Difference between revisions of "Jainism" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[image:Jainism_logo.png|frame|right|The hand with a wheel on the palm symbolizes the Jain Vow of Ahimsa, meaning non-injury and [[nonviolence|non-violence]]. The word in the middle of the wheel reads "[[ahimsa]]." This logo represents halting the cycle of reincarnation through relentless pursuit of [[truth]].]]
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[[Image:Swastik4.GIF|thumb|225px|right|The [[swastik|fylfot]] (a.k.a. [[swastika]]) is one of the holiest Jain symbols; worshippers often use rice grains to create fylfot symbols around the temple altar]]
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'''Jainism''' (pronounced ''jayn-izm''), traditionally known as '''Jain Dharma''', is a [[dharma|dharmic]] [[religion]] with its origins in the prehistory of [[India]], still practiced today by several million people. Jainism has as its religious ideal the perfection of man’s nature. The universe is seen as being eternal—having no beginning and no end—precluding God from being a creator. Perfection of the individual is achieved through the practice of an ascetic life, without any divine assistance. Jain monastics and lay people follow the same fivefold path of nonviolence (''[[ahinsa]]'', or ''[[ahimsa]]''); [[truth]] ''([[satya]])''; non-stealing ''([[asteya]])''; chastity ''([[brahmacharya]])''; and non-possession or non-possessiveness ''([[aparigraha]])'', but to different degrees.  
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Jain dharma teaches that every living thing is an individual and eternal [[soul]], which is responsible for its own actions. Jains see their faith as teaching the individual to live, think and act in ways that respect and honor the spiritual nature of every living being. Jainism was the first religion to practice ''ahimsa'' (non-violence) as a rule of life. The primary figures of Jainism are the 24 [[Tirthankara]]s (prophets), the first being Rishabhanatha (Rsabhadeva), who according to tradition lived millions of years ago, and the most recent being [[Mahavira]] (599–527 B.C.E.).  
  
'''Jainism''' (pronounced ''jayn-izm''), traditionally known as '''Jain Dharma''', is an ancient religion known since early recorded times as an independent faith and philosophy. Jainism is based more immediately upon the teachings of the prince [[Mahavira]] ([[599 B.C.E.|599]]–[[527 B.C.E.]]), or Lord Mahavira to Jains.   According to belief, Jain philosophy is an understanding and codification of eternal universal truths which at times lapse among humanity, but later reappear through the teachings of human beings who have gained [[enlightenment (concept)|enlightenment]] or omniscience (''Keval Gnan'').  In this part of the universe, in the present cycle of time, the philosophy is believed to have first been given to humanity by [[Lord Rishabha]]. However, archaeological evidence from the [[Indus Valley Civilization]] (c. [[3000]]–[[1500]] [[BC]]) has been cited as attesting to the faith's early existence as shown through seals and other artifacts unearthed since the civilization's discovery in [[1921]].
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==Origins==
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[[Image:mahavir.jpg|thumb|right|225px|[[Mahavira]]]]
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Jainism and [[Buddhism]] were both originally orders of monks outside of Brahmanism. Jainism is at least as old as Buddhism; the oldest Buddhist works mention the Jains as a rival sect, under their old name, Nigantha, and their leader [[Mahavira|Nataputta Varddhamana]]. The Jain canonical books mention the same kings that reigned during [[Buddha]]’s life as contemporaries of Mahavira.<ref>Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, ''Indian Philosophy'', vol. 1 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997, ISBN 0195638190), 168.</ref>
  
==Overview of Jain Dharma==
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The Jains are followers of Vardhamana Mahavira (599–527 B.C.E..) who systematized the doctrine of the three ''tirthankaras'': Rsabha, Ajitanatha, and Aristanemi.<ref>Chandrahar Sharma, ''A Critical Survey of Indian Philosophy'' (Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1992, ISBN 8120803647), 250.</ref> Mahavira was not the founder of Jainism, but a monk who espoused the Jaina creed and became a seer and the last prophet (Tirthankara) of Jainism. His predecessor, Parsva, the second-to-last Tirthankara, is said to have died 250 years before Mahavira. According to ''Uttaradhyayanasutra'', a disciple of Parsva met a disciple of Mahavira, and brought about a union of the old Jainism with that of Mahavira.<ref>Radhakrishnan, 169.</ref>
Jain Dharma teaches that every single living thing is an individual and eternal [[soul]], which is responsible for its own actions. Jains see their faith as teaching the individual to live, think and act in ways that respect and honor the spiritual nature of every living being to the best of one's human abilities. Jains view [[God]] as the unchanging traits of the pure soul, chief among them being Infinite Knowledge, Perception, Consciousness, and Happiness ('Ananta Gnana, Darshan, Chaitanya,' and 'Sukh').  The universe itself is eternal, having no beginning and no end.  (Hence, it is said that Jainism is a religious path which does not include the concept of a [[creator God]]).  
 
  
The primary figures of Jainism are the [[Tirthankara]]s. Jainism has two main variants: [[Digambar]] and [[Shvetambar]]. Jains believe in [[ahimsa]] (or ''ahi'''n'''sa''), [[asceticism]], [[karma]], [[samsara]], and the [[jiva]]. Jain philosophy has many scriptures written over a long period of time. Many Jains consider the primary [[scripture]] to be the ''[[Tattvartha Sutra]]'', or Book of Realities written over 18 centuries ago by the monk-scholar [[Umasvati]] (also known as Umasvami).  
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The Jains believe that their faith has come down to them from antiquity through a series of 24 Tirthankaras, the earliest of whom was Rishabhanatha, whom Jain legends depict as having lived millions of years ago, and the most recent, Mahavira. Therefore Mahavira is not regarded as the founder of Jainism, but as the one who gave a new orientation to Jainism and shaped the modern faith. Parsva, the twenty-third Tirthankara, was a historical personage who lived in the eighth or ninth century B.C.E.<ref>Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan and Charles A. Moore (eds.), ''A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy'' (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1973, ISBN 0691019584), 48.</ref>
  
As part of its stance on [[nonviolence]], Jainism goes beyond [[vegetarianism]]  in that the Jain diet also excludes most [[root vegetable]]s and certain other foods believed to be unnecessarily injurious. Observant Jains do not eat, drink or travel after sunset and always rise before sunrise.  
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Seals and other artifacts from the [[Indus Valley Civilization]] (c. 3000–1500 B.C.E.) have been cited as evidence of the faith's early existence.
  
At approximately 8 to 10 million adherents, Jainism is among the smallest of the [[major world religions]].  Despite their meager number, Jains are said to have stood out for themselves and Jains work in a variety of significant fields, mainly businesses and sciences but also education, the arts, and agriculture. Jains have been an important presence in [[Culture of India|Indian culture]], contributing to [[Indian philosophy]], [[art]], [[architecture]], [[science]]s and last but not least the [[politic]]s of [[Mohandas Gandhi]] which led to [[India's independence movement|Indian independence]]. [[Maharashtra]], [[Rajasthan]] and [[Gujarat]] are likely to have the largest Jain population among Indian states. Another state of India with a relatively large Jain population among its residents is [[Karnataka]]. Outside of India, East Africa (Kenya, Tanzania & Uganda) have large communities. Many Jains migrated from E.Africa to UK, Canada & USA.
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==Tirthankaras==
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Jainists, like Buddhists, do not worship [[God]], but revere instead the [[saint]]s who are believed to have achieved complete liberation from the bondage of earthly life. There are 63 significant figures of Jain legend and story. The most important of these are the 24 ''Tirthankaras'', perfected human beings who appeared as teachers at various times in history and represent the highest religious attainment for the Jains. The Tirthankaras, along with 12 ''cakravartins'' (“world conquerors”), nine ''vasudevas'' (counterparts of Vasudeva, the patronymic of Krishna), and nine ''baladevas'' (counterparts of Balarama, the elder half-brother of Krishna), constitute the 54 ''mahapurusas'' (“great souls”), to which were later added nine ''prativasudevas'' (enemies of the vasudevas). Other, more minor, figures include nine ''naradas'' (counterparts of the deity Narada, the messenger between gods and humans), 11 rudras (counterparts of the Vedic god Rudra, from whom Siva is said to have evolved), and 24 ''kamadevas'' (gods of love), all of which show Hindu influences. There are also four groups of gods, the ''bhavanavasis'' (gods of the house), the ''vyantaras'' (intermediaries), the ''jyotiskas'' (luminaries), and the ''vaimanikas'' (astral gods). These deities were assimilated from ancient Indian folk religion.
  
Jainism has a large following in the Indian region of [[Punjab]], especially the town of [[Ludhiana]]. There were many Jains in [[Lahore]] (Punjab's historic capital) and other cities before the [[Partition of India|Partition]] of [[1947]]. Many then fled to the Indian section of Punjab.
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==Jainism Today==
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At a few million adherents, Jainism is among the smallest of the major world religions. [[Maharashtra]], [[Rajasthan]] and [[Gujarat]] are likely to have the largest Jain population among Indian states. Another state of India with a relatively large Jain population among its residents is [[Karnataka]]. Outside of India, East Africa ([[Kenya]], [[Tanzania]] and [[Uganda]]) has significant communities. Many Jains migrated from East Africa to the [[United Kingdom]], [[Canada]] and the [[United States]].
  
===Digambaras and Shvetambaras===
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Jainism has a large following in the Indian region of [[Punjab]], especially the town of [[Ludhiana]]. There were many Jains in [[Lahore]] (Punjab's historic capital) and other cities before the [[Partition of India|Partition]] of 1947. Many then fled to the Indian section of Punjab.
It is generally believed that the 2 major [[sects]] of Jainism trace their origin to events that occurred about ~200 years after the death of [[Mahavira|Mah&#257;v&#299;r]]. [[Bhadrabahu]], chief of the Jain [[monk]]s, foresaw a period of famine and led all who would follow him (~12,000 people), to [[South India|southern India]]. Twelve years later, they returned to find that [[Svetambar]] sect had arisen. The followers of Bhadrabahu became known as the [[Digambar]] sect or the [[Digambara]]s.
 
