Jain Religion -
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Jain Religion
The oldest continuous monastic tradition in India is Jainism, the path of
the Jinas, or victors. This tradition is traced to Var-dhamana Mahavira (The
Great Hero; ca. 599-527 B.C.), the twenty-fourth and last of the
Tirthankaras (Sanskrit for fordmakers). According to legend, Mahavira was
born to a ruling family in the town of Vaishali, located in the modern state
of Bihar.
At the age of thirty, he renounced his wealthy life and devoted himself to
fasting and self-mortification in order to purify his consciousness and
discover the meaning of existence. He never again dwelt in a house, owned
property, or wore clothing of any sort. Following the example of the teacher
Parshvanatha (ninth century B.C.), he attained enlightenment and spent the
rest of his life meditating and teaching a dedicated group of disciples who
formed a monastic order following rules he laid down. His life's work
complete, he entered a final fast and deliberately died of starvation.
Faiths in Jain Religion
The ancient belief system of the Jains rests on a concrete understanding of
the working of karma, its effects on the living soul (jiva ), and the
conditions for extinguishing action and the soul's release. According to the
Jain view, the soul is a living substance that combines with various kinds
of nonliving matter and through action accumulates particles of matter that
adhere to it and determine its fate. Most of the matter perceptible to human
senses, including all animals and plants, is attached in various degrees to
living souls and is in this sense alive. Any action has consequences that
necessarily follow the embodied soul, but the worst accumulations of matter
come from violence against other living beings.
The ultimate Jain discipline, therefore, rests on complete inactivity and
absolute nonviolence (ahimsa) against any living beings. Some Jain monks and
nuns wear face masks to avoid accidentally inhaling small organisms, and all
practicing believers try to remain vegetarians. Extreme renunciation,
including the refusal of all food, lies at the heart of a discipline that
purges the mind and body of all desires and actions and, in the process,
burns off the consequences of actions performed in the past. In this sense,
Jain renunciants may recognize or revere deities, but they do not view the
Vedas as sacred texts and instead concentrate on the atheistic, individual
quest for purification and removal of karma. The final goal is the
extinguishing of self, a "blowing out" (nirvana) of the individual
self.
History
By the first century A.D., the Jain community evolved into two main
divisions based on monastic discipline: the Digambara or "sky-clad"
monks who wear no clothes, own nothing, and collect donated food in their
hands; and the Svetambara or "white-clad" monks and nuns who wear
white robes and carry bowls for donated food. The Digambara do not accept
the possibility of women achieving liberation, while the Svetambara do.
Western and southern India have been Jain strongholds for many centuries;
laypersons have typically formed minority communities concentrated primarily
in urban areas and in mercantile occupations. In the mid-1990s, there were
about 7 million Jains, the majority of whom live in the states of
Maharashtra (mostly the city of Bombay, or Mumbai in Marathi), Rajasthan,
and Gujarat (see Structure and Dynamics, ch. 2). Karnataka, traditionally a
stronghold of Digambaras, has a sizable Jain community.
Ritual Activities
The Jain laity engage in a number of ritual activities that resemble those
of the Hindus around them. Special shrines in residences or in public
temples include images of the Tirthankaras, who are not worshiped but
remembered and revered; other shrines house the gods who are more properly
invoked to intercede with worldly problems. Daily rituals may include
meditation and bathing; bathing the images; offering food, flowers, and
lighted lamps for the images; and reciting mantras in Ardhamagadhi, an
ancient language of northeast India related to Sanskrit. Many Jain laity
engage in sacramental ceremonies during life-cycle rituals, such as the
first taking of solid food, marriage, and death, resembling those enacted by
Hindus. Jains may also worship local gods and participate in local Hindu or
Muslim celebrations without compromising their fundamental devotion to the
path of the Jinas. The most important festivals of Jainism celebrate the
five major events in the life of Mahavira: conception, birth, renunciation,
enlightenment, and final release at death.
Jain Pilgrimages
At a number of pilgrimage sites associated with great teachers of Jainism,
the gifts of wealthy donors made possible the building of architectural
wonders. Shatrunjaya Hills (Siddhagiri) in Gujarat is a major Svetambara
site, an entire city of about 3,500 temples. Mount Abu in Rajasthan, with
one Digambara and five Svetambara temples, is the site of some of India's
greatest architecture, dating from the eleventh through thirteenth centuries
A.D. In Karnataka, on the hill of Sravana Belgola, stands the monolithic
seventeen-meter-high statue of the naked Bhagwan Bahubali (Gomateshvara),
the first person in the world believed by the faithful to have attained
enlightenment, so deep in meditation that vines are growing around his legs.
At this site every twelve years, a major concourse of Jain ascetics and
laity participate in a purification ceremony in which the statue is anointed
from head to toe. Carved in 981, the statue is considered the holiest Jain
shrine. In addition to its lavish patronage of shrines, the Jain community,
with its long scriptural tradition and wealth gained from trade, has always
been known for its philanthropy and especially for its support of education
and learning. Prestigious Jain schools are located in most major cities. The
largest concentrations of Jains are in Maharashtra (more than 965,000) and
Rajasthan (nearly 563,000), with sizable numbers also in Gujarat and Madhya
Pradesh.
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Related Tour
Packages
Jain
Temple Tours (PI 027)
Duration : 4 Nights / 5 Days
Places Covered : Varanasi - Kushinagar (Kakandi and
Pawanagar) - Shravasti - Ayodhya - Allahabad (Kaushambi) -
Varanasi |
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Buddhist
Pilgrimage Tour (PI 002)
Duration : 14 Nights / 15 Days
Places Covered : Delhi - Jaipur - Agra - Varanasi -
Bodhgaya - Vaishali - Kushinagar - Lumbini - Kapilvastu -
Sravasti - Balrampur - Lucknow |
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Buddhist
Temples Tour in India & Nepal (PI 018)
Duration : 11 Nights / 12 Days
Places Covered : Kathmandu - Lumbini(Nepal) - Sravasti -
Kushinagar - Varanasi(Sarnath) - Bodhgaya - Rajgir - Nalanda -
Patna(Vaishali) - Kolkata |
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