In the Buddhist tradition there are many references to the fruit of the emblic
myrobalan. In the , Buddha's knowledge is described in a poetic simile: "O Bhagavan, the entire origination of all types of phenomena throughout time is within the range of your mind, like an ambalan fruit in the palm of your hand". Half an amla fruit was the final gift to the Buddhist
sangha by the great Indian emperor
Ashoka. This is illustrated in the
Ashokavadana in the following verses: "A great donor, the lord of men, the eminent Maurya Ashoka, has gone from being lord of Jambudvipa [the continent] to being lord of half a myrobalan". In
Theravada Buddhism, this plant is said to have been used as the tree for achieving enlightenment, or
Bodhi, by the twenty-first
Buddha, named
Phussa Buddha. In Hinduism, the myrobalan, called the
āmalaka in
Sanskrit, is sacred to all three members of the
Trimurti, the Hindu supreme trinity of
Brahma,
Vishnu, and
Shiva. According to legend, during a religious gathering,
Lakshmi, Vishnu's consort, expressed a desire to worship Shiva, while
Parvati, Shiva's consort, wished to worship Vishnu. Moved by each other's piety, they shed tears upon the earth, from which emerged the first myrobalan trees. The
Amalaka Ekadashi is a Hindu occasion dedicated to Vishnu, venerating the myrobalan. ==See also==