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Arhat
Arhat (Sanskrit) or arahant (Pali). The word "arahan" literally means "worthy one" (an alternative etymology is "foe-destroyer") and constitutes the highest grade of noble person—ariya-puggala—described by the Buddha as recorded in the Pali canon. The word was used (as it is today in the liturgy of Theravada Buddhism) as an epithet of the Buddha himself as well as of his enlightened disciples.
From: Wikipedia.org
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Arhat - by onmarkproductions.com
Arahant: Pali Buddhist Buddhism Dictionary on Arahant
Arahant - by hanlu.anime.co.za
Arahat, Arahant - by palikanon.com
Arahant in Contemporary Theravada Buddhist Societies: The process of sanctification in Thailand - by Kuramoto Ryosuke
Arahant: Spiritual - Theosophy Dictionary on Arahant
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Banner of the Arahants: Buddhist monks and nuns from the Buddha's time till now - book
Buddhist Images of Human Perfection: The Arahant of the Sutta Pitaka Compared with the Bodhisattva and the Mahasiddha - by Nathan Katz - book
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Does an Arahant Reappear after his Parinibbana? - by translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu
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Experience of an Arahant - by beyondthenet.net
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Forest meditations - book
Forest Meditations - Verses of the Arahant Talaputa Thera - translated from the Pali with some reflections by Bhikkhu Khantipalo
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In the Footsteps of the Wise - by fsnewsletter.net
Is Theravada Buddhism for Arahantship Only? - by U Silananda
Is there a gap betwen the Arahant and the Bodhisatta? - by Dhammajoti
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Nibbana as Living Experience/The Buddha and the Arahant - by Lily de Silva
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State of an Arahant after passing away - by beyondthenet.net
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A Well-Known Monk
A wandering monk walked barefoot everywhere he went, to the point that the soles of his feet eventually became quite thick and leathery. And because he ate very little, he gradually became very frail. Several days often passed between opportunities to brush his teeth, so he usually had bad breath. Therefore, throughout the region, he came to be known as the super-calloused fragile mystic plagued with halitosis.
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