Located: Bodhgaya is situated 16 Km from Gaya and 105 km
from Patna, Bihar.
Main Tourist Attractions: The Bodhi Tree, Mahabodhi Temple,
Ancient Railings, Animeshlochana, Gaya, The Karan Chaupa cave, Tibetan
Monastery, Myanmar Monastery, Chinese Monastery.
Best Hangouts: The Monasteries
Best Activities: Yoga & Meditation
Best Buys: Tilkuta (a sweet)
Best Time To visit: October to March
Nearest Tourist Destination: Vaishali, Nalanda, Gaya, Patna
About Bodh Gaya
Bodh Gaya is the place where Gautama Buddha attained unsurpassed,
supreme Enlightenment. It is a place which should be visited or
seen by a person of devotion and which would cause awareness and
apprehension of the nature of impermanence".
Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha-to-be, had been dwelling on the banks
of the Nairanjana River with five ascetic followers for six years
practicing austerities. Realising that austerities could not lead
to realisation he abandoned them. His five ascetic companions disgusted
at his seeming failure, deserted him and left for Sarnath.
He then moved towards the village of Senani where he was offered
rice milk by a Brahmin girl, Sujata. Accepting from a grass-cutter
a gift of kusa grass for a mat, the Bodhisattva took a seat under
a pipal tree facing east. Here he resolved not to rise again until
enlightenment was attained.
As Gautama sat in deep meditation, Mara, Lord of Illusion, perceiving
that his power was about to be broken, rushed to distract him from
his purpose. The Bodhisattva touched the earth, calling it to bear
witness the countless lifetimes of virtue that had led him to this
place of enlightenment. When the earth shook, confirming the truth
of Gautama's words, Mara unleashed his army of demons. In the epic
battle that ensued, Gautama's wisdom broke through the illusions
and the power of his compassion transformed the demons' weapons
into flowers and Mara and all his forces fled in disarray.
The historical place at which the Enlightenment took place became
a place of pilgrimage. Though it is not mentioned in the scriptures,
the Buddha must have visited Bodh Gaya again in the course of his
teaching career. About 250 years after the Enlightenment, the Buddhist
Emperor, Ashoka visited the site and is considered the founder of
the Mahabodhi Temple. According to the tradition, Ashoka, as well
as establishing a monastery, erected a diamond throne shrine at
this spot with a canopy supported by four pillars over a stone representation
of the Vajrasana, the Seat of Enlightenment.
Since 1953, Bodhs Gaya has been developed as an international place
of pilgrimage.

Buddhists
from Sri Lanka, Thailand, Burma, Tibet, Bhutan and Japan have established
monasteries and temples within easy walking distance of the Mahabodhi
compound. The site of the enlightenment now attracts Buddhists and
tourists from all over the world.