra begging for help and Rantideva gave him
half of what remained.
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Then
he heard a dog barking; the poor beast seemed to be starving.
Rantideva gave him what was left. Last of all came a Pariah
who stopped at the hermit's door and asked for help. Rantideva
gave him the milk and the sugar, and continued to fast.
Then
came four gods who said to him:
"It
was to us, Rantideva, that you gave food, for we assumed
the forms of a Brahmin, a Sudra, a dog and a poor outcaste.
You were good to us all and we praise you for your loving
thoughts."
A
kind heart treats all men and even animals as members of
one family, one humanity.

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If
a man is hungry, what is the only thing that will
relieve him? Food. If a man is thirsty, what will
relieve him? Water. If a man is ignorant, what is
the only thing that will help him? Knowledge.
It
is good to give bread to the hungry, water to the
thirsty, knowledge to the ignorant.
The
five sons of Pandu, the five noble Pandavas, were
staying in a palace which at first sight seemed beautiful
and comfortable. But it had been built by an enemy,
Purochana, and he had made the floors and the walls
and the roofs of very inflammable material; he intended
to set fire to it one night while the Pandavas were
asleep, so as to be rid of the five princes whom he
hated.
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Such
was his villainy. For this wicked purpose, he made use of
his skill in building and his cleverness in plotting.
One
day a very skilful miner came to the palace. He said secretly
to the princes:
"One
of your friends sends me here to serve you. I am a miner.
Tell me how I can help you. I know for sure that your enemy,
Purochana himself, will try to burn you all alive in this
house."
Then
the eldest of the Pandavas said to the miner:
"Use
your skill in mining, good sir, to make us an underground
passage so that even if the gates are guarded we may escape,
for we shall get away through the secret passage dug by
your spade and made passable by your art."
In
the floor at the very centre of the palace the miner began
to dig. The Pandavas kept planks ready to place over the
hole and covered the planks with carpets whenever Purochana
came near. So the deceiver was deceived.
At
last the five princes were informed that the passage was
ready. It led from the house to a lovely spot in the forest.
One
night the princes set fire to the palace and then with their
mother Kunti, they made their escape through the underground
passage. It was dark but safe. When strong Bhima noticed
that his companions were not fleeing fast enough, he put
his mother on his shoulders, took two of his brothers on
his hips and the other two under his arms, and with this
burden ran like a wind that cannot be stopped, away from
the deadly fire.
Purochana's
trick had been foiled by the good miner's skill. The miner
was not content merely to dig the ground to discover treasures
for himself alone; he dug for others. He helped others with
his knowledge; he shared his science.
Even
the greatest people on earth does not know everything. We
should learn from one another, man from man, nation from
nation, one part of the world from another; each nation,
each man should be glad to teach what he knows.
The
peoples of the West bring to the East their knowledge of
science, technology, economics, etc.
From
all time the peoples of the East have given to the West
their philosophical and ethical knowledge. Thus India has
given to other countries the knowledge contained in the
Vedas and the teachings of the Buddha on the Noble Path
as well as in all her sacred books.
Even
a child can give knowledge. One child can teach the alphabet
to another. One child can teach another how to do simple
arithmetic, or to tell the North from the South, the East
from the West, or to tie a knot, to play a game, to sow
a seed, e.
We
can all be givers. A holy book says, "It is more blessed
to give than to receive."
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