Bodhi Leaves - Offerings and Reflections from the Buddhist West

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Learn Pali...from Bhikkhu Bodhi!

A complete online Pali course, taught by Bhikkhu Bodhi, is available online at the Bodhi Monastery website.

The description from the website is as follows:

Pali is the language used to preserve the Buddhist canon of the Theravada Buddhist tradition, which is regarded as the oldest complete collection of Buddhist texts surviving in an Indian language. Pali is closely related to Sanskrit, but its grammar and structure are simpler. Traditional Theravadins regard Pali as the language spoken by the Buddha himself, but in the opinion of leading linguistic scholars, Pali was probably a synthetic language created from several vernaculars to make the Buddhist texts comprehensible to Buddhist monks living in different parts of northern India. It is rooted in the Prakrits, the vernacular languages, used in northern India during the Middle period of Indian linguistic evolution. As Theravada Buddhism spread to other parts of southern Asia, the use of Pali as the language of the texts spread along with it, and thus Pali became a sacred language in Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. Pali has been used almost exclusively for Buddhist teachings, although many religious and literary works related to Buddhism were written in Pali at a time when it was already forgotten in India.

This course is designed to help you to learn the basics of Pali grammar and vocabulary through direct study of selections from the Buddha’s discourses. It thus aims to enable you to read the Buddha’s discourses in the original as quickly as possible. The textbook for the course is A New Course in Reading Pali: Entering the Word of the Buddha by James Gair and W.S. Karunatilleke (1998, Motilal Banarsidass Publishers, Delhi, India. ISBN 81-208-1440-1). The Pali grammatical tables were designed by Bhikkhu Nyanatusita.

The course proceeds sequentially through the chapters, or "Lessons," in the textbook, each of which has three parts:

  1. An initial set of readings and an accompanying glossary
  2. Grammatical notes on the forms in the lesson
  3. A set of further readings and a glossary

The lectures will be much more meaningful if the listener obtains a copy of the textbook and studies each lesson before listening to the associated set of lectures. Also, the textbook and lectures assume that the listener has a fundamental understanding of grammar. For those whose who feel that their knowledge of grammar needs refreshing, we recommend Pali Grammar for Students by Steven Collins (2006, Silkworm Books, ISBN 978-974-9511-13-8).

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

query: roguhly how long do you think it would take for 'the average person' to become proficient enough to read and understand the gist of a discourse of the buddha in pali?

El Peregrino said...

Hi Martin, to answer your question, I guess it would depend on many things like what languages you know (should be easy if you speak a North Indian language) or how well you learn languages. Also how often you study, practice, etc.

Pali is supposed to be much easier than Sanskrit and I'm sure with Bhikkhu Bodhi's expert instruction, it won't be very long until you can freely quote the Dhammapada in it's original :)

Anonymous said...

thanks . . . was just curious :-)