Jātaka: storie animate di saggezza antica

Qui le storie delle vite del Bodhisattva sono animate due volte: prendono forma in illustrazioni, graphic novel e colori, e vengono portate a respirare nel cuore di chi le osserva. Un viaggio visivo tra scimmie sagge, elefanti generosi e principi compassionevoli, dove ogni tratto è un ponte tra Oriente e Occidente, tra parola e immagine.

sabato 11 aprile 2026

Mahāsīlava – The Buried King: The Sovereignty of Non-Violence (Jātaka 51)

 

Scene 51 (Mahāsīlava): The Buried King

The cover image immediately introduces the central paradox: a king, buried up to his neck, still wears his crown and a serene expression. Around him, jackals’ eyes glow in the cemetery darkness, but two ogres kneel in reverence, offering a jeweled sword. The moonlit sky and the white umbrella of sovereignty floating above him symbolize that true authority does not depend on a throne but on inner righteousness. This is the visual synthesis of the entire Jātaka: strength born from the renunciation of strength.

 Mahāsīlava – The Buried King: The Sovereignty of Non-Violence (Jātaka 51)

How a king who lost everything regained his kingdom without fighting – and what it can teach us today

 

YOUTUBE VIDEO (MP4)

 

Watch the animated video with audio: 

 

The video visually traces the nine key moments of the tale, from the court of Benares to the cemetery, from forgiveness to the ironic corporate retelling.

 

 

 Introduction – The Convergence of All Values

 


 A wide scene of the royal court of Benares at golden hour. The king sits on a low throne, distributing alms to beggars, animals, and monks. Six almshouses at the city gates are visible in the background. In the foreground, a shadowy minister whispers to a foreign king.

 This visual introduction reminds us that Jātaka 51 is not an isolated story but the peak of a path (Jātakas 49–60). King Mahāsīlava embodies the Buddhist ideal of *rājā*: not the conqueror, but the giver. The six almshouses represent the six perfections (pāramitā), including generosity (dāna) and patience (khanti). The treacherous minister already alludes to the coming crisis: virtue, in the eyes of the world, always appears as weakness.

 

 Appearance: The King Who Seems Weak

 


 The king in white robes, without armor, stands before the open gate of Benares. Behind him, a thousand warriors beg to fight. Before him, an invading army on elephants hesitates, confused.

 “Seems weak” – this is the perceptual trap into which the king of Kosala falls. Mahāsīlava does not fight not because he cannot, but because he has chosen another logic. In Buddhism, true strength is non-reaction to aggression (akkodha). The image captures the misunderstanding perfectly: enemies see a surrendering king, but his own warriors know that one nod would annihilate the invader. Appearances deceive: non-violence is not passivity, it is a strategy operating on a different plane.



Measure: Betrayal and Silence

 


 Split scene. On the left, the treacherous minister is exiled at night, carrying a bag of gold. On the right, the same minister whispers to a new king, pointing at a map of Benares. In the center, an inset shows Mahāsīlava sitting alone in a dark hall, eyes closed.

  This chapter illustrates Level 2 – Measure. Mahāsīlava does not shout, complain, or waste energy. His silence is a form of sati (mindfulness) applied to politics. Exiling the minister instead of executing him is already an act of non-violence. But the traitor interprets this clemency as weakness and exploits it. The king of Kosala, initially skeptical, sends three waves of raiders – and each time Mahāsīlava sends them back with gifts. The measure of the king’s patience is infinite, and precisely for this reason the enemy finally attacks: not because he is sure to win, but because he cannot comprehend such radical logic.

 

 Mind on the Body: The Cemetery and the Jackals

 


 Nocturnal scene in a misty charnel ground. The king, buried up to his neck, grips a jackal by the throat with his teeth. Other jackals flee in panic. Around him, his thousand ministers are also buried but look at the king with trust.

 This is the most dramatic and deepest moment. Level 3 – Mind on the Body. Buried alive, unable to move, Mahāsīlava feels no anger. He urges his companions toward universal love. Then, when the lead jackal approaches to bite him, the king uses the only free part of his body – his mouth – to grip the animal’s throat. Not to kill, but to immobilize. The jackal, trying to escape, digs up the earth and frees the king. The lesson is extraordinary: even in extreme vulnerability, awareness can turn prey into predator. Fear itself becomes a tool of liberation.

