The Buddhist Channel
 
 
 
Reclaiming Ashoka -
An Iron Age  Interfaith Exemplar
 
by Harish Singhal and Paul Chaffee, 
The Interfaith Observer, October  14, 2011
 
New Delhi, India -- Approximately 2280  years ago, Emperor Ashoka, third 
regent of India’s Maurya Dynasty, ascended the  throne. This Iron Age family 
ruled India’ first empire, stretching from eastern  Iran to Burma, including 
most of Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, and  Pakistan. Scholars 
dispute the details but agree that Ashoka ruled for about  four decades in the 
middle of the third century BCE.
<The   four-headed “Ashoka Lion Capital,” originally placed on  Ashoka’s 
pillar in  Sarnath (in today’s Uttar Pradesh), was adopted by India’s 
national  emblem. 
Once in power, Ashoka proved a tyrant. Growing up in the Kshatriya warrior  
caste, the young prince had burnished his reputation as a fierce, merciless 
 fighter and hunter. Though one of the youngest of King Bindusara’s many 
sons, he  proved his father’s best protector, mastering both negotiation and 
an iron fist  for keeping the hinterlands quiet. He out-maneuvered his 
brothers, who perished  by his hand, and developed strong enough allies in the 
court so that when the  king died, father’s succession wishes were upended and 
King Ashoka took over.  For most of the next decade he marched his armies 
through west and south Asia,  becoming the most powerful, fearsome man on 
Earth. 
Eight years into his reign Ashoka fought a bloody war to conquer Kalinga  
(roughly equivalent to the state of Orissa today), a small, sophisticated  
kingdom that had kept its freedom and had a significant army. It had no 
chance,  though, against Ashoka’s military machine. “One hundred and fifty 
thousand were  deported, one hundred thousand were killed and many more died 
(from 
other  causes),” the king later confessed. 
A Stunning Transformation 
Ashoka’s conversion story after Kalinga is nearly unprecedented in the 
annals  of religious history, though one comparison comes to mind. Several 
hundred years  later a Jewish leader, Saul of Tarsus, was converted on the road 
to Damascus and  became known as St. Paul, the point-person for spreading 
Christianity throughout  the Middle East and Europe. 
Within a year of Kalinga’s defeat , Emperor Ashoka converted to Buddhism  
and transformed from tyrant to philosopher-king. He changed what it meant to 
be  king from divine representation to servant of the sangha, the Buddhist  
community. He envisioned and implemented a culture of peace that cares for 
all  living beings. Along the way, his well-funded proselytizing took 
Buddhism from  Italy to his west to Vietnam to his east.  
What generated such a incredible turnaround!? Competing explanations 
abound,  as one might imagine. One legendary answer, frequently quoted, 
provides 
this  confession: What have I done? If this is a victory, what’s a defeat 
then? Is  this a victory or a defeat? Is this justice or injustice? Is it 
gallantry or a  rout? Is it valor to kill innocent children and women? Do I do 
it 
to widen the  empire and for prosperity or to destroy the other’s kingdom 
and splendor? One  has lost her husband, someone else a father, someone a 
child, someone an unborn  infant.... What’s this debris of the corpses? Are 
these marks of victory or  defeat? Are these vultures, crows, eagles the 
messengers of death or evil? 
Whatever the details, Ashoka’s violent ambition morphed into a benevolent  
support for citizens of the empire and those beyond. For next 30 years, he  
turned into the good ruler people have dreamed about for centuries, or so 
the  legend went. Of course, for nearly 2000 years most of what was known 
about  Ashoka came from Buddhist texts written four to six hundred years after 
his  death. The Vedic community, which he had abandoned, paid him no 
attention until  1915, when a linguistic puzzle was finally solved and Ashoka’s 
historic legacy  finally swung into view. 
The story goes back to 1828 when a brilliant Anglo-Indian archeologist and  
philologist, James Prinsep, managed to translate the ancient Brahmi 
language.  Brahmi was the preferred language for the 33 “Edicts of Ashoka,” 
inscriptions we  have today, carved in stone on huge, 50-ton “Ashoka Pillars “ 
as 
well as massive  boulders and cave walls. Some of the inscriptions are 
brief, others run to  hundreds of words. They were carved repeatedly in sites 
across the empire. The  collection of 14 “Girnar” edicts, for instance, has 
been found at five sites and  a shortened version in two others. 
In these ‘letters’ to his people are more intimate than official. Ashoka  
refers to himself “Beloved by the Gods, King Piyadasi,” which means, “he 
who  regards everyone with affection.” Not until 1915, when the last of the 
Edicts  was discovered, do we find reference not just to King Piyadasi, but to 
Ashoka,  confirming his connection to them all. What had been consigned to 
legend gained  historic currency. Who emerged was a leader who championed 
equality, social  just, religious tolerance and more. H.G. Wells wrote, 
"Amidst the tens of  thousands of names of monarchs that crowd the columns of 
history, their  majesties and graciousnesses and serenities and royal 
highnesses 
and the like,  the name of Asoka shines, and shines, almost alone, a star." 
The discovery woke India up to its hidden historical treasure. By the  
mid-twentieth century Ashoka’s reputation throughout south Asia returned to 
what 
 it was over 2200 years ago. At the center of India’s flag is the Ashoka 
Chakra  (see left), an image found on a number of the Edicts, representing 
virtue.  Though he became a Buddhist, Ashoka’s achievements as a ruler are a 
matter of  national pride today. 
The Edicts themselves offer a personal glimpse into Ashoka’s world and what 
 he hoped to engender. They tend towards the practical. In the first of the 
 Girnar inscriptions, we read, “Formerly, in the kitchen of 
Beloved-of-the-Gods,  King Piyadasi, hundreds of thousands of animals were 
killed every day 
to make  curry. But now with the writing of this Dhamma edict, only three 
creatures, two  peacocks and a deer are killed, and the deer not always. And 
in time, not even  these three creatures will be killed.”  Promoting 
vegetarianism, but  gradually. 
What makes Ashoka singularly fascinating among great reformers in history 
is  that he actually had the power to give expression to his vision. A 
practical  administrator, he built accountability systems into his reforms. 
From 
the Edicts  we can discern that… 
    *   He promoted equality, peacemaking, social justice, women’s rights,  
religious freedom, education, science, kindness to prisoners, 
sustainability,  and universal free medical care for animals and birds as well 
as people. 
 
