By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Recount Buddha's life briefly
  • 2Tell the Kisa Gotami story
  • 3Explain the universality of death
  • 4Identify Four Noble Truths
  • 5Connect to Indian Buddhist heritage
💡
Why this chapter matters
Buddhist heritage of India. Famous Kisa Gotami parable. Universal lesson on death and acceptance.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

The Sermon at Benares — Class 10 English (First Flight)

"The world is afflicted with death and decay, therefore the wise do not grieve, knowing the terms of the world." — The Buddha

1. About the Chapter

'The Sermon at Benares' retells the Buddha's first sermon at Benares (modern Varanasi). The piece includes the famous parable of Kisa Gotami, a grieving mother, and the Buddha's teaching about the universality of death and suffering.

Why This Story

  • Foundation of Buddhism
  • Famous parable (Kisa Gotami)
  • Indian heritage (Buddhism began in India)
  • Universal lesson on grief
  • Connects philosophy to daily life

2. About the Buddha

Siddhartha Gautama (c. 563 – 483 BCE)

  • Born a prince in Lumbini (now Nepal)
  • Father: King Suddhodana
  • Mother: Queen Maya
  • Wife: Yasodhara; son: Rahula
  • Lived in luxury until age 29

The Great Departure

At 29, Siddhartha saw:

  1. An OLD MAN
  2. A SICK MAN
  3. A DEAD BODY
  4. An ASCETIC (a monk)

He realised: life has SUFFERING. He left palace to find truth.

Enlightenment

  • Meditated under a BODHI TREE in Bodh Gaya
  • Attained ENLIGHTENMENT — became 'the Buddha' (Awakened One)
  • Founded BUDDHISM

First Sermon

At Sarnath, near Benares (Varanasi), he gave his FIRST SERMON to 5 disciples — this is the famous 'Sermon at Benares'.


3. The Four Noble Truths

The Buddha taught:

  1. Life involves SUFFERING (Dukkha)
  2. Suffering is caused by DESIRE (Tanha)
  3. Suffering can END
  4. The way to end suffering: EIGHTFOLD PATH

4. The Story of Kisa Gotami

Part 1: Kisa Gotami's Loss

Kisa Gotami was a young woman whose ONLY SON died. She was OVERWHELMED with grief.

Part 2: Search for a Cure

She refused to accept his death. She CARRIED the dead body and went from house to house in Benares.

She begged for MEDICINE to bring him back to life. People laughed or pitied her.

Part 3: A Wise Man

An elderly man told her: 'Go to Sakyamuni, the Buddha. He can give you the medicine.'

Part 4: Meeting the Buddha

Kisa went to the Buddha. She asked for medicine to revive her son.

Part 5: The Buddha's Test

The Buddha said: 'Bring me a HANDFUL OF MUSTARD SEEDS.'

Condition: The seeds must come from a house where NO ONE has died — no parent, child, spouse, sibling, friend, anyone.

Part 6: Kisa's Journey

Kisa went from house to house seeking such mustard seeds.

EVERY HOUSE had experienced death:

  • 'My father died last year'
  • 'My beloved son left us last week'
  • 'My wife died long ago'

NO HOUSE was untouched by death.

Part 7: Realisation

Slowly, Kisa REALISED — death is UNIVERSAL. Her grief was not unique. Every family had lost someone.

Part 8: Acceptance

She BURIED her son. She returned to the Buddha and became his disciple.

She had received the BEST MEDICINE — the WISDOM that death is universal.


5. The Buddha's Teaching

Universal Truth

  • Death is UNIVERSAL — no one escapes
  • All living beings are SUBJECT to death
  • This is the LAW of nature

Acceptance

  • Grief is NATURAL but should be ACCEPTED
  • Mourning excessively only adds to suffering
  • WISDOM lies in acceptance

Compassion

  • Grief is shared by ALL — we are NOT alone
  • Compassion comes from understanding shared suffering

Inner Peace

  • True peace comes from ACCEPTANCE, not denial
  • Resisting reality causes more pain
  • Knowing the truth liberates

6. Important Quotes

"All shall die. Beings are powerless against death."

"The world is afflicted with death and decay, therefore the wise do not grieve, knowing the terms of the world."

"Not from weeping nor from grieving will anyone obtain peace of mind."

"He who has overcome all selfish desires shall obtain peace."

"He who seeks peace should pull out the arrow of lamentation, complaint, and grief."


