1. Now at that time a certain Bhikkhunî, when on her death-bed, said: 'After I
am gone, let my set of necessaries 5 belong to the Samgha.' Then the
p. 344
[paragraph continues] Bhikkhus and the Bhikkhunîs disputed as to it,' saying:
'It belongs to us; it belongs to us.'
They told this matter to the Blessed One.
'If, O Bhikkhus, a Bhikkhunî, or a novice under training to become one (a
Sikkhamânâ), when on her death-bed, should say: "After I am gone, let my set of
necessaries belong to the Samgha," then it is the Bhikkhunî-samgha it belongs
to; the Bhikkhu-samgha is not the owner thereof. If a Bhikkhu, O Bhikkhus, or a
novice under training to become one (a Sâmanera), when on his death-bed, should
say: "After I am gone, let my set of necessaries become the property of the
Samgha," then it is the Bhikkhu-samgha it belongs to; the Bhikkhunî-samgha is
not the owner thereof 1'
Footnotes
343:5 Parikkhâro; that is, the eight things over which a member p. 344 of the
Buddhist Order was allowed proprietary rights--the three robes, the alms-bowl,
razor, needle, girdle, and water-strainer.
344:1 By the rule laid down in the Mahâvagga VIII, 27, the set of robes and the
bowl are to be assigned by the Samgha to those that waited on the sick--at least
in the case of Bhikkhus,--and the analogy would doubtless hold good of the
Bhikkhunîs also.
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