  
However the historians have noted that there was no clear division until 5th century. The Valabhi council of 453 resulted in editing and compilation of scriptures of the Svetambar tradition.
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The Jain rituals for marriage and other family rites are distinct and uniquely Indian. Jain rituals are elaborate and include offerings of symbolic objects, with the Tirthankaras being praised in chant. Jains have few core symbols. One Jain symbol incorporates a wheel on the palm of the hand. The holiest one is a simple unadorned [[swastika]] or svastika.
  
Excavations at Mathura have revealed many [[Kushana]] period Jain idols. In all of them the Tirthankaras are represented without clothes. Some of them show monks with only one piece of cloth which is wrapped around the left arm. They are identified as belonging to the ardha-phalaka sect mentioned in some texts. The [[Yapaniaya]] sect is believed to have have originated from the Ardha-phalakas. They followed Digambara practice of nudity, but held several beliefs like the Svetambaras.
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==Digambar and Shvetambar Sects==
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Jainism has two main variants: [[Digambar]] (the naked) and [[Shvetambar]] (wearers of white cloths). The rule of wearing white cloths or being naked applies only to the highest monks and not to laymen or inferior monks.
  
==Universal History and Jain Cosmology==
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It is generally believed that the two major [[sect]]s of Jainism, Digambar and Shvetambar, trace their origin to events that occurred about two hundred years after the nirvana of [[Mahavira|Mah&#257;v&#299;r]]. [[Bhadrabahu]], chief of the Jain [[monk]]s, foresaw a period of famine and led about 12,000 people to [[South India|southern India]]. Twelve years later, they returned to find that the [[Svetambar]] sect had arisen. The followers of Bhadrabahu became known as the [[Digambar]] sect. Historians have noted that there was no clear division until the 5th century, when the Valabhi council of 453 resulted in editing and compilation of scriptures of the Svetambar tradition.
According to Jain beliefs, the [[universe]] was never created, nor will it ever cease to exist. It is eternal but not unchangeable, because it passes through an endless series of alternations or swings. Each of these upward or downward swings is divided into six world ages ([[yugas]]). The present world age is the fifth age of one of these "swings," which is in a downward movement. These ages or "swings" are known as "AARO" as in "''Pehelo Aaro''" or First Age, "''Beejo Aaro''" or Second Age and so on. The last one is the "''Chhatho Aaro''" or Sixth Age. All these ages have fixed time durations of thousands of years.
 
  
When this reaches its lowest level, even Jainism itself will be lost in its entirety. Then, in the course of the next upswing, the Jain religion will be rediscovered and reintroduced by new leaders called ''Tirthankaras'' (literally "Crossing Makers" or "Ford Finders"), only to be lost again at the end of the next downswing, and so on.  
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The two sects generally agree on all principles of Jainism, but the Digambaras have unique religious ceremonies and a different ecclesiastical and literary history from the Shvetambar. The Digambar are differentiated by certain tenets, such as the assertion that perfect saints such as the Tirthankaras live without food, that a monk who owns property and wears clothes cannot achieve ''Moksa'' (liberation), that no woman can achieve Moksa (without being born again as a man), and that the original canon of Mahavira’s teachings is lost. Each sect claims that it maintains the original tradition of Jainism, and that the other is an offshoot dating to around 80 C.E. The [[Sanskrit]] commentaries of the Digambara go back further than those of the Shvetambar. About 84 different schools of Jainism, called ''gacchas'', developed, differing from one another in small details of conduct; the most important was the Kharatara Gaccha
  
In each of these enormously long alternations of time there are always twenty-four Tirthankaras. In the current world age, the twenty-third Tirthankar was [[Parshva]], an [[ascetic]] and teacher, whose traditional dates are [[877 B.C.E.|877]]-[[777 B.C.E.]], i.e., 250 years before the passing of the last Tirthankar Lord Mahavira in [[527 B.C.E.]].  Jains regard him and all Tirthankars as a reformer who called for a return to beliefs and practices in line with the eternal universal philosophy upon which the faith is said to be based.
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Excavations at Mathura have revealed many [[Kushana]] period Jain idols. In all of them the Tirthankaras are represented without clothes. Some of them show monks with only one piece of cloth which is wrapped around the left arm. They are identified as belonging to the Ardha-phalaka sect mentioned in some texts. The [[Yapaniaya]] sect is believed to have originated from the Ardha-phalakas. They followed Digambara practice of nudity, but held several beliefs like the Svetambaras.
  
The twenty-fourth and final Tirthankar of this age is known by his title, [[Mahavira|Mah&#257;v&#299;r]], the Great Hero ([[599 B.C.E.|599]]-527 B.C.E.). He too was a wandering ascetic teacher who attempted to recall the Jains to the rigorous practice of their ancient faith.
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== Jain History of the Universe and Cosmology==
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According to Jain beliefs, the [[universe]] was never created, nor will it ever cease to exist. It is eternal but not unchangeable, because it passes through an endless series of cycles. Each of these upward or downward cycles is divided into six world ages ''([[yugas]])''. The present world age is the fifth age of one of these "cycles," which is in a downward movement. These ages are known as ''Aaro'', as in ''Pehelo Aaro'' (first age), ''Beejo Aaro'' (second age) and so on until the ''Chhatho Aaro'' (sixth age). All these ages have fixed time durations of thousands of years.
  
Jains believe that reality is made up of two eternal principles, [[jiva]] and [[ajiva]]. Jiva consists of an infinite number of identical spiritual units; ajiva (that is, non-jiva) is matter in all its forms and the conditions under which matter exists: time, space, and movement.
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When this cycle reaches its lowest level, even Jainism itself will be lost in its entirety. Then, in the course of the next upswing, the Jain religion will be rediscovered and reintroduced by new leaders called ''Tirthankaras'' (literally "Crossing Makers" or "Ford Finders"), only to be lost again at the end of the next downswing.  
  
Both jiva and ajiva are eternal; they never came into existence for the first time and will never cease to exist. The whole world is made up of jivas trapped in ajiva; there are jivas in rocks, plants, insects, animals, human beings, spirits, et cetera.
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In each of these enormously long alternations of time there are always twenty-four Tirthankaras. Jains believe that [[Lord Rishabha]] was the first human to receive the philosophy in the present cycle. The twenty-third Tirthankar was [[Parshva]], an [[asceticism|ascetic]] and teacher, whose traditional dates are 877-777 B.C.E., 250 years before the passing of the last Tirthankar Lord Mahavira in 527 B.C.E. Jains regard him and all Tirthankars as a reformer who called for a return to beliefs and practices in line with the eternal universal philosophy upon which the faith is said to be based.
  
Any contact whatsoever of the jiva with the ajiva causes the former to suffer. Thus the Jains believed that existence in this world inevitably means suffering. Neither social reform nor the reform of individuals themselves can ever stop suffering. In every human being, a jiva is trapped, and the jiva suffers because of its contact with ajiva. The only way to escape from suffering is for the jiva to completely escape from the human condition, from human existence.  
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The twenty-fourth and final Tirthankar of this age is known by his title, [[Mahavira|Mah&#257;v&#299;r]], the Great Hero (599-527 B.C.E..E.). He too was a wandering ascetic teacher who attempted to recall the Jains to the rigorous practice of their ancient faith.
  
[[Karma]] and [[reincarnation|transmigration]] keep the jiva trapped in ajiva. Achieving release from the human condition is difficult. The Jains believe that the jiva continues to suffer during all its lives or reincarnations, which are of an indefinite number. They believe that every action that a person performs, be it good or evil, opens up channels of the senses (sight, hearing, touch, taste and smell), through which an invisible substance, karma, filters in and adheres to the jiva within, weighing it down and determining the conditions of the next reincarnation.
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==Canonical Literature==
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Near the end of the fourth century B.C.E., a council met at Pataliputra for the purpose of fixing the Jain canon. Its final form, however, was established at the Council of Valabhi, presided over by Devardhi around 454 C.E.<ref>Radhakrishnan, 288.</ref> There are 41 ''Sutras'', including eleven ''Angas'', 12 ''Upāngas'', five ''Chedas'', five ''Mǖlas'', and eight miscellaneous works; a number of ''Prakirnakas'' (unclassified works); 12 ''Niryuktis'' (commentaries); and the ''Mahābhāsya'', or great commentary.  
  
The consequence of evil actions is a heavy karma, which weighs the jiva down, forcing it to enter its new life at a lower level in the scale of existence. The consequence of good deeds, on the other hand, is a light karma, which allows the jiva to rise in its next life to a higher level in the scale of existence, where there is less suffering to be endured. However, good deeds alone can never lead to release.
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Many Jains consider the primary [[scripture]] to be the ''[[Tattvartha Sutra]]'', or ''Book of Realities'', written over eighteen centuries ago by the monk-scholar [[Umasvati]] (also known as Umasvami).
  
<div style="float:right;border:1px;border-style:dotted;width:156px;padding:5px;margin-left:5px">
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According to the Digambara, these texts were first written down in 57 C.E., when religious teachers were not available and the only source of information was what people could remember about the sayings of Vardhamana and the Kevlins. Their original language as Ardha-Māgadhi, but after the Christian era, [[Sanskrit]] became more popular.<ref>Radhakrishnan, 289.</ref>
[[image:Jain-swastika.jpg]]
 
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The holiest Jain symbol is the right facing  [[swastika]], or svastika, shown above.  
 