7. Themes

1. Universality of Death

  • Everyone dies; no exceptions

2. Suffering and Acceptance

  • Grief is natural; acceptance brings peace

3. Wisdom

  • True wisdom is realising shared human condition

4. Compassion

  • Shared suffering should unite us in compassion

5. Detachment

  • Buddha teaches: cling less, suffer less
  • Buddha's own journey from prince to enlightened teacher

8. Literary / Religious Significance

Parable

  • Kisa Gotami's story = parable (story with moral lesson)
  • Used in Buddhist teachings worldwide
  • Translated into many languages

Setting

  • Benares = ancient Indian holy city
  • Sarnath = where Buddha first preached
  • Sacred to Hindus AND Buddhists

Style

  • Simple, direct language
  • Stories teach more than abstract philosophy
  • Buddhist teaching tradition

9. Common Mistakes

  1. Buddha brought the son back to life — NO. He taught Kisa to ACCEPT death.

  2. Kisa is the Buddha's wife — NO. Yasodhara was his wife. Kisa was a GRIEVING MOTHER who became disciple.

  3. Mustard seeds were a real cure — NO. The TEST taught Kisa about death's universality.

  4. Buddha = Hindu god — Buddha is the FOUNDER of Buddhism. Hindus also revere him.

  5. Sermon at Benares in Benares city — Actually at SARNATH, near Benares (Varanasi).


10. Lessons / Morals

  1. Death is universal — accept it
  2. Grief shared with others is bearable
  3. Wisdom comes from realising shared truth
  4. Compassion grows from understanding suffering
  5. Inner peace comes from acceptance, not denial

11. Worked Examples

Example 1: Plot

What did the Buddha ask Kisa Gotami to fetch?

  • He asked her to bring a HANDFUL OF MUSTARD SEEDS — but only from a house where NO ONE had died.

Example 2: Theme

What did Kisa learn from her journey?

  • She learned that DEATH IS UNIVERSAL. EVERY house had lost someone. Her grief was not unique. Death is the shared experience of all living beings.

Example 3: Significance

Why is this sermon important?

  • It's the FIRST SERMON of the Buddha at Sarnath. It teaches the Four Noble Truths. It uses the powerful PARABLE of Kisa Gotami to teach death's universality and the need for acceptance.

12. Indian Context

Buddhism in India

  • Founded in India (5th century BCE)
  • Spread to China, Japan, Tibet, Sri Lanka, Southeast Asia
  • ~10 million Buddhists in India today
  • Ladakh, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh — major Buddhist regions

Indian Sites Connected

  • Lumbini — Buddha's birthplace (Nepal)
  • Bodh Gaya — Enlightenment site (Bihar)
  • Sarnath — First sermon (UP)
  • Kushinagar — Death/Mahaparinirvana (UP)

Modern Indian Buddhists

  • Dr. B.R. Ambedkar — converted to Buddhism (1956)
  • Dalai Lama — lives in Dharamshala
  • Buddhist circuit — major tourist/pilgrim route

Indian Philosophy Connection

  • Buddha's teachings overlap with Hindu Upanishads
  • Both emphasize karma, dharma, detachment
  • 'Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam' (world is one family) — similar spirit

13. Conclusion

'The Sermon at Benares' is:

  • A FOUNDATIONAL Buddhist teaching
  • A POWERFUL parable (Kisa Gotami)
  • A universal LESSON on death and acceptance
  • A piece of INDIAN HERITAGE

For Indian students:

  • LEARN about Indian spiritual heritage
  • REFLECT on universal truths
  • DEVELOP wisdom and compassion
  • APPRECIATE Buddhist contributions to Indian culture

Buddha's message endures:

  • ALL die — accept it
  • SUFFERING is universal — share compassion
  • WISDOM brings peace

