danieLion wrote:Search yielded nothing so forgive me if this is redundant:
Are the khandas orginal to the Buddha? Ajaan Geoff says no, but I recall--but can't find the reference just now--reading a non-Buddhist scholar (probably Sue Hamilton) mentioning emerging evidence that the khandas existed in Indian culture before the Buddha.
Has anyone else come across this references or others?
DanieLion

The general position taken by Gombrich and others*, is that the "five skandhas" is a retake on the five fires used in the brahmanic fire sacrifice, turned to an entirely Buddhist meaning, but retaining the brahmanic terminology.
"skandha" has the basic meaning of a "heap", or a "pile", in this case, a pile of firewood. The sacrificer has "five heaps of burning firewood", front, back, left, right and the blazing sun overhead.
This is also why the defilements (klesa) is rooted in the sense of a fire which burns (see the sutra on all is burning); and the metaphor of nirvana with substratum as the five heaps of firewood without fire (nirvana in this very life), and nirvana without substratum as the dispersal of even these (parinirvana, death of the body, etc.) While classic Theravada renders the "substratum" - upadana as "grasping", the sense of the substratum of burning fuel is also present.
* Check Jurewicz, and maybe Wynne, too.
~~ Huifeng