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Commonly, Jain worshippers also use rice grains to create svastika symbols around the temple altar.
 
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Left facing swastikas are not used in the Jain tradition.
 
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The way to [[moksha]] (release or liberation) is withdrawal from the world. Karma is the cause-and-effect mechanism by virtue of which all actions have inescapable consequences. Karma operates to keep the jiva chained in an unending series of lifetimes in which the jiva suffers to a greater or lesser extent. Thus the way of escape must involve an escape from karma, the destruction of all karma and the avoidance of new karma.  
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In addition to the canons and commentaries, the Svetambara and Digambara traditions have produced a large body of [[literature]], written in several [[language]]s, in the areas of [[philosophy]], [[poetry]], [[drama]], [[grammar]], [[music]], [[mathematics]], [[medicine]], [[astronomy]], [[astrology]], and [[architecture]]. The epics ''Cilappatikaram'' and ''Jivikacintamani'', which are important works of early postclassical [[Tamil]] literature, were written from a Jain perspective. The ''Adipurana'' of the Jain lay poet Pampa is the earliest extant piece of ''mahakavya'' (“high poetic”) Kannada literature. Jainas were similarly influential in the Prakrit languages, Apabhramsa, Old [[Gujarati]], and, later, [[Sanskrit]].
  
Then, at death, with no karma to weigh it down, the jiva will float free of all ajiva, free of the human condition, free of all future embodiments. It will rise to the top of the universe to a place or state called [[Siddhashila]], where the jiva, identical with all other pure jivas, will experience its own true nature in eternal stillness, isolation and noninvolvement. It will be totally free. The way to burn up old karma is to withdraw from all involvement in the world as much as possible, and close the channel of the senses and the mind to prevent karmic matter from entering and adhering to the jiva.
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==Jainism, Buddhism and Hinduism==
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Jainism, [[Buddhism]] and [[Hinduism]] have a set of concepts in common, such as ''[[karma]]'' (merit), ''[[dharma]]'' (duty), ''[[yoga]]'' (ascetic discipline) and ''yajna'' ([[sacrifice]] or [[worship]]) that permit discourse among them. Jainism shares a number of its characteristics with Buddhism; both deny the existence of an intelligent first cause, worship deified [[saint]]s, have celibate clergy, and think it sinful to take the life of any animal. The founders of both religions were men who made themselves perfect. There are many coincidences between the two religions; [[Buddha]] and [[Mahavira]] were contemporaries and died almost at the same time. They share the same holy lands, and both claim to have been patronized by the Maurya princes. Though some Western scholars have claimed that one is a sect or an offshoot of another, Hindu scholars have always regarded them as two distinct religions. It has been conclusively established that Vardhamana was a historical person distinct from Gautama Buddha.<ref>Radhakrishnan, 292.</ref>
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Jainism does not accept the authority of the [[Veda]]. The Jain belief that all living things have souls was a protest against the Hindu tradition of making sacrifices to propitiate God. Jainism believes that there is no god who is responsible for the sorrows of life, and that the way to escape misery is through inward and outward austerity. Jainism accepts Vedic concepts of realism.<ref>Radhakrishnan, 294.</ref>
  
S. Vernon McCasland, Grace E. Cairns and David C. Yu describe Jain cosmology after the following manner:
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==Jiva and Ajiva==
:"In Jain tradition, the first teacher of the religion, Rishabha, lived in the third period of Avasarpini, during which half of the world cycle things are getting worse. Since evil had begun to be found, a teacher called a Tirthankara was needed in order for people to cope with the problems of life.  In the fourth period, evils proliferated such that twenty-three more Tirthankaras came into the world to teach people how to defeat evil and achieve mokasha.  The present time, part of the fifth period, is 'wholly evil.' Now, men live no longer than 125 years, but the sixth epoch will be even worse.  'Man's life span will be only sixteen to twenty years and his height will be reduced to he size of a dwarf. . . . But then the slow upward movement of the second half of the world cycle, Utsarpini, will begin.  There will be steady improvement until, in the sixth era, man's needs will be fulfilled by wishing trees, and man's height will be six miles, and evil will be unknown.' However, eventually things will degenerate again, with a repeat of Avasarpini; Usarpini will come again afterwards, in a neverending cycle, according to Jain cosmology." (McCasland, Cairns, and Yu, ''Religions of the World'', New York: Random House, 1969: pages 485-486)
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Jains believe that reality is made up of two eternal principles, ''[[jiva]]'' (living) and ''[[ajiva]]'' (non-living). ''Jiva'' consists of an infinite number of identical spiritual units; ''ajiva'' (that is, non-''jiva'') is matter in all its forms and the conditions under which matter exists: time, space, and movement. ''Jiva'', the life-principle or soul, is distinct from the body and is not the product or property of the body. Both ''jiva'' and ''ajiva'' are eternal; they never came into existence for the first time and will never cease to exist. ''Jivas'' are classified by the number of sense organs they possess; plants belong to the lowest class because they possess only the sense of touch; worms possess touch and taste; vertebrates possess all five sense organs. Human beings, denizens of hell, and liberated souls possess an additional, inner sense organ, ''manas'', by virtue of which they are able to reason ''(samjnin)''. The four elements, earth, water, air and fire, are animated by souls; particles of earth are the bodies of elementary souls called earth-lives.<ref>Surendranath Dasgupta, ''A History of Indian Philosophy, Vol. I'' (Delhi, Motilal Banarsidass, 1973, ISBN 8120804120), 190.</ref>
  
==Beliefs and practices==
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Consciousness is the essence of the self (or soul), and its manifestations are perception (simple apprehension) and intelligence (conceptual knowledge). Reality is external and is perceived through the senses.<ref>Radhakrishnan and Moore, 250.</ref>
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On the one hand, there are the monks, who practice severe asceticism and strive to make this birth their last. On the other hand, there are the lay people, who pursue less rigorous practices, striving to attain rational faith and do good deeds in this birth. Due to the strict ethics embedded in Jainism, the laity must choose a profession and livelihood that does not involve violence to self and other living beings.
 
  
In their effort to attain their highest and most exalted state of [[beatification]] ([[Siddhatva]]), which is the permanent release of the jiva from all involvement in worldly existence, the Jains believe that no spirit or divine being can assist them in any way. The Jains consider that [[gods]] cannot help the jiva to obtain release. This has to be achieved by individuals through their own efforts. In fact, the angels cannot even gain their own release until they are reincarnated as humans and undertake the difficult actions of removing the karmas.
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==Bondage and Liberation==
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[[Karma]] is the link which ties the soul to the body, and the cause of bondage and sorrow. Jains believe that every action that a person performs, be it good or evil, opens up channels of the senses (sight, hearing, touch, taste and smell), through which an invisible material substance, karma, filters in and adheres to the ''jiva'' within, weighing it down and determining the conditions of the next reincarnation. Ignorance of truth and four passions of anger, greed, pride and delusion attract the flow of karmic matter which obscures the radiance of the soul.  
  
The ethical code of Jainism is taken very seriously. Summarized in the Five Vows, they are followed by both lay people and monastics. These are:
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The way to deliverance is through the three jewels of right faith (belief in real existence), right knowledge (knowledge of real nature without doubt or error) and right conduct (the practice of the five virtues).<ref>Radhakrishnan and Moore, 250.</ref> Through them, the flow of karma into the soul is stopped, and existing karma is discharged. When the last particle of karma has been exhausted, “the partnership between soul and matter is dissolved,” and the soul achieves infinite faith, knowledge, bliss and power. It then transcends the cycle of earthly existence ''([[samsara]])'' and goes to a place or state called [[Siddhashila]], where the ''jiva'', identical with all other pure ''jivas'', experiences its own true nature in eternal stillness, isolation and noninvolvement and dwells in eternal bliss.  
  
#Nonviolence ([[ahinsa]], or [[ahimsa]])
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==Theory of Knowledge==
#Truth ([[satya]])
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The Jains classify knowledge into immediate ''(aparokşa)'' and mediate ''(parokşa)'' knowledge. There are two types of mediate knowledge:
#Non-stealing ([[asteya]])
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*''Mati'', ordinary cognition based on normal sense perception. This includes remembrance ''(smirti)''; recognition ''(samjñã, prtyabhiñã)''; induction based on observation (''curita'', ''tarka''); and deductive reasoning ''(abhinibodha, anumãna)''. Mati is sometimes distinguished into three types: perception ''(upalabdhi)'', memory ''(bhãvanã)'', and understanding ''(upayoga)''. ''Mati'' is knowledge acquired by means of the senses ''(indriyas)'' and the mind ''(anindriya)'', and is always preceded by some kind of perception.<ref>Radhakrishnan, 294.</ref>
#Chastity ([[brahmacharya]])
+
#Non-possession or Non-possessiveness ([[aparigrah]])
+
*''Shruta'', or ''Sruti'', knowledge derived through signs, symbols or words. ''Mati'' gives knowledge by acquaintance; ''sruti'' gives knowledge by description. There are four kinds of shruta: association ''(labhdi)'', ''bhavana'' (attention), understanding ''(upayoga)'', and aspects of the meaning of things ''(naya)''.<ref>Radhakrishnan, 295.</ref>
  
For lay people, 'chastity' means confining sexual experience to the marriage relationship. For monks/nuns, it means complete celibacy. Nonviolence involves being strictly vegetarian. The Jain is expected to follow the principle of non-violence in all his/her thoughts, words and deeds. There are some Jains who wear masks over their mouths and noses to avoid any possibility of breathing in tiny insects.
+
Immediate knowledge is categorized into three types:
 +
*''Avadhi'', clairvoyance, or direct knowledge of things through time and space.
 +
*''Manahparyāya'', telepathy, direct knowledge of the thoughts of others.
 +
*''Kevala'', omniscience unlimited by time or space, prefect knowledge comprehending all substance and their modifications. This knowledge can only be felt and not described, and is possible only for purified souls free from bondage.<ref>'Radhakrishnan, 295.</ref>
  
[[Mahatma Gandhi]] was deeply influenced by the Jain emphasis on a peaceful, non-harming way of life which is common to the Jain philosophy and made it an integral part of his own philosophy.
+
These five types of knowledge are “right knowledge.” There are also three types of “wrong knowledge:” doubt ''(samshaya)'', mistake ''(viparyaya)'', and wrong knowledge through indifference ''(anadhyavasaya)''.<ref>Sharma, 49.</ref> Only one of these eight kinds of knowledge is active at a given moment.  
  