'The Sermon at Benares' — a small parable, a vast truth.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Buddha's name
Siddhartha Gautama (c. 563-483 BCE)
Sermon site
Sarnath, near Benares (Varanasi)
First disciples
5 monks
Four sights
Old, sick, dead, ascetic
Led to renunciation
Four Noble Truths
Suffering → Cause → End → Path
Parable
Kisa Gotami and mustard seeds
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Buddha revived Kisa's son
He taught her to ACCEPT death — did not revive.
WATCH OUT
Kisa was Buddha's wife
Yasodhara was wife. Kisa was grieving mother.
WATCH OUT
Mustard seeds were real cure
It was a TEACHING device showing death's universality.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Fact
Where did Buddha deliver his first sermon and to whom?
Show solution
✦ Answer: At SARNATH, near Benares (Varanasi). He delivered it to his FIVE first disciples (monks who had earlier deserted him during his ascetic practices).
Q2MEDIUM· Plot
What did the Buddha tell Kisa Gotami to do?
Show solution
Step 1 — Her request. Kisa asked Buddha for medicine to revive her dead son. Step 2 — Buddha's instruction. Bring a HANDFUL OF MUSTARD SEEDS — easily available. Step 3 — The condition. The seeds must come from a house where NO ONE has ever died (no parent, child, spouse, sibling, friend, anyone). Step 4 — Her journey. She went house to house. EVERY HOUSE had experienced death. Step 5 — Realisation. Death is UNIVERSAL — no family escapes it. Her grief is shared. Step 6 — Acceptance. She accepted her son's death, buried him, became Buddha's disciple. ✦ Answer: Buddha asked Kisa to fetch mustard seeds from a house where NO ONE had ever died. Going house to house, she realised every family had lost someone — death is universal. This wisdom helped her accept her son's death and find peace.
Q3HARD· Theme
Explain how Buddha's teaching to Kisa Gotami transforms grief into wisdom.
Show solution
Step 1 — Kisa's initial state. Overwhelmed grief — refused to accept death. Carried dead son seeking impossible cure. Step 2 — Buddha's gentle method. He didn't lecture or scold. He gave a TASK — find mustard seeds from a death-free house. Step 3 — Self-discovery. Kisa learned the TRUTH HERSELF by going house to house. Self-realisation > being told. Step 4 — Universal truth revealed. EVERY house had death stories. She saw her grief was ONE among countless. Step 5 — Transformation of grief. • SHARED grief is bearable • COMPASSION grows from understanding • ACCEPTANCE replaces denial • PEACE comes from truth Step 6 — Buddha's broader teaching. • Suffering is universal (1st Noble Truth) • Clinging causes suffering • Release brings peace • Wisdom is the path Step 7 — Kisa's wisdom. She buried her son. Returned to Buddha as disciple. Became compassionate teacher herself. Step 8 — Lesson for readers. Grief is not bad. CLINGING to grief is bad. Acceptance + compassion = peace. ✦ Answer: Buddha didn't deny Kisa's grief. He gave her a task — find mustard seeds from a death-free house. By going house to house, she discovered that every family had experienced death. This SELF-REALISATION transformed her grief: from isolated suffering to shared human truth. She accepted her son's death, buried him, and became Buddha's disciple. The teaching: grief is universal; acceptance brings peace; compassion grows from understanding shared suffering.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Siddhartha Gautama → Buddha
  • Born c. 563 BCE, Lumbini (Nepal)
  • Saw four sights: old, sick, dead, ascetic
  • Enlightenment under Bodhi tree at Bodh Gaya
  • First sermon: Sarnath, near Benares
  • Four Noble Truths
  • Kisa Gotami: grieving mother
  • Mustard seeds test: from death-free house
  • Every house had death — universal
  • Acceptance > grief; wisdom > denial

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 6-8 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Short2-32Plot, Buddha facts
Long5-61Kisa Gotami essay
Prep strategy
  • Memorise Buddha's life dates
  • Tell Kisa's story fluently
  • Quote Buddha's lines
  • Connect to Indian Buddhist sites

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Buddhist circuit India

Lumbini → Bodh Gaya → Sarnath → Kushinagar — major Indian pilgrimage route.

Dr. B.R. Ambedkar

Indian Constitution architect converted to Buddhism in 1956. Inspired millions.

Mindfulness movement

Modern mindfulness and meditation derive from Buddhist practices originating in India.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Use Buddha's full name (Siddhartha Gautama)
  2. Cite Sarnath specifically
  3. Tell Kisa story with details
  4. Quote Buddha's lines on death

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Read Dhammapada
  • Study Indian Buddhist philosophy
  • Visit Sarnath/Bodh Gaya
  • Compare with Hindu philosophy

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 10 BoardHigh
Religious StudiesHigh

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

It is gentle but unforgettable. Buddha doesn't lecture Kisa; he lets her DISCOVER the truth. By visiting many homes, she SEES that death is everywhere. Self-realisation is more powerful than being told. The method works because it transforms grief into shared compassion.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 20 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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