Mahavira

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Mahavira from a manuscript, Gujarat, India, Circa 1411

Mahavira (599-527 B.C.E.) (meaning: "'Great Hero") is a central figure in the religion of Jainism who is revered as the twenty-fourth and most recent Tirthankara ("Crosser of the stream of Samsara"). His philosophical teachings are said to have restored the religion of Jainism and helped to promulgate its central tenets. Mahavira was likely a contemporary of the Buddha (Siddhartha Gautama), and both figures challenged the authority of Vedic Hinduism, especailly the Brahmanical practice of animal sacrifies. Both Mahavira and the Buddha also eventually formed their own monastic communities, which subsequently divided into different sects. The two major schools of Jainism, Śvetāmbaras and Digambaras respectively, dispute much about the life of Mahavira, but share a great deal of common ground concerning his teachings.

Biography

Many details about Mahavira's biography are gleaned from a Jain work called the Acaranga, which is part of the Kalpasutra text (c. 100-200 C.E.). Another early source for Mahavira's life is the "Pillow Scripture" or Uvahanasuya (dates?)

It is said that Mahavira was born in the ancient Kingdom of Vaishali, now a district of Bihar state, India. He died inPavapuri, also in Bihar state. He was known as "Vardhamana" (meaning "increasing") because it is said that his family's wealth grew after his conception. A growth of everything good was also noticed in the kingdom, like the bloom of beautiful flowers.

After his birth, Mahavira allegedly was taken by the Hindu God, Lord Indra to bathe in the celestial milk and perform the ritual befitting a future 'Tirthankara'. He was then returned back to his mother, who had dreamt of fourteen auspicious symbols before giving birth to her son. It was a sign to tell her to prepare for the advent of a great soul. Śvetāmbara sources include further stories associating Mahavira with Indra. The embryo that would become Mahavira was, according to legend, transferred from the womb of a brahman mother (Devānandā) into the womb of Mahavira's kshatriya mother Trisala by the god Indra. The reason for this transfer was two-fold: traditionally, tirthankaras are born in the kshatriya class, and Devānandā's husband expressed a desire for his son to learn the Vedas, an activity not granted esteem in Jain tradition. This association with Indra is disputed by Digambaras.

Being the son of Queen Trisala and King Siddartha (not to be confused with the historical Buddha namedSiddartha Gautama), Mahavira lived the life of a prince. In later Jain literature his parents are described as devotees of Parshva, the twenty-third tirthankara of Jainism. In time he married Yaśodā, a princess, and had a daughter. It is claimed by Jains that Mahavira caused his parents no grief or pain throughout their entire lives. At the age of thirty, following the deaths of his parents, he left his family, gave up his worldly possessions, and spent twelve years as an ascetic. At one point, it is said that Mahavira had more than 400,000 followers, though this figure comes from a later Jain document and may have been exaggerated.

He passed away in 527 B.C.E. at the age of 72. Digambaras dispute the dating of his death as 527 B.C.E., suggesting the date 510 B.C.E. as more accurate. As well, Western scholars favor a dating of 549 B.C.E. to 477 B.C.E., based on a comparison of literary sources. Jains signify Dipavali, the last day of the Hindu and Jain calendars, as the anniversery of his death and, accordingly, the day he attained siddha loka (enlightenment). His birthday is celebrated as Mahavir Jayanti.

A few centuries after Mahavira's death, the Jain religious order (Sangha) grew more and more complex. There were schisms on some minor points, although they did not concern the original, core doctrines as preached by Mahavira. Later generations saw the introduction of ritualistic complexities that some have criticized as almost placing Mahavira and other Tirthankaras on the thrones of Hindu deities.

Awakening and Enlightenment

After renouncing his princely status, Mahavira spent the next twelve and half years in deep silence and meditation seeking to conquer his desires, feelings, and attachments. He carefully avoided harming or annoying other living beings including animals, birds, and plants. Legend tells us, however, that he suffered from the elements, including animals and insects. He also went without food for long periods. It is of note, however, that the earliest sources do not indicate any supernatural obstacles - Mahavira struggles against nature and hostile human beings, but never against demons. His victory over these obstacles and his enduring calm and peaceful character against all unbearable hardships is reflected in his title, Mahavira (a Sanskrit word, meaning very brave and courageous), given to him by his peers (though later attributed to the gods). After this twelve and a half year period, Jains believe that he attained kevala, or perfect enlightenment, in which perfect perception, knowledge, power, and bliss are said to be realized.

Mahavira spent the next thirty years travelling around India teaching the people the central doctrines of Jainism. The ultimate objective of his teaching was to explain how one can attain total freedom from the cycle of rebirth to achieve the permanent blissful state. Mahavira attracted people from all walks of life, rich and poor, kings and commoners, men and women, princes and priests, touchable and untouchable. He organized his followers into a four-fold order, namely monk (Sadhu), nun (Sadhvi), layman (Shravak), and laywoman (Shravika). This order is known as Chaturvidh Jain Sangh.