The Jain rituals for marriage and other family rites are distinct and uniquely Indian. Jains have built temples where images of their Tirthankaras are venerated. Jain rituals are elaborate and include offerings of symbolic objects, with the Tirthankaras being praised in chant.
+
Knowledge of a particular thing is also divided into two types: knowledge of a thing as it is ''(pramāna)'' and knowledge of a thing in its relation to other things ''(naya)''. ''Naya'' is the viewpoint from which a statement is made about a thing. It includes partial knowledge about the innumerable aspects of a thing, and judgment based on this partial knowledge.<ref>Sharma, 49.</ref>
  
Jains have few core symbols. One Jain symbol incorporates a wheel on the palm of the hand. The holiest one is a simple unadorned [[swastika]] or svastika.
+
===Realistic Pluralism (Anekantavada)===
 +
Jain metaphysics is a realistic and relativistic pluralism. Matter ''(pudgala)'' and spirit ''(jiva)'' are seen as separate and independent realities. There are innumerable material atoms, and innumerable individual souls, and each of these possesses an infinite number of characteristics of its own.<ref>Sharma, 51.</ref> Every object possesses innumerable positive and negative characteristics. The substance ''(dravya)'' of a thing possesses all its qualities and modes.<ref>''Tattvaarthasutra'' V, 37.</ref> The permanent and essential qualities of a substance are called attributes ''(guna)'', and the changing and accidental qualities are called modes ''(paryāya)''.  
  
===Jain Ethics===
+
===Relativity of Knowledge ''(Syadvada)'' ===
Jainism is an ancient religious system, as old as Hinduism and Zoroastrianism. It was founded by Rishabh Dev, a minor deity in Rig Veda. Subsequently it was expounded by a line of 23 other teachers. The last and 24th was Vardhaman a near contemporary of Lord Buddha. Vardhaman is also called Lord Mahavir by Jains and Hindus alike. Mahavir means the great brave one, who had conquered fear, lust, anger etc.
+
An ordinary person cannot know all the qualities of a particular thing; to do so would be to become omniscient. The nature of reality is indeterminate and infinitely complex, and human knowledge of it at any given moment is necessarily limited to only certain aspects. The infinite aspects of reality are all relative; therefore all judgments are relative, conditional and limited. It is incorrect to say that anything is absolutely true or absolutely untrue.
  
Jainism never was in clash with Hinduism for ascendancy, and like Hinduism, does NOT accept male converts. Women can be accepted through marriage with a Jain. A Jain woman marrying a Hindu, can continue to be treated as a Jain.
+
==Ethics==
 +
[[Image:Mahavratas.jpg|thumb|250px|Five Mahavratas of Jain ascetics]]
 +
In the Jain community there are monks and nuns, and laymen and laywomen. All follow the same fivefold spiritual discipline; monks and nuns are differentiated from lay people only by the degree to which they embody this discipline. Monks and nuns strive to make this birth their last by practicing severe [[asceticism]], while the lay people pursue less rigorous practices, striving to attain rational [[faith]] and do good deeds in this birth. The Five Vows of the monastics are called Great Vows ''(maha-vrata)'' and those of the laity are called Small Vows ''(anu-vrata)''. The Five Vows are:
  
Jainism developed a coherent philosophy which could hold its own against the Hindu schools and susrquently against the lelentless enquiry of modern western philosophy
+
#Non-violence (''[[ahinsa]]'', or ''[[ahimsa]]'')
+
#Truth ''([[satya]] )''
The Jain ethics are so interwoven with the religion, at least I cant determine where one ends and the begins. Second, there has been so much mutual influence between Hindu and Jain ethics it is hard to determine where one was influenced by the other. Therefore any discussion of ethics of ethics without religion is difficult, but I have attempted to segregate them.
+
#Non-stealing ''([[asteya]])''
 +
#Chastity ''([[brahmacharya]])''
 +
#Non-possession or Non-possessiveness ''([[aparigrah]])''
  
===Theory of bondage===
+
For lay people, [[chastity]] means confining [[human sexuality|sexual experience]] to the [[marriage]] relationship; for monks and nuns, it means complete [[celibacy]]. Non-possessiveness for lay people means merely being content with what one has; for the monastics it means having almost no possessions at all, not even clothing, and begging for food.<ref>Sharma, 66.</ref> Non-violence involves being strictly [[vegetarianism|vegetarian]] and studiously striving to avoid harming any living thing. The Jain diet excludes most [[root vegetable]]s and certain other foods believed to be unnecessarily injurious.
This is actually a restatement of the Law of Karma, which runs through all Indian religions and philosophy. Only detailed interpretations are different.
+
{{readout||left|250px|The understanding and implementation of ''[[ahimsa]]'' (non-violence) is more comprehensive in Jainism than in any other religion}}
Jainism treats everything as an object composed of different  substances. Time and space too are substances, so is the soul and life force. Animate objects contain Jiva, life force, different from the atma [soul], which is inherently perfect. And has infinite potentialities within itself.
+
The understanding and implementation of ''ahimsa'' is more radical and comprehensive than in any other religion. Observant Jains do not eat, drink or travel after sunset and always rise before sunrise. Water must not be drunk after dark, to avoid the possibility of accidentally swallowing some small insect. Some Jains wear masks over their mouths and noses to avoid any possibility of breathing in tiny insects. Jains are expected to follow the principle of non-violence in all of his or her thoughts, words and deeds. The laity must avoid professions which involve [[violence]] to the self or other living beings, such as [[agriculture]]; consequently many Jains are involved in commerce.  
Bondage in Indian philosophy means the shackles of birth/death/birth cycle.
 
The Karma the totality of the past life of a soul determines it present status.
 
This position is accepted all Indian philosophies.
 
Jainism holds that that soul with its passions or Karmic forces, as the organizer of the body and mind and is the efficient cause. Matter is the material cause.
 
Bondage is caused by passions which are anger, pride, infatuation, and greed. [Hindu philosophies recognize unbridled sensual pleasures as another source of passion].
 
'''Liberation'''
 
  
Bondage, of course, leads to the method of breaking it. The passions, though natural, arise out of ignorance of real nature of soul and physical world. Ignorance can be removed by careful study of the teachings of liberated teachers. So far there is no mention of any religion at all.
+
The Jains believe that the highest and most exalted state of [[beatification]] ''([[Siddhatva]])'', the permanent release of the ''jiva'' from all involvement in worldly existence, can only be achieved by individuals through their own efforts. No spirit or god can assist the ''jiva'' to obtain release.
[If you feel like it, you can use Moses as the teacher]
 
  
A faith has to be established in the teacher based on his ethics, liberation status, internal consistency, a certain minimum level of reason and logic.
+
[[Mohandas K. Gandhi]] was deeply influenced by Jain ethical principles, and made the doctrine of ''ahimsa'' (non-violence) an integral part of his own philosophy and a method of political action.
Jains consider their 24 Tirthankars as the liberated souls and qualifying as efficient teachers. [They don’t dispute your right to accept any teacher(s), and still be liberated from bondage, but then you will not be Jain].
 
The three gems of Jainism are right faith, right knowledge and right conduct. These have been interpreted as:
 
  
===Right knowledge and faith===
+
Jainism asserts that [[absolutism]] (especially [[moral absolutism]]) leads to fanaticism and violence, and therefore supports tolerance among beliefs, claiming that no single belief holds truth exclusively.
You can pursue any field of knowledge, flowing from belief the same is good for you and overall humanity. For that you have to have right knowledge. Surely, if you want to be an astromer, theology is  not the right knowledge. Then whatever the field of your choice, you have to accept its discipline.
 
  
===Right conduct===
+
==Jain Prayer==
Good conduct is defined, briefly, as doing what is beneficial to others and refraining from doing the harmful. For this one must take (1) Five great vows (2)Practice extreme care in day to day business so that harm is avoided to every life (3) Practice restraint in thought, speech and physical action (4)Practice Dharma of ten kinds namely forgiveness, humility, straightforwardness i.e. absence of deceit, truthfulness, cleanliness, self restraint, austerity, self sacrifice, non –attachment to worldly wealth [does not mean shunning enjoying it], celibacy. (5) Meditate on truth (6) Conquer all pains and discomforts arising from hunger, thirst, heat, cold etc. through fortitude (7) attain equanimity, purity, absolute gracelessness and perfect conduct.
+
Every day Jains say their universal prayer of salutation and worship, the Namokar-mantra. All good work and events start with this prayer.
All above are to practiced according to capacity and will, which are to strengthened.
 
  
===Five great vows===
+
''Namo Arihantanam:'' - I bow to the Arahantas, the perfected human beings, Godmen.<br/>
These vows are accepted uniformly by all Indian religions. Buddhism enshrines them in Panch Sheela. But Jains try to practice them much more rigorously than others do.
+
''Namo Siddhanam:'' - I bow to the Siddhas, liberated bodiless souls, God.<br/>
 
+
''Namo Aayariyanam:'' - I bow to the Acharyas, the masters and heads of congregations.<br/>
#Ahimsa or non-injury to life.: Non injury to all life, human, animal or any other beings inhabiting living bodies. Jain saints found that they inhale and destroy the life of organisms floating in air. They filter that air through a piece of cloth. Of course lay householders find it too tough.
+
''Namo Uvajjhayanam:'' - I bow to the Upadhyayas, the spiritual teachers.<br/>
This attitude is based on the idea of potential equality of all souls. Non injury must be practiced in thought and speech too. This is the same as submissiveness.
 