 

Power: The Ogres and the Returned Sword

 

 Dawn in the cemetery. The king, now bathed, dressed in royal robes, and wearing a sword, sits on a stone throne. Two ogres (yakkha) kneel before him, offering a golden bowl and a severed corpse cut in half.

 Level 4 – Power. Here occurs the definitive inversion. The ogres – symbols of chaotic, hungry forces – recognize the king’s justice more than humans do. They serve the one who could arbitrate their dispute over the corpse. And with their magic, the ogres restore to Mahāsīlava all the attributes of power: bath water, robes, food, the sword. The king cuts the corpse into two perfect halves – an act of precise justice, not violence. The sword, taken by the usurper, returns to the rightful sovereign without a single drop of blood being spilled. Power regained not through war but through moral authority.

 

 Forgiveness: The Apex of Sovereignty

 


 Nighttime royal chamber, lit by oil lamps. Mahāsīlava stands by the usurper’s bed, touching his belly with the flat of the sword. The usurper, in tears, reaches out to touch the king’s feet. In the background, the city of Benares celebrates with tiny lamps.

  The apex. The rightful king does not kill the usurper. He wakes him with a flat sword strike, looks him in the eye, and tells him everything. At that point the usurper – who had acted out of greed – recognizes Mahāsīlava’s virtue and begs forgiveness. Not only that: he returns the kingdom and offers himself as guardian. Forgiveness is not weakness: it is the only force that can transform an enemy into an ally. Sovereignty, here, becomes *service*. The king who knew how to forgive now governs with a former enemy who protects him. This is the synthesis of the twin axis “Power vs Forgiveness”.

 

 Conclusion – Sovereignty Possible Today

 


 A contemporary city square with protesters and police. In the center, a person in simple attire sits on a bench, holding a sign that reads “Toil on, my brother” in multiple languages. Around them, social media icons turn into doves. In the sky, a translucent image of King Mahāsīlava smiles.

  What does it mean to be sovereign today, without kingdoms or armies? The Jātaka’s answer is revolutionary: sovereignty is the ability not to react to provocation, to arbitrate disputes instead of arming them, to forgive instead of taking revenge. In contemporary politics, dominated by the spectacularization of conflict, Mahāsīlava reminds us that another way exists. Historical examples – Gandhi, King, Havel – are but reflections of this ancient wisdom. The “buried king” is each of us when, though crushed by circumstances, we retain the clarity not to hate. And in the end, as the king’s concluding verse says: *“Toil on, my brother; still in hope stand fast”* – strive, but with gentle perseverance, because the fruit of patience is excellent.

 

 Ironic Tale – The Buried Manager (Contemporary Version)

 


 A modern office basement. A man in a wrinkled suit is buried up to his neck under stacks of printers and papers. Similar colleagues around him, with laptops and coffee cups. A smartphone live-streams a video. In the background, a LinkedIn influencer flees. Two venture capitalists in hoodies offer a golden iPad.

  The ironic retelling is not a parody but a relevance test. The “Buried Manager” applies the same logic as Mahāsīlava in the corporate world: he does not respond to aggression with aggression, but with a smile and fact-checking. The digital jackals (LinkedIn commentators) flee when exposed. The finance ogres (private equity funds) recognize his justice and restore his power. The happy ending – the usurper begging forgiveness and the traitor condemned to customer service – is obviously ironic, but the truth it carries is serious: in an ecosystem obsessed with brute force, strategic kindness can still surprise and win. Not because it is “smarter”, but because it is the only response that does not fuel the cycle of violence.

 

  

The Buried CEO 

(Or: How I Lost Everything by Being Too Nice and Won It Back by Doing Absolutely Nothing)

 

Chapter 1 – The King of Severance Packages

 

Matteo was a strange CEO. He never fired anyone on the spot, never yelled in board meetings, never launched the "ruthless restructurings" that consultants offered him like candy. Instead, he listened. Worse: he forgave. When he discovered that his deputy, Giampiero, had been having inappropriate relations with the accounting department (i.e., sliding into the intern's DMs on Slack), Matteo didn't press charges. He transferred him with a generous payout and an embarrassingly glowing reference.

