Jainism

Author: www.NiNa.Az
Mar 14, 2025 / 00:58

Jainism ˈ dʒ eɪ n ɪ z əm JAY niz əm also known as Jain Dharma is an Indian religion Jainism traces its spiritual ideas a

Jainism
Jainism
Jainism

Jainism (/ˈnɪzəm/ JAY-niz-əm), also known as Jain Dharma, is an Indian religion. Jainism traces its spiritual ideas and history through the succession of twenty-four tirthankaras (supreme preachers of dharma), with the first in the current time cycle being Rishabhadeva, whom the tradition holds to have lived millions of years ago, the twenty-third tirthankara Parshvanatha, traditionally dated to the 9th century BCE, and the twenty-fourth tirthankara Mahavira, historically around the 6th or 5th BCE. Jainism is considered an eternal dharma with the tirthankaras guiding every time cycle of the cosmology. Central to understanding Jain philosophy is the concept of bhedavijñāna, or the clear distinction in the nature of the soul and non-soul entities. This principle underscores the innate purity and potential for liberation within every soul, distinct from the physical and mental elements that bind it to the cycle of birth and rebirth. Recognizing and internalizing this separation is essential for spiritual progress and the attainment of samyaka darśana or self realization, which marks the beginning of the aspirant's journey towards liberation. The three main pillars of Jainism are ahiṃsā (non-violence), anekāntavāda (non-absolutism), and aparigraha (asceticism).

Jainism
image
Jain temples on Shatrunjaya hill near Palitana, Gujarat
ClassificationIndian religion

Jain monks take five main vows: ahiṃsā (non-violence), satya (truth), asteya (not stealing), brahmacharya (chastity), and aparigraha (non-possessiveness). These principles have affected Jain culture in many ways, such as leading to a predominantly lacto-vegetarian lifestyle. Parasparopagraho jīvānām (the function of souls is to help one another) is the faith's motto, and the Namokar Mantra is its most common and strongest prayer.

Jainism is one of the oldest religions still practiced today. It has two major ancient sub-traditions, Digambaras and Śvētāmbaras, which hold different views on ascetic practices, gender, and the texts considered canonical. Both sub-traditions have mendicants supported by laypersons (śrāvakas and śrāvikas). The Śvētāmbara tradition in turn has two sub-traditions: Deravasi, also known as Mandirmargis, and Sthānakavasī. The religion has between four and five million followers, known as Jains or Jainas, who reside mostly in India, where they numbered around 4.5 million at the 2011 census. Outside India, some of the largest Jain communities can be found in Canada, Europe, and the United States. Japan is also home to a fast-growing community of converts. Major festivals include Paryushana and Das Lakshana, Ashtanika, Mahavir Janma Kalyanak, Akshaya Tritiya, and Dipawali.

Beliefs and philosophy

image
The hand symbolizes Ahiṃsā, the wheel dharmachakra, the resolve to halt saṃsāra (transmigration).

Jainism is transtheistic and forecasts that the universe evolves without violating the law of substance dualism, and the actual realization of this principle plays out through the phenomena of both parallelism and interactionism.

Dravya (Ontological facts)

Dravya means substances or entity in Sanskrit. Jains believe the universe is made up of six eternal substances: sentient beings or souls (jīva), non-sentient substance or matter (pudgala), the principle of motion (dharma), the principle of rest (adharma), space (ākāśa), and time (kāla). The last five are united as the ajiva (non-living). Jains distinguish a substance from a complex body, or thing, by declaring the former a simple indestructible element, while the latter is a compound made of one or more substances that can be destroyed.

Tattva (Soteriological facts)

Tattva connotes reality or truth in Jain philosophy and is the framework for salvation. According to Digambara Jains, there are seven tattvas: the sentient (jiva or living), the insentient (ajiva or non-living), the karmic influx to the soul (Āsrava, which is a mix of living and non-living), the bondage of karmic particles to the soul (Bandha), the stoppage of karmic particles (Saṃvara), the wiping away of past karmic particles (Nirjarā), and the liberation (Moksha). Śvētāmbaras add two further tattvas, namely good karma (Punya) and bad karma (Paapa). The true insight in Jain philosophy is considered as "faith in the tattvas". The spiritual goal in Jainism is to reach moksha for ascetics, but for most Jain laypersons, it is to accumulate good karma that leads to better rebirth and a step closer to liberation.

Pramana (Epistemological facts)

Jain philosophy accepts three reliable means of knowledge (pramana). It holds that correct knowledge is based on perception (pratyaksa), inference (anumana) and testimony (sabda or the word of scriptures). These ideas are elaborated in Jain texts such as Tattvarthasūtra, Parvacanasara, Nandi and Anuyogadvarini. Some Jain texts add analogy (upamana) as the fourth reliable means, in a manner similar to epistemological theories found in other Indian religions.

In Jainism, jnāna (knowledge) is said to be of five kinds – mati jñāna (sensory knowledge), śrutu jñāna (scriptural knowledge), avadhi jñāna (clairvoyance), manah prayāya Jñāna (telepathy) and kevala jnana (omniscience). According to the Jain text Tattvartha sūtra, the first two are indirect knowledge and the remaining three are direct knowledge.

Soul and karma

image
Classification of Saṃsāri Jīvas (transmigrating souls) in Jainism

According to Jainism, the existence of "a bound and ever changing soul" is a self-evident truth, an axiom which does not need to be proven. It maintains that there are numerous souls, but every one of them has three qualities (Guṇa): consciousness (chaitanya, the most important), bliss (sukha) and vibrational energy (virya).

It further claims the vibration draws karmic particles to the soul and creates bondages, but is also what adds merit or demerit to the soul. Jain texts state that souls exist as "clothed with material bodies", where it entirely fills up the body. Karma, as in other Indian religions, connotes in Jainism the universal cause and effect law. However, it is envisioned as a material substance (subtle matter) that can bind to the soul, travel with the soul in bound form between rebirths, and affect the suffering and happiness experienced by the jiva in the lokas. Karma is believed to obscure and obstruct the innate nature and striving of the soul, as well as its spiritual potential in the next rebirth.

Saṃsāra

The conceptual framework of the Saṃsāra doctrine differs between Jainism and other Indian religions. Soul (jiva) is accepted as a truth, as in Hinduism but not Buddhism. The cycle of rebirths has a definite beginning and end in Jainism. Jain theosophy asserts that each soul passes through 8,400,000 birth-situations as they circle through Saṃsāra, going through five types of bodies: earth bodies, water bodies, fire bodies, air bodies and vegetable lives, constantly changing with all human and non-human activities from rainfall to breathing.

Harming any life form is a sin in Jainism, with negative karmic effects. Jainism states that souls begin in a primordial state, and either evolve to a higher state or regress if driven by their karma. It further clarifies that abhavya (incapable) souls can never attain moksha (liberation). It explains that the abhavya state is entered after an intentional and shockingly evil act.