#Truthfulness: This has two forms i.e. always speak the truth, and always shun falsehood. This practiced very rigorously by the Jains. Truth has to good and pleasant too. Don’t speak a truth which is likely to cause discordance, BUT falsehood is no substitute for even an un pleasant truth !!
 
#Non stealing: Not taking what does not rightfully belongs to you. Jains believe property and wealth contribute to well being, and robbing a man of his wealth might mean robbing him of his life or dignity of living.
 
#Celibacy: Indian religious thought interprets celibacy as abstinence from self indulgence of all kinds. This is to practiced in every form. Even a boastful speech violates celibacy. Celibacy does NOT mean abstinence from restrained sex.
 
#Detachment:  It means freeing oneself from slavery of abject dependence on sensual pleasures. Such pleasures are not banned, merely slavery to them is.
 
These practices lead to attainment of infinite knowledge, power and bliss.
 
 
 
===Jain Prayer===
 
Every day Jains bow their heads and say their universal prayer, the Namokar-mantra.  All good work and events start with this prayer of salutation and worship.
 
 
 
''Namo Arihantanam:''   - I bow to the Arahantas, the perfected human beings, Godmen.<br/>
 
''Namo Siddhanam:''     - I bow to the Siddhas, liberated bodiless souls, God.<br/>
 
''Namo Aayariyanam:''     - I bow to the Acharyas, the masters and heads of congregations.<br/>
 
''Namo Uvajjhayanam:''   - I bow to the Upadhyayas, the spiritual teachers.<br/>
 
 
''Namo Loe Savva Sahunam:'' - I bow to all the spiritual practitioners in the universe, [[Sadhu]]s.<br />
 
''Namo Loe Savva Sahunam:'' - I bow to all the spiritual practitioners in the universe, [[Sadhu]]s.<br />
  
''Eso Pancha Namokaro:''     - This fivefold obeisance [[mantra]],<br />
+
''Eso Pancha Namokaro:'' - This fivefold obeisance [[mantra]],<br />
''Savva Pavappanasano:''     - Destroys all sins and obstacles,<br />
+
''Savva Pavappanasano:'' - Destroys all sins and obstacles,<br />
''Mangalanam cha Savvesim:''   - And of all auspicious repetitions,<br />
+
''Mangalanam cha Savvesim:'' - And of all auspicious repetitions,<br />
 
''Padhamam Havai Mangalam:'' - Is the first and foremost.<br />  
 
''Padhamam Havai Mangalam:'' - Is the first and foremost.<br />  
  
- These five salutations are capable of destroying all the sins and this is the first happiness among all forms of happiness.
+
These five salutations are capable of destroying all the sins and this is the first happiness among all forms of happiness.
 
 
In the above prayer, Jains salute the virtues of their five benevolent.  They do not pray to a specific Tirthankar or monk by name.  By saluting them, Jains receive the inspiration from the five benevolent for the right path of true happiness and total freedom from the misery of life.  Jain prayers do not ask for any favors or material benefits from their Gods, the Tirthankaras or from monks and nuns.
 
 
 
===Jain Epistemology===
 
[[Ahimsa]] (more accurately transliterated from Sanskrit as "Ahi'''n'''sa") is not only the foundation of Jain morality, but also Jain [[epistemology]]. Jainism asserts that [[absolutism]] (especially [[moral absolutism]]) leads to fanaticism and violence, so Jain epistemology supports tolerance amongst beliefs, claiming that no single belief holds truth exclusively. ''[[anekanta|ankantavada]]'' &mdash;literally '''Nonsingular Conclusivity''' or '''Non-one-ended-ness'''&mdash;is the position that all non-omniscent truth claims are partially based on the fact that all observations, and therefore all individual conclusions derived from a given observation, are by themselves limited and biased.
 
 
 
==Jainism and the faiths originating in South Asia==
 
It has been advanced that the pervasive influence of Jain culture and philosophy in ancient Bihar gave rise to [[Buddhism]].
 
 
 
The Buddhists always maintained that by the time Buddha and Mahavira were alive, Jainism was already an ancient and deeply entrenched faith and culture in the region. For a discussion about the connections between Jainism and Buddhism see [[Jainism and Buddhism]].
 
  
Jainism as a religion was at various times found all over South Asia including [[Afghanistan]], [[Nepal]], [[Burma]], [[Bangladesh]], and [[Sri Lanka]]. Additionally, it is practiced by adherents in all the metropolitan cities such as [[Delhi]], [[Mumbai]], [[Kolkata]] and [[Chennai]]. The religion has its presence even in the other prominent cities of India, [[Ahmedabad]], [[Bangalore]], [[Hyderabad, India|Hyderabad]].
+
Jains do not pray to a specific Tirthankar or monk by name. This prayer salutes the virtues of the five benevolents; by saluting them, Jains receive the inspiration from them to seek the right path of true happiness and total freedom from the misery of life. Jain prayers do not ask for any favors or material benefits from gods, the Tirthankaras or from monks and nuns.
  
Jain philosophy and culture have been a major cultural, philosophical, social and political force since the dawn of civilization in South Asia, and its ancient influence has been traced beyond the borders of modern "India" into the [[Middle Eastern]] and [[Mediterranean]] regions. Jainism is presently a growing faith in the United States as well.  
+
==Holy Sites==
 +
There are many Jain [[tirtha]]s (pilgrimage sites) throughout [[India]] since the construction of a temple was thought to contribute to liberation from karma. Also included in the following list are significant sites in other countries.  
  
 
+
*[[Shravanabelagola]], monumental statue of the Jain saint Gomateshwara in [[Hassan]] District, [[Karnataka]]
Over several thousand years, Jain influence on Hindu philosophy and religion have been considerable, while Hindu influence on Jain temple worship and rituals can be observed in certain Jain sects. For a detailed discussion see [[Jainism and Hinduism]].
+
*[[Dilwara Temples]], complex of white marble Jain temples on [[Mount Abu]], [[Rajasthan]]
 
+
*[[Ranakpur Temples]], extensive complex of white marble Jain temples in [[Ranakpur]], [[Rajasthan]]
==Jain tirthas==
+
*[[Palitana]], most visited Jain temple in [[Gujarat]]
There are many Jain [[tirtha]]s (pilgrimage sites) throughout India.
+
*[[Bawangaja]], a complex of Jain temples and monumental statues in [[Barwani]] District, [[Madhya Pradesh]]
 
+
*[[Gwalior]]'s fort, home to dozens of Jain rock-cut sculptures
*[[Shravanabelagola]], monumental statue of the Jain saint Gomateshwara in [[Hassan]] District, [[Karnataka]].
+
*[[Shikharji]] in Madhuban, Bihar, has a series of temples on mountains where the [[Tirthankaras]] got Keval Gyan
*[[Dilwara Temples]], complex of white marble Jain temples on [[Mount Abu]], [[Rajasthan]].
 
*[[Ranakpur Temples]], extensive complex of white marble Jain temples in [[Ranakpur]], [[Rajasthan]].
 
*[[Palitana]], most visited Jain temple in [[Gujarat]].
 
*[[Bawangaja]], a complex of Jain temples and monumental statues in [[Barwani]] District, [[Madhya Pradesh]].
 
*[[Gwalior]]'s fort is home to dozens of Jain rock-cut sculptures.
 
*[[Shikharji]] in Madhuban, Bihar has a series of temples on mountains where the [[Tirthankaras]] got Keval Gyan
 
*The [http://www.jaincentre.com/ Jain Centre ]in Leicester, England, the first Jain Temple consecrated in the western world
 
*The [http://www.jcgb.org/ Jain Center of Greater Boston ] in Norwood, Massachusetts, USA, is the first Jain Center in North America.
 
 
*The ''Bhagwan'' [[Adinath]] ''derasar'' at [[Vataman]] near [[Ahmedabad]]
 
*The ''Bhagwan'' [[Adinath]] ''derasar'' at [[Vataman]] near [[Ahmedabad]]
*[[Bajrangarh]], [[Atisaya-kshetra]] in [[Guna]] district in [[Madhya Pradesh]], [[India]]
+
*[[Bajrangarh]], [[Atisaya-kshetra]] in [[Guna]] district in [[Madhya Pradesh]]
*[[Kundalpur]], Siddha-kshetra having 63 temples, famous for beautiful statue of Bade Baba in [[Damoh]] district in [[Madhya Pradesh]], [[India]]
+
*[[Kundalpur]], Siddha-kshetra having 63 temples, famous for beautiful statue of Bade Baba in [[Damoh]] district in [[Madhya Pradesh]]
*The [http://www.jcnc.org/ Jain Center of Northern California ] in Milpitas, California, USA
+
*The Jain Centre in Leicester, [[England]], the first Jain temple consecrated in the western world
 +
*The Jain Center of Greater Boston in Norwood, [[Massachusetts]], the first Jain Center in [[North America]]
 +
*Siddhachalam in Blairstown, [[New Jersey]], founded in 1983.
 +
*The Jain Center of Northern California, in Milpitas, [[California]]
 +
*[[Mahaveer Temple]] in Kobe, [[Japan]], opened June 1, 1985.
 +
*[[Shree Hong Kong Jain Sangh]] in [[Hong Kong]], founded in 1996.
  