 "You're a chicken," whispered the CFO before quitting. "In the corporate world, you eat or get eaten. You're a buffet."

 Giampiero, the treacherous deputy, found a job at a rival startup. And every evening, he told his new boss: "Matteo is weak. He opened six 'active listening' offices instead of buying weapons – sorry, patents – against his enemies. One viral tweet and his empire crumbles."

 

Chapter 2 – The Live-Sepulture on LinkedIn

 

The startup's boss, a certain Omar who called himself "The Disruptor", decided to test the thesis. He sent a troll to post fake news about one of Matteo's projects. Matteo replied with a heart emoji and a "Thanks for the feedback, shall we grab a coffee?" The troll was so confused that he resigned by himself.

 So Omar went for the kill: he launched a hostile takeover, bought up Matteo's debt, and one morning showed up at Matteo's office with a YouTuber in tow. "You're out. Your thousand employees? All fired. Actually, go down to the basement, sit in the chairless open space, and wait for the jackals of social media to finish the job."

 Matteo offered no resistance. In fact, he held the basement door open himself. "My children," he told his employees, "let our hearts be filled with love and charity. And maybe plug your phones into power banks – this livestream is going to be long."

 

Chapter 3 – The Digital Jackals

 

At midnight, the LinkedIn commentators, business journalists, and "fail" influencers arrived in droves. Ready to feast on the company's corpse. First comment: "This is why kindness doesn't pay." Second comment: "Matteo, an incompetent with a nice-guy face."

 But Matteo had a plan. When the lead jackal – a certain successful entrepreneur with 200k followers – approached to deliver the final blow with a post titled "Lessons from a Loser", Matteo responded with a video. In the video, he sat on a broken office chair, smiled, and said: "Hey Luca. You're right. I'm a loser. But tell me: that story about your fund investing in companies later flipped to the Chinese – how did that end? Oh, and your former partners say hi."

 The video went viral. The jackal, caught by the throat in the grip of facts, deleted the post and shut down comments. The pack fled.

 

Chapter 4 – The Ogre Venture Capitalists

 

While Matteo was exiting the basement (he had found a back door leading to the cafeteria, where the vending machine still worked), two private equity funds were fighting over the remains of his company. They couldn't agree. So they went to Matteo.

 "Sir, you are just. You divide the pie."

 Matteo rubbed his hands. "Gladly. But first... can I take a shower? I'm dirty."

 With their financial magic, the funds brought him scented water from a luxury spa, a Zegna suit, and even the lunch prepared for Omar (who had in the meantime been arrested for tax evasion – a minor detail). Then Matteo asked for the most important thing: "Bring me the decree appointing the new CEO."

 They brought it. He signed. Then he cut the company into two equal halves – one for each fund – and kept for himself the role of honorary chairman with veto power.

 

Epilogue – Forgiveness (With a Postscript)

 

That night, Matteo entered Omar's office. Omar was sleeping on his designer chair, still convinced he was the boss. Matteo hit him on the belly with the flat side of an iPad. Omar woke up with a start.

 "How did you get in? The guards? The security doors?"

 "The guards are my former employees you laid off. The security doors I opened with your own fingerprints, collected from the glass you left at the farewell party."

 Omar wept. Swore loyalty. The next morning, in front of everyone, he returned the company to Matteo. The traitor Giampiero was condemned to work forever in customer service for a phone company.

 Matteo sat down in front of his laptop, opened an email, and wrote to his team: "If I had not persevered, I'd still be in the basement. Instead, I learned that non-violence is not weakness. It's just very, very slow. But in the end, trolls die. Patience doesn't."

 And below, his old motto: "Toil on, my brother. And remember to put your phone on airplane mode when they bury you alive."

 

Moral: next time someone tells you that kindness doesn't pay, ask them how many jackals they've turned into lambs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mahāsīlava – The Buried King: The Sovereignty of Non-Violence (Jātaka 51)

  Scene 51 (Mahāsīlava): The Buried King The cover image immediately introduces the central paradox: a king, buried up to his neck, still ...