Souls can be good or evil in Jainism, unlike the nondualism of some forms of Hinduism and Buddhism. According to Jainism, a Siddha (liberated soul) has gone beyond Saṃsāra, is at the apex, is omniscient, and remains there eternally.

Cosmology

image
Rebirth loka (realms of existence) in Jain cosmology
image
Division of time in Jain cosmology

Jain texts propound that the universe consists of many eternal lokas (realms of existence). As in Buddhism and Hinduism, both time and the universe are eternal, but the universe is transient. The universe, body, matter and time are considered separate from the soul (jiva). Their interaction explains life, living, death and rebirth in Jain philosophy. The Jain cosmic universe has three parts, the upper, middle, and lower worlds (urdhva loka, madhya loka, and adho loka). Jainism states that Kāla (time) is without beginning and eternal; the cosmic wheel of time, kālachakra, rotates ceaselessly. In this part of the universe, it explains, there are six periods of time within two eons (ara), and in the first eon the universe generates, and in the next it degenerates.

Thus, it divides the worldly cycle of time into two half-cycles, utsarpiṇī (ascending, progressive prosperity and happiness) and avasarpiṇī (descending, increasing sorrow and immorality). It states that the world is currently in the fifth ara of avasarpiṇī, full of sorrow and religious decline, where the height of living beings shrinks. According to Jainism, after the sixth ara, the universe will be reawakened in a new cycle.

God

image
Jain miniature painting of 24 tirthankaras, Jaipur, c. 1850

Jainism is a transtheistic religion, holding that the universe was not created, and will exist forever. It is independent, having no creator, governor, judge, or destroyer. In this, it is unlike the Abrahamic religions and the theistic strands of Hinduism, but similar to Buddhism. However, Jainism believes in the world of heavenly and hellish beings who are born, die and are reborn like earthly beings. The souls who live happily in the body of a heavenly celestial do so because of their positive karma. It is further stated that they possess a more transcendent knowledge about material things and can anticipate events in the human realms. However, once their past karmic merit is exhausted, it is explained that their souls are reborn again as humans, animals or other beings. The perfect enlightened souls with a body are called Arihants (victors) and perfect souls without a body are called Siddhas (liberated souls). Only a soul with human body can attain enlightenment and liberation. The liberated beings are the supreme beings and are worshipped by all heavenly, earthly and hellish beings who aspire to attain liberation themselves.

Salvation, liberation

Purification of soul and liberation can be achieved through the path of three jewels:Samyak Darśana (Correct View), meaning faith, acceptance of the truth of soul (jīva);Samyak Gyana (Correct Knowledge), meaning undoubting knowledge of the tattvas; and Samyak Charitra (Correct Conduct), meaning behavior consistent with the Five vows. Jain texts often add samyak tapas (Correct Asceticism) as a fourth jewel, emphasizing belief in ascetic practices as the means to liberation (moksha). The four jewels are called Moksha Marga (the path of liberation).

Main principles

Non-violence (ahimsa)

The principle of ahimsa (non-violence or non-injury) is a fundamental tenet of Jainism. It holds that one must abandon all violent activity and that without such a commitment to non-violence all religious behavior is worthless. In Jain theology, it does not matter how correct or defensible the violence may be, one must not kill or harm any being, and non-violence is the highest religious duty. Jain texts such as Ācārāṅga Sūtra and Tattvarthasūtra state that one must renounce all killing of living beings, whether tiny or large, movable or immovable. Its theology teaches that one must neither kill another living being, nor cause another to kill, nor consent to any killing directly or indirectly.

Furthermore, Jainism emphasizes non-violence against all beings not only in action but also in speech and in thought. It states that instead of hate or violence against anyone, "all living creatures must help each other".

Jains believe that violence negatively affects and destroys one's soul, particularly when the violence is done with intent, hate or carelessness, or when one indirectly causes or consents to the killing of a human or non-human living being.

The doctrine exists in Hinduism and Buddhism, but is most highly developed in Jainism. The theological basis of non-violence as the highest religious duty has been interpreted by some Jain scholars not to "be driven by merit from giving or compassion to other creatures, nor a duty to rescue all creatures", but resulting from "continual self-discipline", a cleansing of the soul that leads to one's own spiritual development which ultimately affects one's salvation and release from rebirths. Jains believe that causing injury to any being in any form creates bad karma which affects one's rebirth, future well-being and causes suffering.

Late medieval Jain scholars re-examined the Ahiṃsā doctrine when faced with external threat or violence. For example, they justified violence by monks to protect nuns. According to Dundas, the Jain scholar Jinadattasuri wrote during a time of destruction of temples and persecution that "anybody engaged in a religious activity who was forced to fight and kill somebody would not lose any spiritual merit but instead attain deliverance".

However, examples in Jain texts that condone fighting and killing under certain circumstances are relatively rare.

Many-sided reality (anekāntavāda)

image
Jain temple painting explaining Anekantavada with Blind men and an elephant

The second main principle of Jainism is anekāntavāda, from anekānta ("many-sidedness," etymologically "non-oneness" or "not being one") and vada ("doctrine"). The doctrine states that truth and reality are complex and always have multiple aspects. It further states that reality can be experienced, but cannot be fully expressed with language. It suggests that human attempts to communicate are Naya, "partial expression of the truth". According to it, one can experience the taste of truth, but cannot fully express that taste through language. It holds that attempts to express experience are syāt, or valid "in some respect", but remain "perhaps, just one perspective, incomplete". It concludes that in the same way, spiritual truths can be experienced but not fully expressed. It suggests that the great error is belief in ekānta (one-sidedness), where some relative truth is treated as absolute. The doctrine is ancient, found in Buddhist texts such as the Samaññaphala Sutta. The Jain Agamas suggest that Mahāvīra's approach to answering all metaphysical philosophical questions was a "qualified yes" (syāt). These texts identify anekāntavāda as a key difference from the Buddha's teachings. The Buddha taught the Middle Way, rejecting extremes of the answer "it is" or "it is not" to metaphysical questions. The Mahāvīra, in contrast, taught his followers to accept both "it is", and "it is not", qualified with "perhaps", to understand Absolute Reality. The permanent being is conceptualized as jiva (soul) and ajiva (matter) within a dualistic anekāntavāda framework.

According to Paul Dundas, in contemporary times the anekāntavāda doctrine has been interpreted by some Jains as intending to "promote a universal religious tolerance", and a teaching of "plurality" and "benign attitude to other [ethical, religious] positions". Dundas states this is a misreading of historical texts and Mahāvīra's teachings. According to him, the "many pointedness, multiple perspective" teachings of the Mahāvīra is about the nature of absolute reality and human existence. He claims that it is not about condoning activities such as killing animals for food, nor violence against disbelievers or any other living being as "perhaps right". The five vows for Jain monks and nuns, for example, are strict requirements and there is no "perhaps" about them. Similarly, since ancient times, Jainism co-existed with Buddhism and Hinduism according to Dundas, but Jainism disagreed, in specific areas, with the knowledge systems and beliefs of these traditions, and vice versa.

