The Buddhist Community
of various sorts in order to handle donations of money and goods
and oversee their running. The canonical Vinaya sources refer
to the office of kappiya-kiiraka (Sanskrit kalpi-kiira), a layman
who makes 'allowable' (kappiya) gifts that would otherwise,
according to the strictures of the Vinaya, not be permissible.
This is relevant especially to donations of.land and money, which
individual monks and nuns are strictly forbidden from accepting
or handling, but which the kappiya-kiiraka could receive and
administer on their behalf.^35 The Sangha could thus become the
effective owner of considerable property, wealth, and resources,
while individual monks also came to exercise rights over pro-
perty which in certain circumstances extended to being able to
leave it to their monastic pupils.^36
A situation where a monk lives in a wealthy monastery effect-
ively enjoying personal rights of ownership over a share of that
monastery's wealth is somewhat removed from the ideal of the
homeless mendicant, wandering from village to village with alms-
bowl and dressed in rag robes retrieved from a dust heap, intent
on his spiritual quest. But we must remember that there were
also monks, perhaps the majority, who lived in more modest small
village monasteries. There were also those, no doubt a small minor~
ity, who continued to be inspired by the ascetic ideal, setting off
for the forest, living in caves, or donning robes made from rags
discarded on rubbish heaps,
In the context of developed Buddhist monasticism, dwell-
ing in the forest or wearing robes made of rags from a dust
heap became two of a set of twelve or thirteen specialized ascetic
practices (dhuta-gu!Ja/dhutmiga) that an individual monk might
undertake for a shorter or longer period.^37 These forest-dwelling
( iira!Jyaka/iiraiiiiika) or rag robe-wearing (parrzsu-!parrzsu-kulikii)
monks are contrasted with the town-dwelling (giima-viisin) monks.
Although the numbers of forest monks may have been relatively
small, their strict practice meant that they attracted the sup~
port of the laity and that they enjoyed considerable prestige and
influence.^38 Ironically this meant that they did not always suc-
ceed in maintaining their ascetic practice and that in ancient Sri
Lanka, for example, monks belonging to nominally Arafifiika