http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/culture/200507/kt2005070420024111680.htm

Academicians Claim Buddha Turned Into European Saint

By Kim Ki-tae
Staff Reporter

The ancient tale of Gautama Siddhartha, the founder of Buddhism, spread 
from
his homeland to Europe, where he became a Christian saint with the name 
of
``Iosaphat.”

That’s the conclusion of a group of Korean researchers who have 
conducted a
multi-linguistic study of the westward spread of the story of the 
Buddha.

``It is apparent that the name Iosaphat originates from Buddha,’’ Paik
Seung-wook, a lecturer of Spanish at Seoul National University said.

According to Paik, while the Buddha’s tale spread westbound, his name
``Buddha’’ or ``Bodhisatta’’ in Sanskrit, changed gradually in 
accordance
with various linguistic backgrounds with similar accounts of the tale.

For example, it changed to ``Bodisav’’ in Persian texts in the sixth or
seventh century, ``Budhasaf or Yudasaf’’ in an eighth-century Arabic
document and ``Iodasaph’’ in Georgia in the 10th century.

The name in turn was adapted to ``Ioasaph’’ in Greece in the 11th 
century,
and ``Iosaphat’’ or ``Josaphat’’ in Latin since then.

``The gradual change of the name shows the westward spread of the tale 
from
Nepal (where the Buddha was born) to Persia, the Middle East, Greece and
Europe,’’ Paik said.

Paik is a member of a project research team undertaking a study of the
literary interchange between the East and the West. The Korean Research
Foundation is sponsoring the study, and the study results were 
published in
the June-July edition of the bimonthly ``Antiquus.’’

As it spread, the tale adapted different versions according to various
religious backdrops. In the Greek account, a hero Ioasaph, a prince in
India, one day witnessed blind, sick and old people on the streets 
outside
of the palace. The scenes shocked the innocent prince and led him to
contemplate the agony and emptiness of life. One day, a Christian monk 
named
Barlaam visited the anguished prince and taught him the religion.
Enlightened, Ioasaph abandoned his secular values and led an ascetic 
life
until his death. This account has a striking similarity to that of the
Buddha’s tale.

In Europe, the story spread to most regions, especially since the 11th
century, and the tale’s hero has been acclaimed as the champion of
Christianity, not Buddhism.

``There are slight differences in accounts in different texts. For 
example,
in an Arabic account, the prince married a woman, but in a Greek text, 
he
overcomes temptation from female figures,’’ Paik said.

According to Paik, there have been previous studies in Britain and 
Germany
on the cultural transmission of Buddha’s tale to Europe, but he said 
this
study is the first time scholars approached the subject in a 
comprehensive
and multi-linguistic way.

``The research covered eight languages _ Sanskrit, Georgian, Arab, 
Turkish,
Persian, Greek, Latin and Spanish. Our team studied the original text 
in six
languages, and the other two in English,’’ Paik said.



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