Non-attachment (aparigraha)

The third main principle in Jainism is aparigraha which means non-attachment to worldly possessions. For monks and nuns, Jainism requires a vow of complete non-possession of any property, relations and emotions. The ascetic is a wandering mendicant in the Digambara tradition, or a resident mendicant in the Śvētāmbara tradition. For Jain laypersons, it recommends limited possession of property that has been honestly earned, and giving excess property to charity. According to Natubhai Shah, aparigraha applies to both the material and the psychic. Material possessions refer to various forms of property. Psychic possessions refer to emotions, likes and dislikes, and attachments of any form. Unchecked attachment to possessions is said to result in direct harm to one's personality.

Jain ethics and five vows

image
Nishidhi stone, depicting the vow of sallekhana, 14th century, Karnataka

Jainism teaches five ethical duties, which it calls five vows. These are called anuvratas (small vows) for Jain laypersons, and mahavratas (great vows) for Jain mendicants. For both, its moral precepts preface that the Jain has access to a guru (teacher, counsellor), deva (Jina, god), doctrine, and that the individual is free from five offences: doubts about the faith, indecisiveness about the truths of Jainism, insincerity of desire for Jain teachings, non-recognition of fellow Jains, and insufficient admiration of fellow Jains' spiritual endeavors. Such a person undertakes the following Five vows of Jainism:

  1. Ahiṃsā, "intentional non-violence" or "noninjury": The first major vow taken by Jains is to cause no harm to other human beings, as well as all living beings (particularly animals). This is the highest ethical duty in Jainism, and it applies not only to one's actions, but demands that one be non-violent in one's speech and thoughts.
  2. Satya, "truth": This vow is to always speak the truth. Neither lie, nor speak what is not true, and do not encourage others or approve anyone who speaks an untruth.
  3. Asteya, "not stealing": A Jain layperson should not take anything that is not willingly given. Additionally, a Jain mendicant should ask for permission to take it if something is being given.
  4. Brahmacharya, "celibacy": Abstinence from sex and sensual pleasures is prescribed for Jain monks and nuns. For laypersons, the vow means chastity, faithfulness to one's partner.
  5. Aparigraha, "non-possessiveness": This includes non-attachment to material and psychological possessions, avoiding craving and greed. Jain monks and nuns completely renounce property and social relations, own nothing and are attached to no one.

Jainism prescribes seven supplementary vows, including three guņa vratas (merit vows) and four śikşā vratas. The Sallekhana (or Santhara) vow is a "religious death" ritual observed at the end of life, historically by Jain monks and nuns, but rare in the modern age. In this vow, there is voluntary and gradual reduction of food and liquid intake to end one's life by choice and with dispassion, This is believed to reduce negative karma that affects a soul's future rebirths.

Practices

Asceticism and monasticism

image
Digambara sadhu (monk)
image
Śvētāmbara-Deravasi sadhu (monk)
image
Śvētāmbara-Sthanakwasi sadhu (monk)
image
A Śvētāmbara sadhvi (nun)(early 20th-century)
image
A Digambara sadhvi (nun)

Of the major Indian religions, Jainism has had the strongest ascetic tradition. Ascetic life may include nakedness, symbolizing non-possession even of clothes, fasting, body mortification, and penance, to burn away past karma and stop producing new karma, both of which are believed essential for reaching siddha and moksha ("liberation from rebirths" and "salvation").

Jain texts like Tattvartha Sūtra and Uttaradhyayana Sūtra discuss austerities in detail. Six outer and six inner practices are oft-repeated in later Jain texts. Outer austerities include complete fasting, eating limited amounts, eating restricted items, abstaining from tasty foods, mortifying the flesh, and guarding the flesh (avoiding anything that is a source of temptation). Inner austerities include expiation, confession, respecting and assisting mendicants, studying, meditation, and ignoring bodily wants in order to abandon the body. Lists of internal and external austerities vary with the text and tradition. Asceticism is viewed as a means to control desires, and to purify the jiva (soul). The tirthankaras such as the Mahāvīra (Vardhamana) set an example by performing severe austerities for twelve years.

Monastic organization, sangh, has a four-fold order consisting of sadhu (male ascetics, muni), sadhvi (female ascetics, aryika), śrāvaka (laymen), and śrāvikā (laywomen). The latter two support the ascetics and their monastic organizations called gacch or samuday, in autonomous regional Jain congregations. Jain monastic rules have encouraged the use of mouth cover, as well as the Dandasan – a long stick with woolen threads – to gently remove ants and insects that may come in their path.

Food and fasting

The practice of non-violence towards all living beings has led to Jain culture being vegetarian. Devout Jains practice lacto-vegetarianism, meaning that they eat no eggs, but accept dairy products if there is no violence against animals during their production. Veganism is encouraged if there are concerns about animal welfare. Jain monks, nuns and some followers avoid root vegetables such as potatoes, onions, and garlic because tiny organisms are injured when the plant is pulled up, and because a bulb or tuber's ability to sprout is seen as characteristic of a higher living being. Jain monks and advanced lay people avoid eating after sunset, observing a vow of ratri-bhojana-tyaga-vrata. Monks observe a stricter vow by eating only once a day.

Jains fast particularly during festivals. This practice is called upavasa, tapasya or vrata, and may be practiced according to one's ability. Digambaras fast for Dasa-laksana-parvan, eating only one or two meals per day, drinking only boiled water for ten days, or fasting completely on the first and last days of the festival, mimicking the practices of a Jain mendicant for the period. Śvētāmbara Jains do similarly in the eight day paryusana with samvatsari-pratikramana. The practice is believed to remove karma from one's soul and provides merit (punya). A "one day" fast lasts about 36 hours, starting at sunset before the day of the fast and ending 48 minutes after sunrise the day after. Among laypeople, fasting is more commonly observed by women, as it shows their piety and religious purity, gains merit earning and helps ensure future well-being for their family. Some religious fasts are observed in a social and supportive female group. Long fasts are celebrated by friends and families with special ceremonies.

Meditation

image
image
Left: Jain nuns meditating, Right: 10th-century Gommateshwara statue depicting standing meditation (Kayotsarga posture)

Jainism considers meditation (dhyana) a necessary practice, but its goals are very different from those in Buddhism and Hinduism. In Jainism, meditation is concerned more with stopping karmic attachments and activity, not as a means to transformational insights or self-realization in other Indian religions. According to Padmanabh Jaini, Sāmāyika is a practice of "brief periods in meditation" in Jainism that is a part of siksavrata (ritual restraint). The goal of Sāmāyika is to achieve equanimity, and it is the second siksavrata. The samayika ritual is practiced at least three times a day by mendicants, while a layperson includes it with other ritual practices such as Puja in a Jain temple and doing charity work. According to Johnson, as well as Jaini, samayika connotes more than meditation, and for a Jain householder is the voluntary ritual practice of "assuming temporary ascetic status".

