The name for state of bliss in Buddhism is Nirvana.
Caste is a Hindu concept, not a Buddhist one. The fact that a person is considered untouchable according to Hinduism has no effect on how long it will take him/her to attain nibbana(nirvana) according to Buddhism.
Enlightened Buddhist
Buddhist
Free from suffering
The object of Buddhism is to escape the cycle of birth and death and to attain enlightenment and Nirvana. This can be done by realizing the intent of the Four Noble Truths and following the Eightfold Pah.
A Buddhist seeks to attain enlightenment. Enlightenment is the understanding of how to live life in a skillful fashion that ends desire and its associated pain. This is done by following the Eightfold Path. Once enlightened a Buddhist may, if he choses, enter Nirvana a state of existence without a sense of personal identity.
Generally Buddhists wish to attain enlightenment. Death after enlightenment is either permanent or not. They might then go onto Nirvana, a selfless (egoless) condition with no goals, or reject Nirvana and return to the cycle of death and rebirth to help others fin d enlightenment,
The ultimate goal of a Buddhist is the attainment of nirvana. Nirvana is a state of consciousness where things such as greed, hatred, and the obsession of "me and mine" do not exist.
"Nirvana." If you are using it in the formal Buddhist sense, you can capitalize it, otherwise lowercase it.
Enlightenment or Nirvana.
nirvana