==Jain festivals==
+
==Holy Days==
*[[Paryushan Parva]], 10 day fasts to observe 10 important principles to follow.
+
*[[Paryushan Parva]], eight-day fasts to observe, eight important principles to follow
*[[Mahavir Jayanti]], birthday of [[Mahavir]].
+
*[[Mahavir Jayanti]], birthday of [[Mahavir]]
*[[Deepawali]], day of attaining nirvana by [[Mahavir]].
+
*[[Diwali]], day of attaining nirvana by [[Mahavir]]
*[[Kshamavaani]], The day of asking forgiveness from all.
+
*[[Kshamavaani]], the day of asking forgiveness from all
  
The [http://www.cs.colostate.edu/~malaiya/calendar.html Jain Calendar] gives the dates for major Jain festivals, vratas and fairs.
+
==Notes==
 
+
<references/>
==Jainism and other religions==
 
 
 
* [[Jainism and Hinduism]]
 
* [[Jainism and Buddhism]]
 
* [[Jainism and Sikhism]]
 
* [[Jainism and Christianity]]
 
* [[Jainism and Judaism]]
 
* [[Jainism and Islam]]
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
(Note: ''A sampling of references appears below.'' If counterevidence exists to any of the above, it is requested that it be ''appended'' to the end.)
+
*Campbell, Joseph. ''Oriental Mythology.'' Harmondsworth, UK: Penguin Books, 1976. ISBN 0140043055
 +
*Cupramaṇyam, Ka Nā. ''Tiruvalluvar and his Tirukkural.'' New Delhi: Bharatiya Jnanpith Publication, 1987.
 +
*Dasgupta, Surendranath. ''A History of Indian Philosophy, Vol. I.'' Delhi, Motilal Banarsidass, 1973. ISBN 8120804120
 +
*Fisher, Mary Pat. ''Living Religions.'' Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1999. ISBN 0130119946
 +
*Jain, Bhagchandra. ''Jainism in Buddhist Literature.'' Nagpur: Alok Prakashan, 1972.
 +
*Nakamura, Hajime, and Gaynor Sekimori. ''Gotama Buddha: A Biography Based on the Most Reliable Texts.'' Tokyo: Kosei Publishing Co., 2000. ISBN 4333018935
 +
*Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli. ''Indian Philosophy, Volume I''. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997. ISBN 0195638190
 +
*Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli, and Charles A. Moore (eds). ''A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy.'' Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1973. ISBN 0691019584
 +
*Sharma, Chandrahar. ''A Critical Survey of Indian Philosophy''. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 2003. ISBN 8120803647
 +
*Thomas, Edward. ''Jainism, or, The Early Faith of Asoka.'' India: Asian Educational Services, 1995. ISBN 8120609808
  
*[[Mary Pat Fisher|Fisher]] — ''[[Living Religions]]'' (5th Edition) ([[2003]]), p.130
+
==External links==
*Bhaskar, Bhagchandra Jain, '''''Jainism in Buddhist Literature'''''.  Alok Prakashan: Nagpur, 1972.
+
All links retrieved November 6, 2021.
*Campbell, Joseph, '''''Oriental Mythology''''', 1962.
 
*Nakamura, Hajime, '''''Gotama Buddha: A Biography Based on the Most Reliable Texts.'''''  Kosei Publishing:  Tokyo, 2000.
 
*Ramachandran, T.N., '''''Harrappa and Jainism''''' 1987.
 
*Subramaniyam, Ka Naa, '''''Tiruvalluvar and his Tirukkural.'''''  Bharatiya Jnanpith: New Delhi 1987.
 
*Thomas, Edward, '''''Jainism, or the Early Faith of Asoka.''''' Asian Educational Services: New Delhi, 1995 (reprint of the original by Trubner:  London, 1877).
 
 
 
*[http://www.iep.utm.edu/j/jain.htm#H2 Jain Philosophy, Webb, Mark Owen]
 
  
==External links==
+
*[http://www.jainworld.com/ Jainworld] &ndash; Jainism Global Resource Center
*[http://www.jaina.org Federation of Jain Associations in North America ]
+
*[http://www.sacred-texts.com/jai/index.htm Jain Texts] &ndash; Internet Sacred Texts Archive, Translated by Hermann Jacobi, 1884
*[http://www.yja.org Young Jains of America ]
+
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/jainism/ BBC - Religions: Jainism]
*[http://www.cs.colostate.edu/~malaiya/jainhlinks.html Jainism: Jain Principles, Tradition and Practices] Jainism resources on the web
+
*[http://www.jaina.org/ Federation of Jain Associations in North America (JAINA)]
*[http://www.sacred-texts.com/jai/index.htm Jaina Sutras], Translated from the Prakrit by Hermann Jacobi, 1884
+
*[https://www.jaincentreleicester.com/ Jain Samaj in Leicester], England
*[http://www.AtmaDharma.com AtmaDharma.com - Collection of Original Jain Texts]
+
*[http://www.jcgb.org/ Jain Center of Greater Boston]
*[http://www.shubhlabh.net Jain Samaj Europe ]
+
*[http://www.siddhachalam.org/common/index.php Siddhachalam in Blairstown], New Jersey
 +
*[http://www.jcnc.org/ Jain Center of Northern California]  
 +
*[http://www.cs.colostate.edu/~malaiya/calendar.html Jain Calendar]
  
[[Category:Jainism|*]]
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[[Category:Vegetarianism]]
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[[es:Jainismo]]
 
[[eo:Ĝajnismo]]
 
[[fr:Jaïnisme]]
 
[[he:ג'ייניזם]]
 
[[lb:Jainismus]]
 
[[hu:Dzsainizmus]]
 
[[nl:Jaïnisme]]
 
[[nds:Jainismus]]
 
[[ja:ジャイナ教]]
 
[[no:Jainisme]]
 
[[pl:Dźinizm]]
 
[[pt:Jainismo]]
 
[[ru:Джайнизм]]
 
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Latest revision as of 12:42, 6 November 2021


The fylfot (a.k.a. swastika) is one of the holiest Jain symbols; worshippers often use rice grains to create fylfot symbols around the temple altar

Jainism (pronounced jayn-izm), traditionally known as Jain Dharma, is a dharmic religion with its origins in the prehistory of India, still practiced today by several million people. Jainism has as its religious ideal the perfection of man’s nature. The universe is seen as being eternal—having no beginning and no end—precluding God from being a creator. Perfection of the individual is achieved through the practice of an ascetic life, without any divine assistance. Jain monastics and lay people follow the same fivefold path of nonviolence (ahinsa, or ahimsa); truth (satya); non-stealing (asteya); chastity (brahmacharya); and non-possession or non-possessiveness (aparigraha), but to different degrees.

Jain dharma teaches that every living thing is an individual and eternal soul, which is responsible for its own actions. Jains see their faith as teaching the individual to live, think and act in ways that respect and honor the spiritual nature of every living being. Jainism was the first religion to practice ahimsa (non-violence) as a rule of life. The primary figures of Jainism are the 24 Tirthankaras (prophets), the first being Rishabhanatha (Rsabhadeva), who according to tradition lived millions of years ago, and the most recent being Mahavira (599–527 B.C.E.).

Origins

Jainism and Buddhism were both originally orders of monks outside of Brahmanism. Jainism is at least as old as Buddhism; the oldest Buddhist works mention the Jains as a rival sect, under their old name, Nigantha, and their leader Nataputta Varddhamana. The Jain canonical books mention the same kings that reigned during Buddha’s life as contemporaries of Mahavira.[1]

The Jains are followers of Vardhamana Mahavira (599–527 B.C.E.) who systematized the doctrine of the three tirthankaras: Rsabha, Ajitanatha, and Aristanemi.[2] Mahavira was not the founder of Jainism, but a monk who espoused the Jaina creed and became a seer and the last prophet (Tirthankara) of Jainism. His predecessor, Parsva, the second-to-last Tirthankara, is said to have died 250 years before Mahavira. According to Uttaradhyayanasutra, a disciple of Parsva met a disciple of Mahavira, and brought about a union of the old Jainism with that of Mahavira.[3]

The Jains believe that their faith has come down to them from antiquity through a series of 24 Tirthankaras, the earliest of whom was Rishabhanatha, whom Jain legends depict as having lived millions of years ago, and the most recent, Mahavira. Therefore Mahavira is not regarded as the founder of Jainism, but as the one who gave a new orientation to Jainism and shaped the modern faith. Parsva, the twenty-third Tirthankara, was a historical personage who lived in the eighth or ninth century B.C.E.[4]

Seals and other artifacts from the Indus Valley Civilization (c. 3000–1500 B.C.E.) have been cited as evidence of the faith's early existence.

Tirthankaras

Jainists, like Buddhists, do not worship God, but revere instead the saints who are believed to have achieved complete liberation from the bondage of earthly life. There are 63 significant figures of Jain legend and story. The most important of these are the 24 Tirthankaras, perfected human beings who appeared as teachers at various times in history and represent the highest religious attainment for the Jains. The Tirthankaras, along with 12 cakravartins (“world conquerors”), nine vasudevas (counterparts of Vasudeva, the patronymic of Krishna), and nine baladevas (counterparts of Balarama, the elder half-brother of Krishna), constitute the 54 mahapurusas (“great souls”), to which were later added nine prativasudevas (enemies of the vasudevas). Other, more minor, figures include nine naradas (counterparts of the deity Narada, the messenger between gods and humans), 11 rudras (counterparts of the Vedic god Rudra, from whom Siva is said to have evolved), and 24 kamadevas (gods of love), all of which show Hindu influences. There are also four groups of gods, the bhavanavasis (gods of the house), the vyantaras (intermediaries), the jyotiskas (luminaries), and the vaimanikas (astral gods). These deities were assimilated from ancient Indian folk religion.