Rituals and worship

image
Praying at the feet of a statue of Bahubali

There are many rituals in Jainism's various sects. According to Dundas, the ritualistic lay path among Śvētāmbara Jains is "heavily imbued with ascetic values", where the rituals either revere or celebrate the ascetic life of tirthankaras, or progressively approach the psychological and physical life of an ascetic. The ultimate ritual is sallekhana, a religious death through ascetic abandonment of food and drinks. The Digambara Jains follow the same theme, but the life cycle and religious rituals are closer to a Hindu liturgy. The overlap is mainly in the life cycle (rites-of-passage) rituals, and likely developed because Jain and Hindu societies overlapped, and rituals were viewed as necessary and secular.

Jains ritually worship numerous deities, especially the Jinas. In Jainism a Jina as deva is not an avatar (incarnation), but the highest state of omniscience that an ascetic tirthankara achieved. Out of the 24 tirthankaras, Jains predominantly worship four: Mahāvīra, Parshvanatha, Neminatha and Rishabhanatha. Among the non-tirthankara saints, devotional worship is common for Bahubali among the Digambaras. The Panch Kalyanaka rituals remember the five life events of the tirthankaras, including the Panch Kalyanaka Pratishtha Mahotsava, Panch Kalyanaka Puja and Snatrapuja.

image
Jain worship may include ritual offerings and recitals.

The basic ritual is darsana (seeing) of deva, which includes Jina, or other yaksas, gods and goddesses such as Brahmadeva, 52 Viras, Padmavati, Ambika and 16 Vidyadevis (including Sarasvati and Lakshmi). Terapanthi Digambaras limit their ritual worship to tirthankaras. The worship ritual is called devapuja, and is found in all Jain sub-traditions. Typically, the Jain layperson enters the Derasar (Jain temple) inner sanctum in simple clothing and bare feet with a plate filled with offerings, bows down, says the namaskar, completes his or her litany and prayers, sometimes is assisted by the temple priest, leaves the offerings and then departs.

Jain practices include performing abhisheka (ceremonial bath) of the images. Some Jain sects employ a pujari (also called upadhye), who may be a Hindu, to perform priestly duties at the temple. More elaborate worship includes offerings such as rice, fresh and dry fruits, flowers, coconut, sweets, and money. Some may light up a lamp with camphor and make auspicious marks with sandalwood paste. Devotees also recite Jain texts, particularly the life stories of the tirthankaras.

Traditional Jains, like Buddhists and Hindus, believe in the efficacy of mantras and that certain sounds and words are inherently auspicious, powerful and spiritual. The most famous of the mantras, broadly accepted in various sects of Jainism, is the "five homage" (panca namaskara) mantra which is believed to be eternal and existent since the first tirthankara's time. Medieval worship practices included making tantric diagrams of the Rishi-mandala including the tirthankaras. The Jain tantric traditions use mantra and rituals that are believed to accrue merit for rebirth realms.

Festivals

image
Celebrating Das Lakshana (Paryushana), Jain Center of America, New York City

The most important annual Jain festival is called the Paryushana by Svetambaras and by the Digambaras. It is celebrated from the 12th day of the waning moon in the traditional lunisolar month of Bhadrapada in the Indian calendar. This typically falls in August or September of the Gregorian calendar. It lasts eight days for Svetambaras, and ten days among the Digambaras. It is a time when lay people fast and pray. The five vows are emphasized during this time. Svetambaras recite the Kalpasūtras, while Digambaras read their own texts. The festival is an occasion where Jains make active effort to stop cruelty towards other life forms, freeing animals in captivity and preventing the slaughter of animals.

Forgiveness

I forgive all living beings,
may all living beings forgive me.
All in this world are my friends,
I have no enemies.

Jain festival prayer on the last day

The last day involves a focused prayer and meditation session known as Samvatsari. Jains consider this a day of atonement, granting forgiveness to others, seeking forgiveness from all living beings, physically or mentally asking for forgiveness and resolving to treat everyone in the world as friends. Forgiveness is asked by saying "Micchami Dukkadam" or "Khamat khamna" to others. This means, "If I have offended you in any way, knowingly or unknowingly, in thought, word or action, then I seek your forgiveness." The literal meaning of Paryushana is "abiding" or "coming together".

Mahavir Janma Kalyanak celebrates the birth of Mahāvīra. It is celebrated on the 13th day of the lunisolar month of Chaitra in the traditional Indian calendar. This typically falls in March or April of the Gregorian calendar. The festivities include visiting Jain temples, pilgrimages to shrines, reading Jain texts and processions of Mahāvīra by the community. At his legendary birthplace of Kundagrama in Bihar, north of Patna, special events are held by Jains.The next day of Dipawali is observed by Jains as the anniversary of Mahāvīra's attainment of moksha. The Hindu festival of Diwali is also celebrated on the same date (Kartika Amavasya). Jain temples, homes, offices, and shops are decorated with lights and diyas (small oil lamps). The lights are symbolic of knowledge or removal of ignorance. Sweets are often distributed. On Diwali morning, Nirvan Ladoo is offered after praying to Mahāvīra in all Jain temples across the world. The Jain new year starts right after Diwali. Some other festivals celebrated by Jains are Akshaya Tritiya and Raksha Bandhan, similar to those in the Hindu communities.

Traditions and sects

image
Digambara Mahāvīra iconography
image
Śvētāmbara Simandhar Swami iconography

The Jain community is divided into two major denominations, Digambara and Śvētāmbara. Monks of the Digambara (sky-clad) tradition do not wear clothes. Female monastics of the Digambara sect wear unstitched plain white sarees and are referred to as Aryikas. Śvētāmbara (white-clad) monastics, on the other hand, wear seamless white clothes.

According to Viśeṣāvaśyaka Bhāṣya, a 5th century CE Śvetāmbara text, they are the original followers which is corroborated by the pattavali of the Kalpa Sutra, and that Digambaras arose 609 years after the death of Mahavira (in about the 1st century CE or 82 AD) because of an arrogant man named Sivabhuti who became a Jain monk in a fit of pique after a fight at home. He is accused of starting the Digambara Jain tradition with what Śvetāmbara call as "eight concealments", of rejecting Jain texts preserved by the Śvetāmbara tradition, and misunderstanding the Jain ideology including those related to nuns and clothes. The claim of them being the original followers of Jainism is further corroborated by the naked idols excavated from Kankali Tila, but consecrated by Śvetāmbara ascetics whose names match exactly with those mentioned in the pattavali of the Kalpa Sutra. According to Jinabhadra Gaṇi, Sivabhuti was the eighth heretic who is regarded as the founder of the Digambara sect. Another Śvetāmbara work, Nihnavavad, also confirms this account. A condition was enforced that since women possess clothes in the Digambara tradition, they are not fit to attain Moksha or liberation. This aligns with the current-day Digambara belief regarding women attaining salvation. Several well-known scholars such as R. G. Bhandarkar and Professor J. F. Fleet of Cambridge University agree with the Śvetāmbara account more than later Digambara accounts.

