Greenspace: The Oldest
Historical Tree in the World
January 23, 2017
Stephen Forbes The Adelaide Review
“In Sri Lanka, there grows to this day, a
tree, the oldest historical tree in the world.” – H.G.
Wells
Late last year our family made a pilgrimage to
the ancient city of Anuradhapura in Sri Lanka. The World Heritage
site illustrates millennia of Sri Lanka’s cultural history while
remaining an important contemporary religious and regional centre.
Our visit coincided with the Ill Full Moon Poya day public holiday
drawing crowds to the Thuparamaya, Sri Lanka’s source for Buddhism,
and to the ancient Jaya Sri Maha Bodhi – the oldest cultivated tree
in the world with a documented written history.
The veneration accorded this tree, especially
by devotees of the Theravada Buddhist tradition, reflects the
direct connection of this tree to the living Buddha.
The Jaya Sri Maha Bodhi was established from
the southern branch of the peepal (or esathu) tree (Ficus
religiosa) in whose shade the Buddha achieved enlightenment. This
branch was brought to Sri Lanka from India in 236 BC by the
Buddhist nun Sanghamitta Maha Theri, through the patronage of King
Ashoka, a convert and powerful supporter of Buddhism – she is often
referred to as his daughter, and accordingly, as a
princess.
So, the Jaya Sri Maha Bodhi is around 2250
years old and has been curated and protected by Buddhist monks and
devotees throughout its life. Such devotion to a tree deserves some
contemplation – certainly the tree is approached with piety for its
connection with the Buddha but the tree is singular, and an
individual in its own right and the achievement in protecting the
tree demonstrates what good people can do.
Buddha’s enlightenment dates from around the
5th century BC and took place near the river Neranjana at Bodh Gaya
in the Bihar State in northern India. The peepal tree was already a
place of devotion, and after the Buddha’s enlightenment was
identified as the Bodhi tree and became a pilgrimage site during
his lifetime. Sanghamitta’s arboricultural endeavours turned out to
be timely as subsequent arboricidal events show.
King Ashoka’s second wife, Tisayaraksita,
jealous of her husband’s love for the Bodhi, had the tree pierced
by poisonous mandu thorns, although the tree subsequently
regenerated. To protect the Bodhi tree, Ashoka built a three-metre
high stone wall (elephants particularly like them). But within
half-a-century the tree was destroyed by King Pushyamitra Shunga
during his persecution of Buddhism. The tree planted to replace the
Bodhi, possibly at that stage a scion from the original, was
destroyed at the beginning of the 7th century AD – this time by
King Sassanka.
Accordingly there is considerable doubt as to
whether the present tree at Bodh Gaya is even a scion of the
original. This tree was planted by Alexander Cunningham, a British
archaeologist in 1881 after the death of its predecessor. Such
doubts over the provenance of the original Bodhi tree at Bodh Gaya
see the Jaya Sri Maha Bodhi at Anuradhapura viewed as the closest
authentic link to the living Buddha and, consequently, as the
preferred for scion wood for establishing the Bodhi trees that are
central to many Buddhist temples in Asia.
While the Bodhi tree is important to
Buddhists, the tree that the Buddha chose to sit under was already
a sacred tree in Hindu doctrine. In the Bhagavad Gita the Lord
Krishna declares that, ‘Of all the trees I am the peepal tree’ and
the peepal is mentioned as one of the names of Lord Vishnu in the
Vishnu Sahasramana. In India sadhus choose them for meditation and
many Hindus still practice pradakshina including circumambulation,
or meditative pacing around peepal trees with an accompanying chant
of ‘vriksha rajaya namah’ (‘salutation to the king of trees’). So
while the Buddha chose the peepal tree perhaps the peepal tree
might also have chosen the Buddha.
Sacred trees and sacred groves aren’t isolated
to Hinduism and Buddhism in human history. The earliest written
chronicles including the Epic of Gilgamesh and the Bible record
both the destruction and the planting of sacred groves. Hiking in
the Simien Mountains of Ethiopia the only stands of trees still
remaining are such sacred groves, including the ‘church forests’
associated with Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo churches and
monasteries. In earlier times such sacred groves were revered by
Agao pagans whose religious gatherings, sacrifices and burials were
associated with the groves. These groves were apparently also
adopted by early Islamic converts.
While the traditions associated with such
groves are disappearing globally alongside the global destruction
of forests and the globalisation of culture, the truth in these
relationships remains relevant. In a post last November Reuters
journalist Dean Yates outlined his experiences following the
development of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder as a war
correspondent. While professional help has been critical Yates
witnesses the solace provided by the ancient trees of the Tasmanian
wilderness.
Trees play a critical role in food, water and
climate security, but they also play a critical role in our
spiritual wellbeing. Our future depends on them.