Jainism Today

At a few million adherents, Jainism is among the smallest of the major world religions. Maharashtra, Rajasthan and Gujarat are likely to have the largest Jain population among Indian states. Another state of India with a relatively large Jain population among its residents is Karnataka. Outside of India, East Africa (Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda) has significant communities. Many Jains migrated from East Africa to the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States.

Jainism has a large following in the Indian region of Punjab, especially the town of Ludhiana. There were many Jains in Lahore (Punjab's historic capital) and other cities before the Partition of 1947. Many then fled to the Indian section of Punjab.

The Jain rituals for marriage and other family rites are distinct and uniquely Indian. Jain rituals are elaborate and include offerings of symbolic objects, with the Tirthankaras being praised in chant. Jains have few core symbols. One Jain symbol incorporates a wheel on the palm of the hand. The holiest one is a simple unadorned swastika or svastika.

Digambar and Shvetambar Sects

Jainism has two main variants: Digambar (the naked) and Shvetambar (wearers of white cloths). The rule of wearing white cloths or being naked applies only to the highest monks and not to laymen or inferior monks.

It is generally believed that the two major sects of Jainism, Digambar and Shvetambar, trace their origin to events that occurred about two hundred years after the nirvana of Mahāvīr. Bhadrabahu, chief of the Jain monks, foresaw a period of famine and led about 12,000 people to southern India. Twelve years later, they returned to find that the Svetambar sect had arisen. The followers of Bhadrabahu became known as the Digambar sect. Historians have noted that there was no clear division until the 5th century, when the Valabhi council of 453 resulted in editing and compilation of scriptures of the Svetambar tradition.

The two sects generally agree on all principles of Jainism, but the Digambaras have unique religious ceremonies and a different ecclesiastical and literary history from the Shvetambar. The Digambar are differentiated by certain tenets, such as the assertion that perfect saints such as the Tirthankaras live without food, that a monk who owns property and wears clothes cannot achieve Moksa (liberation), that no woman can achieve Moksa (without being born again as a man), and that the original canon of Mahavira’s teachings is lost. Each sect claims that it maintains the original tradition of Jainism, and that the other is an offshoot dating to around 80 C.E. The Sanskrit commentaries of the Digambara go back further than those of the Shvetambar. About 84 different schools of Jainism, called gacchas, developed, differing from one another in small details of conduct; the most important was the Kharatara Gaccha

Excavations at Mathura have revealed many Kushana period Jain idols. In all of them the Tirthankaras are represented without clothes. Some of them show monks with only one piece of cloth which is wrapped around the left arm. They are identified as belonging to the Ardha-phalaka sect mentioned in some texts. The Yapaniaya sect is believed to have originated from the Ardha-phalakas. They followed Digambara practice of nudity, but held several beliefs like the Svetambaras.

Jain History of the Universe and Cosmology

According to Jain beliefs, the universe was never created, nor will it ever cease to exist. It is eternal but not unchangeable, because it passes through an endless series of cycles. Each of these upward or downward cycles is divided into six world ages (yugas). The present world age is the fifth age of one of these "cycles," which is in a downward movement. These ages are known as Aaro, as in Pehelo Aaro (first age), Beejo Aaro (second age) and so on until the Chhatho Aaro (sixth age). All these ages have fixed time durations of thousands of years.

When this cycle reaches its lowest level, even Jainism itself will be lost in its entirety. Then, in the course of the next upswing, the Jain religion will be rediscovered and reintroduced by new leaders called Tirthankaras (literally "Crossing Makers" or "Ford Finders"), only to be lost again at the end of the next downswing.

In each of these enormously long alternations of time there are always twenty-four Tirthankaras. Jains believe that Lord Rishabha was the first human to receive the philosophy in the present cycle. The twenty-third Tirthankar was Parshva, an ascetic and teacher, whose traditional dates are 877-777 B.C.E., 250 years before the passing of the last Tirthankar Lord Mahavira in 527 B.C.E. Jains regard him and all Tirthankars as a reformer who called for a return to beliefs and practices in line with the eternal universal philosophy upon which the faith is said to be based.

The twenty-fourth and final Tirthankar of this age is known by his title, Mahāvīr, the Great Hero (599-527 B.C.E.). He too was a wandering ascetic teacher who attempted to recall the Jains to the rigorous practice of their ancient faith.

Canonical Literature

Near the end of the fourth century B.C.E., a council met at Pataliputra for the purpose of fixing the Jain canon. Its final form, however, was established at the Council of Valabhi, presided over by Devardhi around 454 C.E.[5] There are 41 Sutras, including eleven Angas, 12 Upāngas, five Chedas, five Mǖlas, and eight miscellaneous works; a number of Prakirnakas (unclassified works); 12 Niryuktis (commentaries); and the Mahābhāsya, or great commentary.

Many Jains consider the primary scripture to be the Tattvartha Sutra, or Book of Realities, written over eighteen centuries ago by the monk-scholar Umasvati (also known as Umasvami).

According to the Digambara, these texts were first written down in 57 C.E., when religious teachers were not available and the only source of information was what people could remember about the sayings of Vardhamana and the Kevlins. Their original language as Ardha-Māgadhi, but after the Christian era, Sanskrit became more popular.[6]

In addition to the canons and commentaries, the Svetambara and Digambara traditions have produced a large body of literature, written in several languages, in the areas of philosophy, poetry, drama, grammar, music, mathematics, medicine, astronomy, astrology, and architecture. The epics Cilappatikaram and Jivikacintamani, which are important works of early postclassical Tamil literature, were written from a Jain perspective. The Adipurana of the Jain lay poet Pampa is the earliest extant piece of mahakavya (“high poetic”) Kannada literature. Jainas were similarly influential in the Prakrit languages, Apabhramsa, Old Gujarati, and, later, Sanskrit.

Jainism, Buddhism and Hinduism

Jainism, Buddhism and Hinduism have a set of concepts in common, such as karma (merit), dharma (duty), yoga (ascetic discipline) and yajna (sacrifice or worship) that permit discourse among them. Jainism shares a number of its characteristics with Buddhism; both deny the existence of an intelligent first cause, worship deified saints, have celibate clergy, and think it sinful to take the life of any animal. The founders of both religions were men who made themselves perfect. There are many coincidences between the two religions; Buddha and Mahavira were contemporaries and died almost at the same time. They share the same holy lands, and both claim to have been patronized by the Maurya princes. Though some Western scholars have claimed that one is a sect or an offshoot of another, Hindu scholars have always regarded them as two distinct religions. It has been conclusively established that Vardhamana was a historical person distinct from Gautama Buddha.[7]

Jainism does not accept the authority of the Veda. The Jain belief that all living things have souls was a protest against the Hindu tradition of making sacrifices to propitiate God. Jainism believes that there is no god who is responsible for the sorrows of life, and that the way to escape misery is through inward and outward austerity. Jainism accepts Vedic concepts of realism.[8]

Jiva and Ajiva

Jains believe that reality is made up of two eternal principles, jiva (living) and ajiva (non-living). Jiva consists of an infinite number of identical spiritual units; ajiva (that is, non-jiva) is matter in all its forms and the conditions under which matter exists: time, space, and movement. Jiva, the life-principle or soul, is distinct from the body and is not the product or property of the body. Both jiva and ajiva are eternal; they never came into existence for the first time and will never cease to exist. Jivas are classified by the number of sense organs they possess; plants belong to the lowest class because they possess only the sense of touch; worms possess touch and taste; vertebrates possess all five sense organs. Human beings, denizens of hell, and liberated souls possess an additional, inner sense organ, manas, by virtue of which they are able to reason (samjnin). The four elements, earth, water, air and fire, are animated by souls; particles of earth are the bodies of elementary souls called earth-lives.[9]

Consciousness is the essence of the self (or soul), and its manifestations are perception (simple apprehension) and intelligence (conceptual knowledge). Reality is external and is perceived through the senses.[10]

Bondage and Liberation

Karma is the link which ties the soul to the body, and the cause of bondage and sorrow. Jains believe that every action that a person performs, be it good or evil, opens up channels of the senses (sight, hearing, touch, taste and smell), through which an invisible material substance, karma, filters in and adheres to the jiva within, weighing it down and determining the conditions of the next reincarnation. Ignorance of truth and four passions of anger, greed, pride and delusion attract the flow of karmic matter which obscures the radiance of the soul.

The way to deliverance is through the three jewels of right faith (belief in real existence), right knowledge (knowledge of real nature without doubt or error) and right conduct (the practice of the five virtues).[11] Through them, the flow of karma into the soul is stopped, and existing karma is discharged. When the last particle of karma has been exhausted, “the partnership between soul and matter is dissolved,” and the soul achieves infinite faith, knowledge, bliss and power. It then transcends the cycle of earthly existence (samsara) and goes to a place or state called Siddhashila, where the jiva, identical with all other pure jivas, experiences its own true nature in eternal stillness, isolation and noninvolvement and dwells in eternal bliss.

Theory of Knowledge

The Jains classify knowledge into immediate (aparokşa) and mediate (parokşa) knowledge. There are two types of mediate knowledge:

  • Mati, ordinary cognition based on normal sense perception. This includes remembrance (smirti); recognition (samjñã, prtyabhiñã); induction based on observation (curita, tarka); and deductive reasoning (abhinibodha, anumãna). Mati is sometimes distinguished into three types: perception (upalabdhi), memory (bhãvanã), and understanding (upayoga). Mati is knowledge acquired by means of the senses (indriyas) and the mind (anindriya), and is always preceded by some kind of perception.[12]
  • Shruta, or Sruti, knowledge derived through signs, symbols or words. Mati gives knowledge by acquaintance; sruti gives knowledge by description. There are four kinds of shruta: association (labhdi), bhavana (attention), understanding (upayoga), and aspects of the meaning of things (naya).[13]

Immediate knowledge is categorized into three types:

  • Avadhi, clairvoyance, or direct knowledge of things through time and space.
  • Manahparyāya, telepathy, direct knowledge of the thoughts of others.
  • Kevala, omniscience unlimited by time or space, prefect knowledge comprehending all substance and their modifications. This knowledge can only be felt and not described, and is possible only for purified souls free from bondage.[14]

These five types of knowledge are “right knowledge.” There are also three types of “wrong knowledge:” doubt (samshaya), mistake (viparyaya), and wrong knowledge through indifference (anadhyavasaya).[15] Only one of these eight kinds of knowledge is active at a given moment.