During Chandragupta Maurya's reign, Jain tradition states that Acharya Bhadrabahu predicted a twelve-year-long famine and moved to Karnataka with his disciples. Sthulabhadra, a pupil of Acharya Bhadrabahu, is believed to have stayed in Magadha. Later, as stated in tradition, when followers of Acharya Bhadrabahu returned, they found those who had remained at Magadha had started wearing white clothes, which was unacceptable to the others who remained naked. This is how Jains believe the Digambara and Śvētāmbara schism began, with the former being naked while the latter wore white clothes. Digambara saw this as being opposed to the Jain tenet of aparigraha which, according to them, required not even possession of clothes, i.e. complete nudity. In the fifth-century CE, the Council of Valabhi was organized by Śvētāmbara, which Digambara did not attend. At the council, the Śvētāmbara adopted the texts they had preserved as canonical scriptures, which Digambara has ever since rejected. This council is believed to have solidified the historic schism between these two major traditions of Jainism. The earliest record of Digambara beliefs is contained in the Prakrit Suttapahuda of Kundakunda.

The earliest mention and description of the schism is in the 5th century CE Śvetāmbara texts. Digambara texts do not mention the schism at least until the 10th century CE. Even after a much later mention of the schism, several important Digambara texts differ greatly on the narrative about the Śvetāmbara sect's emergence. Bhadrabāhucaritra by Digambara monk Ratnanandi states that the Śvetāmbara sect emerged after the famine in Magadha. While this is one account of the schism as per the Digambara scriptures, another alternate story is described in Darśanasār, also a Digambara text authored by Digambara monk Devasena states that the Śvetāmbara sect emerged in Vallabhi in Saurashtra 136 years after the death of Vikramaditya (or 50 AD) after a monk named Jinacandra spread the narrative that women could attain omniscience and salvation. It is worth mentioning that none of the two accounts from Digambara texts are confirmed and are believed to be much later additions (at least after 10th century CE).Pattavalis of both the sects confirm that there did not exist a pupil of Bhadrabāhu who was named Jinacandra. On the contrary, such anomalies are not observed in Śvetāmbara texts which describe only one account of the schism i.e., the one about Sahasramalla or Sivabhuti.

Digambaras and Śvētāmbara differ in their practices and dress code, interpretations of teachings, and on Jain history especially concerning the tirthankaras. Their monasticism rules differ, as does their iconography. Śvētāmbara has had more female than male mendicants, where Digambara has mostly had male monks and considers males closest to the soul's liberation. The Śvētāmbaras believe that women can also achieve liberation through asceticism and state that the 19th Tirthankara Māllīnātha was female, which Digambara rejects. Early Jain images from Mathura depict Digambara iconography until late fifth century CE where Svetambara iconography starts appearing.

Several scholars and scriptures of other religions as well as those of their counterpart Śvetāmbara Jainscriticize Digambara sect's practices of public nudity as well as their belief that women are incapable of attaining spiritual liberation.

Excavations at Mathura revealed Jain statues from the time of the Kushan Empire (c. 1st century CE).Tirthankara represented without clothes, and monks with cloth wrapped around the left arm, are identified as the Ardhaphalaka (half-clothed) mentioned in texts. The Yapaniyas, believed to have originated from the Ardhaphalaka, followed Digambara nudity along with several Śvētāmbara beliefs. In the modern era, according to Flügel, new Jain religious movements that are a "primarily devotional form of Jainism" have developed which resemble "Jain Mahayana" style devotionalism.

Scriptures and texts

image
Stela depicting Śhrut Jnāna, or complete scriptural knowledge
image
The Suryaprajnaptisūtra, a fourth or third century BCE astronomy text of Śvētāmbara Jains. Above: its manuscript from c. 1500 CE.
image
Mangulam inscription dated 3rd century BCE

Jain canonical scriptures are called Agamas. They are believed to have been verbally transmitted, much like the ancient Buddhist and Hindu texts, and to have originated from the sermons of the tirthankaras, whereupon the Ganadharas (chief disciples) transmitted them as Śhrut Jnāna (heard knowledge). The spoken scriptural language is believed to be Ardhamagadhi by the Śvētāmbara Jains, and a form of sonic resonance by the Digambara Jains.

The Śvētāmbaras believe that they have preserved 45 of the 50 original Jain scriptures (having lost an Anga text and four Purva texts), while the Digambaras believe that all were lost, and that Āchārya Bhutabali was the last ascetic who had partial knowledge of the original canon. According to them, Digambara Āchāryas recreated the oldest-known Digambara Jain texts, including the four anuyoga. The Digambara texts partially agree with older Śvētāmbara texts, but there are also gross differences between the texts of the two major Jain traditions. The Digambaras created a secondary canon between 600 and 900 CE, compiling it into four groups or Vedas: history, cosmography, philosophy and ethics.

The most popular and influential texts of Jainism have been its non-canonical literature. Of these, the Kalpa Sūtras are particularly popular among Śvētāmbaras, which they attribute to Bhadrabahu (c. 300 BCE). This ancient scholar is revered in the Digambara tradition, and they believe he led their migration into the ancient south Karnataka region and created their tradition. Śvētāmbaras believe instead that Bhadrabahu moved to Nepal. Both traditions consider his Niryuktis and Samhitas important. The earliest surviving Sanskrit text by Umaswati, the Tattvarthasūtra is considered authoritative by all traditions of Jainism. In the Digambara tradition, the texts written by Kundakunda are highly revered and have been historically influential, while the oldest being Kasayapahuda and Shatkhandagama attributed to Acharya pushpdanta and Bhutbali. Other important Digambara Jain texts include: Samayasara, Ratnakaranda śrāvakācāra, and Niyamasara.

Comparison with other religions

Jain stupa
image
Jain votive plaque with Jain stupa, the "Vasu Śilāpaṭa" ayagapata, 1st century CE, excavated from Kankali Tila, Mathura.
The inscription reads:
"Adoration to the Arhat Vardhamana. The daughter of the matron (?) courtesan Lonasobhika (Lavanasobhika), the disciple of the ascetics, the junior (?) courtesan Vasu has erected a shrine of the Arhat, a hall of homage (ayagasabha), cistern and a stone slab at the sanctuary of the Nirgrantha Arhats, together with her mother, her daughter, her son and her whole household in honour of the Arhats."
image
Sivayasa Ayagapata, with stupa fragment, Kankali Tila, 75–100 CE

All four Dharmic religions, viz., Jainism, Hinduism, Sikhism and Buddhism, share concepts and doctrines such as karma and rebirth. They do not believe in eternal heaven or hell or judgment day, and leave it up to individual discretion to choose whether or not to believe in gods, to disagree with core teachings, and to choose whether to participate in prayers, rituals and festivals. They all consider values such as ahimsa (non-violence) to be important,: p. 635 link suffering to craving, individual's actions, intents, and karma, and believe spirituality is a means to enlightened peace, bliss and eternal liberation (moksha).