    *   He developed major public works projects including hospitals, 
clinics, and  universities. Rest houses between cities were built with wells, 
fruit trees  and shade trees for weary travelers.  
    *   He banned deforestation, most hunting, and sought to improve the 
lives of  slaves.  
    *   Socially, he called for respectful behavior, generosity, and 
moderation as  consumers.  
    *   Personally he advocated kindness, self-examination, truthfulness,  
gratitude, loyalty, and self-control, claiming that the power of love is  
greater than the power of the sword. 
An Interfaith-Friendly Empire 
Ashoka’s religious conversion changed his life and India’s. His Edicts, 
while  steering away from rituals, dogma, and festivals, promoted Buddhist 
values in  everyday living. His broad agenda expressed his understanding of 
Buddhist  “dhamma” (from Pali) or “dharma” (from Sanskrit), a word rich in 
meanings about  the disciplines which make life fulfilling and meaningful. 
Dhamma, in essence,  calls for kindness to all life, truth telling, respect, 
and generosity. To  promote the Dhamma, Ashoka built thousands of stupas 
(Buddhist worship sites)  throughout the empire. He sent Buddhist teachers and 
priests to Syria, Iran,  Egypt, Greece, and Italy; to Nepal, Tibet, and China; 
to Miramar, Thailand,  Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam, and he sent his 
daughter, Sanghamitta, and his son  on Mahinda, both ordained monastics, to 
Ceylon 
(now Sri Lanka). The young king,  and the nation followed. Essentially, 
Ashoka’s missionary efforts transformed a  young Buddhist reform tradition into 
a world religion. 
Buddhist proselytizing sounds oxymoronic today, to be sure, but Ashoka’s  
doesn’t fit your stereotype of a missionary. He was not a philosopher or 
priest,  instead working to improve peoples day-to-day living, albeit, with 
Buddhist  values. Simultaneously, he had an interfaith agenda he pursued as 
seriously as  Buddhism. He called for mutual respect among us all, regardless 
of 
religion. He  encouraged non-Buddhist educators and asked all schools to 
teach about and  appreciate all religions. Hindus, Jains, and Pagans were as 
fully welcome in  this empire as Buddhists. He observed that harming someone 
else’s religion harms  your own. 
Ashoka’s new kind of civilization faded away, becoming legendary within 50  
years of his death. Gradually Hinduism in India absorbed Buddhism back into 
the  mother faith, and Buddhism was left to thrive beyond India’s borders 
in lands  where Ashoka had sent missionaries. 
Then 22 years after the 1893 World’s Parliament of Religions, history’s 
veil  rolled back more than two millennia to reveal a global leader who 
achieved a  peaceful, constructive, interfaith culture that lasted the better 
part 
of a  century. His achievement is a prod for those who share similar dreams 
about the  future. We should all be studying the Edicts of Ashoka. 
---------- 

Quotations from Ashoka’s Edicts were translated by the Ven.  S. Dhammika in 
his The Edicts of King Asoka: An English Rendering (1993), which  is freely 
distributed online by Dharmanet International. Bhikkhu Dhammika is  
spiritual director of the Buddha Dhamma Mandala Society in  Singapore.

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