Knowledge of a particular thing is also divided into two types: knowledge of a thing as it is (pramāna) and knowledge of a thing in its relation to other things (naya). Naya is the viewpoint from which a statement is made about a thing. It includes partial knowledge about the innumerable aspects of a thing, and judgment based on this partial knowledge.[16]

Realistic Pluralism (Anekantavada)

Jain metaphysics is a realistic and relativistic pluralism. Matter (pudgala) and spirit (jiva) are seen as separate and independent realities. There are innumerable material atoms, and innumerable individual souls, and each of these possesses an infinite number of characteristics of its own.[17] Every object possesses innumerable positive and negative characteristics. The substance (dravya) of a thing possesses all its qualities and modes.[18] The permanent and essential qualities of a substance are called attributes (guna), and the changing and accidental qualities are called modes (paryāya).

Relativity of Knowledge (Syadvada)

An ordinary person cannot know all the qualities of a particular thing; to do so would be to become omniscient. The nature of reality is indeterminate and infinitely complex, and human knowledge of it at any given moment is necessarily limited to only certain aspects. The infinite aspects of reality are all relative; therefore all judgments are relative, conditional and limited. It is incorrect to say that anything is absolutely true or absolutely untrue.

Ethics

Five Mahavratas of Jain ascetics

In the Jain community there are monks and nuns, and laymen and laywomen. All follow the same fivefold spiritual discipline; monks and nuns are differentiated from lay people only by the degree to which they embody this discipline. Monks and nuns strive to make this birth their last by practicing severe asceticism, while the lay people pursue less rigorous practices, striving to attain rational faith and do good deeds in this birth. The Five Vows of the monastics are called Great Vows (maha-vrata) and those of the laity are called Small Vows (anu-vrata). The Five Vows are:

  1. Non-violence (ahinsa, or ahimsa)
  2. Truth (satya )
  3. Non-stealing (asteya)
  4. Chastity (brahmacharya)
  5. Non-possession or Non-possessiveness (aparigrah)

For lay people, chastity means confining sexual experience to the marriage relationship; for monks and nuns, it means complete celibacy. Non-possessiveness for lay people means merely being content with what one has; for the monastics it means having almost no possessions at all, not even clothing, and begging for food.[19] Non-violence involves being strictly vegetarian and studiously striving to avoid harming any living thing. The Jain diet excludes most root vegetables and certain other foods believed to be unnecessarily injurious.

Did you know?
The understanding and implementation of ahimsa (non-violence) is more comprehensive in Jainism than in any other religion

The understanding and implementation of ahimsa is more radical and comprehensive than in any other religion. Observant Jains do not eat, drink or travel after sunset and always rise before sunrise. Water must not be drunk after dark, to avoid the possibility of accidentally swallowing some small insect. Some Jains wear masks over their mouths and noses to avoid any possibility of breathing in tiny insects. Jains are expected to follow the principle of non-violence in all of his or her thoughts, words and deeds. The laity must avoid professions which involve violence to the self or other living beings, such as agriculture; consequently many Jains are involved in commerce.

The Jains believe that the highest and most exalted state of beatification (Siddhatva), the permanent release of the jiva from all involvement in worldly existence, can only be achieved by individuals through their own efforts. No spirit or god can assist the jiva to obtain release.

Mohandas K. Gandhi was deeply influenced by Jain ethical principles, and made the doctrine of ahimsa (non-violence) an integral part of his own philosophy and a method of political action.

Jainism asserts that absolutism (especially moral absolutism) leads to fanaticism and violence, and therefore supports tolerance among beliefs, claiming that no single belief holds truth exclusively.

Jain Prayer

Every day Jains say their universal prayer of salutation and worship, the Namokar-mantra. All good work and events start with this prayer.

Namo Arihantanam: - I bow to the Arahantas, the perfected human beings, Godmen.
Namo Siddhanam: - I bow to the Siddhas, liberated bodiless souls, God.
Namo Aayariyanam: - I bow to the Acharyas, the masters and heads of congregations.
Namo Uvajjhayanam: - I bow to the Upadhyayas, the spiritual teachers.
Namo Loe Savva Sahunam: - I bow to all the spiritual practitioners in the universe, Sadhus.

Eso Pancha Namokaro: - This fivefold obeisance mantra,
Savva Pavappanasano: - Destroys all sins and obstacles,
Mangalanam cha Savvesim: - And of all auspicious repetitions,
Padhamam Havai Mangalam: - Is the first and foremost.

These five salutations are capable of destroying all the sins and this is the first happiness among all forms of happiness.

Jains do not pray to a specific Tirthankar or monk by name. This prayer salutes the virtues of the five benevolents; by saluting them, Jains receive the inspiration from them to seek the right path of true happiness and total freedom from the misery of life. Jain prayers do not ask for any favors or material benefits from gods, the Tirthankaras or from monks and nuns.

Holy Sites

There are many Jain tirthas (pilgrimage sites) throughout India since the construction of a temple was thought to contribute to liberation from karma. Also included in the following list are significant sites in other countries.

  • Shravanabelagola, monumental statue of the Jain saint Gomateshwara in Hassan District, Karnataka
  • Dilwara Temples, complex of white marble Jain temples on Mount Abu, Rajasthan
  • Ranakpur Temples, extensive complex of white marble Jain temples in Ranakpur, Rajasthan
  • Palitana, most visited Jain temple in Gujarat
  • Bawangaja, a complex of Jain temples and monumental statues in Barwani District, Madhya Pradesh
  • Gwalior's fort, home to dozens of Jain rock-cut sculptures
  • Shikharji in Madhuban, Bihar, has a series of temples on mountains where the Tirthankaras got Keval Gyan
  • The Bhagwan Adinath derasar at Vataman near Ahmedabad
  • Bajrangarh, Atisaya-kshetra in Guna district in Madhya Pradesh
  • Kundalpur, Siddha-kshetra having 63 temples, famous for beautiful statue of Bade Baba in Damoh district in Madhya Pradesh
  • The Jain Centre in Leicester, England, the first Jain temple consecrated in the western world
  • The Jain Center of Greater Boston in Norwood, Massachusetts, the first Jain Center in North America
  • Siddhachalam in Blairstown, New Jersey, founded in 1983.
  • The Jain Center of Northern California, in Milpitas, California
  • Mahaveer Temple in Kobe, Japan, opened June 1, 1985.
  • Shree Hong Kong Jain Sangh in Hong Kong, founded in 1996.

Holy Days

  • Paryushan Parva, eight-day fasts to observe, eight important principles to follow
  • Mahavir Jayanti, birthday of Mahavir
  • Diwali, day of attaining nirvana by Mahavir
  • Kshamavaani, the day of asking forgiveness from all

Notes

  1. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, Indian Philosophy, vol. 1 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997, ISBN 0195638190), 168.
  2. Chandrahar Sharma, A Critical Survey of Indian Philosophy (Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1992, ISBN 8120803647), 250.
  3. Radhakrishnan, 169.
  4. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan and Charles A. Moore (eds.), A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1973, ISBN 0691019584), 48.
  5. Radhakrishnan, 288.
  6. Radhakrishnan, 289.
  7. Radhakrishnan, 292.
  8. Radhakrishnan, 294.
  9. Surendranath Dasgupta, A History of Indian Philosophy, Vol. I (Delhi, Motilal Banarsidass, 1973, ISBN 8120804120), 190.
  10. Radhakrishnan and Moore, 250.
  11. Radhakrishnan and Moore, 250.
  12. Radhakrishnan, 294.
  13. Radhakrishnan, 295.
  14. 'Radhakrishnan, 295.
  15. Sharma, 49.
  16. Sharma, 49.
  17. Sharma, 51.
  18. Tattvaarthasutra V, 37.
  19. Sharma, 66.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Campbell, Joseph. Oriental Mythology. Harmondsworth, UK: Penguin Books, 1976. ISBN 0140043055
  • Cupramaṇyam, Ka Nā. Tiruvalluvar and his Tirukkural. New Delhi: Bharatiya Jnanpith Publication, 1987.
  • Dasgupta, Surendranath. A History of Indian Philosophy, Vol. I. Delhi, Motilal Banarsidass, 1973. ISBN 8120804120
  • Fisher, Mary Pat. Living Religions. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1999. ISBN 0130119946
  • Jain, Bhagchandra. Jainism in Buddhist Literature. Nagpur: Alok Prakashan, 1972.
  • Nakamura, Hajime, and Gaynor Sekimori. Gotama Buddha: A Biography Based on the Most Reliable Texts. Tokyo: Kosei Publishing Co., 2000. ISBN 4333018935
  • Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli. Indian Philosophy, Volume I. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997. ISBN 0195638190
  • Radhakrishnan, Sarvepalli, and Charles A. Moore (eds). A Sourcebook in Indian Philosophy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1973. ISBN 0691019584
  • Sharma, Chandrahar. A Critical Survey of Indian Philosophy. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 2003. ISBN 8120803647
  • Thomas, Edward. Jainism, or, The Early Faith of Asoka. India: Asian Educational Services, 1995. ISBN 8120609808

External links

All links retrieved November 6, 2021.

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