Jainism differs from both Buddhism and Hinduism in its ontological premises. All believe in impermanence, but Buddhism incorporates the premise of anatta ("no eternal self or soul"). Hinduism incorporates an eternal unchanging atman ("soul"), while Jainism incorporates an eternal but changing jiva ("soul"). In Jain thought, there are infinite eternal jivas, predominantly in cycles of rebirth, and a few siddhas (liberated ones). Unlike Jainism, Hindu philosophies encompass nondualism where all souls are identical as Brahman and posited as interconnected one Jainism rejected the non-dual concept, stating that if there were only one universal consciousness which was already liberated, the purpose of dharma would be nullified. Additionally, the need and desire for an infinitely blissful consciousness to create the universe would imply a limitation within that consciousness. Jainism also criticized Vedanta's inability to explain how an intangible consciousness could create a material universe, filled with countless living beings who experience suffering. Jain scholar Dr. Hukumchand Bharill explains that, according to both Jainism and Vedanta, only consciousness can perceive itself, while the mind and body are incapable of recognizing and experiencing the soul. In Jainism, the soul, in its state of ignorance, mistakenly identifies with the body and consequently experiences suffering. When the soul realizes its true nature, it attains enlightenment, gaining infinite knowledge and bliss. If there were only a singular, universal consciousness, Bharill questions, who attains realization as the consciousness is already liberated, and the mind is incapable of experiencing soul's boundless knowledge-bliss nature.

While both Hinduism and Jainism believe "soul exists" to be a self-evident truth, most Hindu systems consider it to be eternally present, infinite and constant (vibhu), but some Hindu scholars propose soul to be atomic. Hindu thought generally discusses Atman and Brahman through a monistic or dualistic framework. In contrast, Jain thought denies the Hindu metaphysical concept of Brahman, and Jain philosophy considers the soul to be ever changing and bound to the body or matter for each lifetime, thereby having a finite size that infuses the entire body of a living being.

Jainism is similar to Buddhism in not recognizing the primacy of the Vedas and the Hindu Brahman. Jainism and Hinduism, however, both believe "soul exists" as a self-evident truth. Jains and Hindus have frequently intermarried, particularly in northern, central and western regions of India. Some early colonial scholars stated that Jainism like Buddhism was, in part, a rejection of the Hindu caste system, but later scholars consider this a Western error. A caste system not based on birth has been a historic part of Jain society, and Jainism focused on transforming the individual, not society.

Monasticism is similar in all three traditions, with similar rules, hierarchical structure, not traveling during the four-month monsoon season, and celibacy, originating before the Buddha or the Mahāvīra. Jain and Hindu monastic communities have traditionally been more mobile and had an itinerant lifestyle, while Buddhist monks have favored belonging to a sangha (monastery) and staying in its premises. Buddhist monastic rules forbid a monk to go outside without wearing the sangha's distinctive ruddy robe, or to use wooden bowls. In contrast, Jain monastic rules have either required nakedness (Digambara) or white clothes (Śvētāmbara), and they have disagreed on the legitimacy of the wooden or empty gourd as the begging bowl by Jain monks.

Jains have similar views with Hindus that violence in self-defence can be justified, and that a soldier who kills enemies in combat is performing a legitimate duty. Jain communities accepted the use of military power for their defence; there were Jain monarchs, military commanders, and soldiers. The Jain and Hindu communities have often been very close and mutually accepting. Some Hindu temples have included a Jain Tirthankara within its premises in a place of honour, while temple complexes such as the Badami cave temples and Khajuraho feature both Hindu and Jain monuments.

Fynes (1996) argues that various Jain influences, particularly ideas on the existence of plant souls, were transmitted from Western Kshatrapa territories to Mesopotamia and then integrated into Manichaean beliefs.

Art and architecture

image
The birth of Mahavira, from the Kalpa Sūtra (c. 1375–1400 CE)
image
Sihanamdika ayagapata, 25–50 CE, Kankali Tila, Mathura, Uttar Pradesh
image
Inscriptions at a Udaygiri-Khandagiri 2nd–1st-century BCE Jain rock cut cave, Odisha

Jainism has contributed significantly to Indian art and architecture. Jain arts depict life legends of tirthankara or other important people, particularly with them in a seated or standing meditative posture. Yakshas and yakshinis, attendant spirits who guard the tirthankara, are usually shown with them. The earliest known Jain image is in the Patna museum. It is dated approximately to the third century BCE. Bronze images of Pārśva can be seen in the Prince of Wales Museum, Mumbai, and in the Patna museum; these are dated to the second century BCE.

Ayagapata is a type of votive tablet used in Jainism for donation and worship in the early centuries. These tablets are decorated with objects and designs central to Jain worship such as the stupa, dharmacakra and triratna. They present simultaneous trends or image and symbol worship. Numerous such stone tablets were discovered during excavations at ancient Jain sites like Kankali Tila near Mathura in Uttar Pradesh, India. The practice of donating these tablets is documented from first century BCE to the third century CE.Samavasarana, a preaching hall of tirthankaras with various beings concentrically placed, is an important theme of Jain art.

image
Kirti Stambh in Chittor Fort, 12th century CE

The Jain tower in Chittor, Rajasthan, is a good example of Jain architecture. Decorated manuscripts are preserved in Jain libraries, containing diagrams from Jain cosmology. Most of the paintings and illustrations depict historical events, known as Panch Kalyanaka, from the life of the tirthankara. Rishabha, the first tirthankara, is usually depicted in either the lotus position or kayotsarga, the standing position. He is distinguished from other tirthankara by the long locks of hair falling to his shoulders. Bull images also appear in his sculptures. In paintings, incidents from his life, like his marriage and Indra marking his forehead, are depicted. Other paintings show him presenting a pottery bowl to his followers; he is also seen painting a house, weaving, and being visited by his mother Marudevi. Each of the twenty-four tirthankara is associated with distinctive emblems, which are listed in such texts as Tiloyapannati, Kahavaali and Pravacanasaarodhara.

Temples

image
image
Palitana
image
Girnar
image
Mount Abu
image
Sonagiri
image
Hastinapur
image
Ayodhya
image
Shikharji
image
Kundalpur
image
Pawapuri
image
Bawangaja
image
Ranakpur
image
Khajuraho
image
Varanasi
image
Shravanabelagola
image
Moodabidri
image
Udayagiri
image
Kumbhoj
image
Osian
image
Pattadakal
image
Halebidu
image
Ellora
image
Guntur
image
Kulpakji
image
Mattancherry
image
Tirumalai
image
Pudukottai
image
Madurai
image
Chitharal
class=notpageimage|
Major pilgrimage and temple sites in Jainism

A Jain temple, a Derasar or Basadi, is a place of worship. Temples contain tirthankara images, some fixed, others moveable. These are stationed in the inner sanctum, one of the two sacred zones, the other being the main hall. One of the images is marked as the moolnayak (primary deity). A manastambha (column of honor) is a pillar that is often constructed in front of Jain temples. Temple construction is considered a meritorious act.