Mahavira's sermons were orally compiled by his immediate disciples in the Agam Sutras. These Agam Sutras were orally passed on to future generations. In the course of time, many were lost, destroyed, or modified. Approximately one thousand years after the death of Mahavira, it is said that the Agam Sutras were written down on palmleaf paper as a record of his teachings. Śvetāmbara Jains have accepted these sutras as an authentic version of Mahavira's teachings while Digambara Jains use them as a reference prefering to (focus on his example instead? or preferring to use other texts calle dthe what?).

Jainism, according to Jain tradition, existed before Mahavira, and his teachings are believed to be based on those of his predecessors. Thus in Jain thought Mahavira was more of a reformer and propagator of an existing religious order than the founder of a new faith. It is said that he followed the well established creed of his predecessor Parshva. However, Mahavira did rearticulate the philosophical tenets of Jainism to correspond to his times.

Teachings

The teachings of Mahavira, like any religious teacher, were not formulated in an ideological vacuum. The prevailing worldview of his time and place - including ideas of reincarnation, karma, deities and souls - were fully integrated into his philosophy, though interpretted differently to reflect his unique approach to the questions of his culture and era.

Mahavira preached that from eternity, every living being is in bondage of karmic atoms that are accumulated by good or bad deeds. Under the influence of karma, the soul is habituated to seek pleasures in materialistic belongings and possessions, which are the deep rooted causes of self-centered violent thoughts, deeds, anger, hatred, greed, and such other vices. These result in further accumulation of karmas.

To liberate one's self, Mahavira taught the neccesity of right faith (samyak-darshana), right knowledge (samyak-jnana), and right conduct (samyak-charitra'). At the heart of right conduct for Jains lie the five great vows:

  • Nonviolence (Ahimsa)- not to cause harm to any living beings
  • Truthfulness (Satya)- to speak the harmless truth only
  • Non-stealing (Asteya)- not to take anything not properly given
  • Chastity (Brahmacharya)- not to indulge in sensual pleasure
  • Non-possession/Non-attachment (Aparigraha)- complete detachment from people, places, and material things

The five vows are not found in the oldest Jain literature as they are often presented later. Though the concepts are certainly there, and expressed with similar emphasis, the formulation of the five vows as a system was likely not an action of Mahavira; however, the preaching of the importance of these five practices is certainly a teaching of his. We find in even the earliest Jain stories about Mahavira a man living and practicing these five precepts (without explicitly delineating them as a monastic code), prior even to his attaining kevala.

Monks and nuns are held to follow these vows strictly and totally, while the common people may follow the vows as far as their life styles will permit. Mahavira, following his enlightenment, set up a religious community that specifically included male clergy, female clergy, male laity and female laity. This religious community, like its contemporary the Buddhist sangha, did not discriminate based on social class, but rather accepted all that willing to adhere to Jain principles. In the matters of spiritual advancement, as envisioned by Mahavira, both men and women are on an equal footing and were taught by Mahavira that they may equally renounce the world in search of ultimate happiness.

Also found in early Jain works (and thus likely echoes of the teachings of Mahavira) is an emphasis on the independance of the practitioner. Though Mahavira organized a community of believers, he also stressed the idea that the individual was responsible for his or her own salvation.

Significance

Mahavira lived and worked in a time with an already firmly established religious order and system of ethics. Like his contemporary the Buddha, and indeed a great deal of religious innovators, he rejected specific elements of this system and suggested his own. A major addition to Indian thought that can be traced to Mahavira in a great degree is the teaching of ahimsa - non-violence. The prevailing religious tradition of the time was Brahmanic Hinduism. During this phase in the development of Hinduism animal sacrifice was a common ritual. Though not alone, Mahavira protested this action, and this prohibition still exists in the Jain religion. Eventually the act of animal sacrifice fell out of practice in Hinduism, as the idea of ahimsa gained currency in that religion as well.

The religion that Mahavira promulgated continues to survive. The number of adherents worldwide is estimated at approximately three million [1], most of which reside in India. Though Jains are a minority there the religion is widely recognized by both private and public institutions, and the study of Jainism ("Jainology") is a legitimate pursuit in higher circles of education. Certainly the teachings of Mahavira were significant, if only shown by the devotion and interest shown in him and his thought thousands of years after his death.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Dundas, Paul, The Jains. Routledge, London (1992). ISBN 0-415-05183-5
  • Eliade, Mircea, (editor in chief.) Colette Caillat, "Mahavira", The Encyclopedia of Religion. MacMillan, 1987. (pg. 128) ISBN 0028971353
  • Hemacandra, The Lives of the Jain Elders, translated by R. C. C. Fynes. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1998). ISBN 0192832271
  • Upadhye, A. N., ed. Mahavira and His Teachigns. Bombay (1977).

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