Ancient Jain monuments include the Udaigiri Hills near Bhelsa (Vidisha) and Pataini temple in Madhya Pradesh, the Ellora in Maharashtra, the Palitana temples in Gujarat, and the Jain temples at Dilwara Temples near Mount Abu, Rajasthan.Chaumukha temple in Ranakpur is considered one of the most beautiful Jain temples and is famous for its detailed carvings. According to Jain texts, Shikharji is the place where twenty of the twenty-four Jain Tīrthaṅkaras along with many other monks attained moksha (died without being reborn, with their soul in Siddhashila). The Shikharji site in northeastern Jharkhand is therefore a revered pilgrimage site. The Palitana temples are the holiest shrine for the Śvētāmbara Murtipujaka sect. Along with Shikharji the two sites are considered the holiest of all pilgrimage sites by the Jain community. The Jain complex, Khajuraho and Jain Narayana temple are part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site.Shravanabelagola, Saavira Kambada Basadi or 1000 pillars and Brahma Jinalaya are important Jain centers in Karnataka. In and around Madurai, there are 26 caves, 200 stone beds, 60 inscriptions, and over 100 sculptures.

The second–first century BCE Udayagiri and Khandagiri Caves are rich with carvings of tirthanakars and deities with inscriptions including the Elephant Cave inscription. Jain cave temples at Badami, Mangi-Tungi and the Ellora Caves are considered important. The Sittanavasal Cave temple is a fine example of Jain art with an early cave shelter, and a medieval rock-cut temple with excellent fresco paintings comparable to Ajantha. Inside are seventeen stone beds with second century BCE. Tamil-Brahmi inscriptions. The eighth century Kazhugumalai temple marks the revival of Jainism in South India.

Pilgrimages

image
Shikharji

Jain Tirtha (pilgrim) sites are divided into the following categories:

  • Siddhakshetra – Site of the moksha of an arihant (kevalin) or tirthankara, such as: Ashtapada of Rishabhanatha, Shikharji of 20 Tirthankara, Girnar of Neminatha, Pawapuri of Mahaveera, Champapuri (capital of Anga) of Vasupujya, Mangi-Tungi of Ram, Palitana of 3 Pandavas.
  • Atishayakshetra – Locations where divine events are believed to have occurred, such as: Mahavirji, Rishabhdeo, Kundalpur, Tijara, and Aharji.
  • Puranakshetra –  Places associated with the lives of great men, such as: Ayodhya, Vidisha, Hastinapur, and Rajgir.
  • Gyanakshetra –  Places associated with famous acharyas, or centers of learning, such as Shravanabelagola.

Outside contemporary India, Jain communities built temples in locations such as Nagarparkar, Sindh (Pakistan). However, according to a UNESCO tentative world heritage site application, Nagarparkar was not a "major religious centre or a place of pilgrimage" for Jainism, but it was once an important cultural landscape before "the last remaining Jain community left the area in 1947 at Partition".

Statues and sculptures

Gommateshwara
(Bahubali)
image
The 58.8-foot high monolithic statue of Bahubali built in 981 CE
Religion
AffiliationJainism
image
Idol of Suparśvanātha

Jain sculptures usually depict one of the twenty-four tīrthaṅkaras; Parshvanatha, Rishabhanatha and Mahāvīra are among the more popular, often seated in lotus position or kayotsarga, along with Arihant, Bahubali, and protector deities like Ambika. Quadruple images are also popular. Tirthankar idols look similar, differentiated by their individual symbol, except for Parshvanatha whose head is crowned by a snake. Digambara images are naked without any beautification, whereas Śvētāmbara depictions are clothed and ornamented.

A monolithic, 18-metre (59-foot) statue of Bahubali, Gommateshvara, built in 981 CE by the Ganga minister and commander Chavundaraya, is situated on a hilltop in Shravanabelagola in Karnataka. This statue was voted first in the SMS poll Seven Wonders of India conducted by The Times of India. The 33-metre (108-foot) tall Statue of Ahiṃsā (depicting Rishabhanatha) was erected in the Nashik district in 2015. Idols are often made in Ashtadhatu (literally "eight metals"), namely Akota Bronze, brass, gold, silver, stone monoliths, rock cut, and precious stones.

Symbols

image
Om in Jainism
image
Jain flag

Jain icons and arts incorporate symbols such as the swastika, Om, and the Ashtamangala. In Jainism, Om is a condensed reference to the initials "A-A-A-U-M" of the five parameshthis: "Arihant, Ashiri, Acharya, Upajjhaya, Muni". The Ashtamangala is a set of eight auspicious symbols: in the Digambara tradition, these are chatra, dhvaja, kalasha, fly-whisk, mirror, chair, hand fan and vessel. In the Śvētāmbar tradition, they are Swastika, Srivatsa, Nandavarta, Vardhmanaka (food vessel), Bhadrasana (seat), Kalasha (pot), Darpan (mirror) and pair of fish.

image
A symbol to represent the Jain community was chosen in 1975 as part of the commemoration of the 2,500th anniversary of Mahavira's nirvana.

The hand with a wheel on the palm symbolizes ahimsā. The wheel represents the dharmachakra, which stands for the resolve to halt the saṃsāra (wandering) through the relentless pursuit of ahimsā. The five colours of the Jain flag represent the Pañca-Parameṣṭhi and the five vows. The swastika's four arms symbolise the four realms in which rebirth occurs according to Jainism: humans, heavenly beings, hellish beings and non-humans. The three dots on the top represent the three jewels mentioned in ancient texts: correct faith, correct understanding and correct conduct, believed to lead to spiritual perfection.

In 1974, on the 2500th anniversary of the nirvana of Mahāvīra, the Jain community chose a single combined image for Jainism. It depicts the three lokas, heaven, the human world and hell. The semi-circular topmost portion symbolizes Siddhashila, a zone beyond the three realms. The Jain swastika and the symbol of Ahiṃsā are included, with the Jain mantra Parasparopagraho Jīvānām from sūtra 5.21 of Umaswati's Tattvarthasūtra, meaning "souls render service to one another".

History

Jainism is a religion founded in ancient India. Jains trace their history through twenty-four tirthankaras and revere Rishabhanatha as the first tirthankara (in the present time-cycle). Some artifacts found in the Indus River Valley civilization have been suggested as a link to ancient Jain culture, but very little is known about the Indus Valley iconography and script. The last two tirthankaras, the 23rd tirthankara Parshvanatha (c. 9th–8th century BCE) and the 24th tirthankara Mahavira (c. 599 – c. 527 BCE) are historical figures. Mahavira was a contemporary of the Buddha. According to Jain texts, the 22nd Tirthankara Neminatha lived about 85,000 years ago and was the cousin of Krishna.

Ancient

Jainism is an ancient Indian religion of obscure origins. Jains claim it to be eternal, and consider the first tirthankara Rishabhanatha as the reinforcer of Jain Dharma in the current time cycle. It is one of the Śramaṇa traditions of ancient India, those that rejected the Vedas, and according to the twentieth-century scholar of comparative religion Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan, Jainism was in existence before the Vedas were composed.

The first twenty two tirthankaras are not considered by non-Jain scholars as historical figures. The 23rd Tirthankara, Parshvanatha, was likely a historical being, dated by the Jain tradition to the ninth century BCE; historians date him to the eighth or seventh century BCE. Parshvanatha may have founded a proto-Jain ascetic community which subsequently got revived and reformed by Mahavira.

Mahāvīra is considered a contemporary of the Buddha, in around the sixth or 5th century BCE. The interaction between the two religions began with the Buddha; later, they competed for followers and the merchant trade networks that sustained them. Buddhist and Jain texts sometimes have the same or similar titles but present different doctrines.

Kings Bimbisara (c. 558–491 BCE), Ajatashatru (c. 492–460 BCE), and Udayin (c. 460–440 BCE) of the Haryanka dynasty were patrons of Jainism. Jain tradition states that Chandragupta Maurya (322–298 BCE), the founder of the Mauryan Empire and grandfather of Ashoka, became a monk and disciple of Jain ascetic Bhadrabahu in the later part of his life. Jain texts state that he died intentionally at Shravanabelagola by fasting.

The third century BCE emperor Ashoka, in his pillar edicts, mentions the Niganthas (Jains).Tirthankara statues date back to the second century BCE. Archeological evidence suggests that Mathura was an important Jain center from the second century BCE. onwards. Inscriptions from as early as the first century CE already show the schism between Digambara and Śvētāmbara. There is inscriptional evidence for the presence of Jain monks in south India by the second or first centuries BCE, and archaeological evidence of Jain monks in Saurashtra in Gujarat by the second century CE.

Royal patronage has been a key factor in the growth and decline of Jainism. In the second half of the first century CE, Hindu kings of the Rashtrakuta dynasty sponsored major Jain cave temples. King Harshavardhana of the seventh century championed Jainism, Buddhism and all traditions of Hinduism. The Pallava King Mahendravarman I (600–630 CE) converted from Jainism to Shaivism. His work Mattavilasa Prahasana ridicules certain Shaiva sects and the Buddhists and expresses contempt for Jain ascetics. The Yadava dynasty built many temples at the Ellora Caves between 700 and 1000 CE. King Āma of the eighth century converted to Jainism, and the Jain pilgrimage tradition was well established in his era.Mularaja (10th century CE), the founder of the Chalukya dynasty, constructed a Jain temple, even though he was not a Jain. During the 11th century, Basava, a minister to the Jain Kalachuri king Bijjala, converted many Jains to the Lingayat Shaivite sect. The Lingayats destroyed Jain temples and adapted them to their use. The Hoysala King Vishnuvardhana (c. 1108–1152 CE) became a Vaishnavite under the influence of Ramanuja, and Vaishnavism then grew rapidly in what is now Karnataka.

Medieval

image
The ruins of Gori Jain temples in Nagarparkar, Pakistan, a pilgrimage site before 1947

Jainism faced persecution during and after the Muslim conquests on the Indian subcontinent. The scholarship in context of Jain relations with the ruler of Delhi Sultanate remains scarce, notwithstanding there were several instances of cordial relations of Jains with prominent rulers of the Sultanate. Alauddin Khalji (1296–1316), as attested by the Jain texts held discussions with Jain sages and once specially summoned Acharya Mahasena to Delhi. One more prominent Jain figure Acharya Ramachandra Suri was also honored by him. During his reign, his governor of Gujarat, Alp Khan permitted the reconstruction of the temples razed during earlier Muslim conquests and himself made huge donation for the renovation of Jain temples.Muhammad bin Tughluq (1325–1351) according to the Jain chronicles favoured the Jain scholars.

The Mughal emperors in general were influenced by the Jain scholars and made patronage and grants for their pilgrimage sites under Humayun (1540–1556), Akbar (1556–1605), Jahangir (1605–1627) and even Aurangzeb (1658–1707). Despite this, there were instances of religious bigotry during the Mughal rule towards Jains. Babur (1526–1530), the first Mughal emperor ordered the destruction of various Jain idols in Gwalior. In 1567, Akbar ravaged the fort of Chittor. After the conquest of the fort, Akbar ordered the destruction of several Jain shrines and temples in Chittor. Similarly there were instances of desecration of Jain religious shrines under Jahangir, Shah Jahan and most notably under Aurangzeb.

The Jain community were the traditional bankers and financiers, and this significantly impacted the Muslim rulers. However, they rarely were a part of the political power during the Islamic rule period of the Indian subcontinent.

Colonial era

image
A poster of Virchand Gandhi, who represented Jainism at the Parliament of the World's Religions in Chicago in 1893
image
A 34-foot-tall idol of Shrimad Rajchandra at Dharampur, Valsad

A Gujarati Jain scholar, Virchand Gandhi, represented Jainism at the first World Parliament of Religions in 1893, held in America during the Chicago World's Fair. He worked to defend the rights of Jains and wrote and lectured extensively on Jainism.

Shrimad Rajchandra, a mystic, poet and philosopher from Gujarat is believed to have attained jatismaran gnana (ability to recollect past lives) at the age of seven. Virchand Gandhi mentioned this feat at the Parliament of the World's Religions. He is best known because of his association with Mahatma Gandhi. Shrimad Rajchandra composed Shri Atmasiddhi Shastra, considered his magnum opus, containing the essence of Jainism in a single sitting of 1.5–2 hours. He expounds on the six fundamental truths of the soul:

  1. Self (soul) exists
  2. It is permanent and eternal
  3. It is the doer of its own actions
  4. It is the enjoyer or the sufferer of its actions
  5. Liberation exists
  6. There is a path to achieve liberation.

Colonial era reports and Christian missions variously viewed Jainism as a sect of Hinduism, a sect of Buddhism, or a distinct religion. Christian missionaries were frustrated at Jain people without pagan creator gods refusing to convert to Christianity, while colonial era Jain scholars such as Champat Rai Jain defended Jainism against criticism and misrepresentation by Christian activists. Missionaries of Christianity and Islam considered Jain traditions idolatrous and superstitious. These criticisms, states John E. Cort, were flawed and ignored similar practices within sects of Christianity.

The British colonial government in India and Indian princely states promoted religious tolerance. However, laws were passed that made roaming naked by anyone an arrestable crime. This drew popular support from the majority Hindu population, but particularly impacted Digambara monks. The Akhil Bharatiya Jain Samaj opposed this law, claiming that it interfered with Jain religious rights. Acharya Shantisagar entered Bombay (now Mumbai) in 1927, but was forced to cover his body. He then led an India-wide tour as the naked monk with his followers, to various Digambara sacred sites, and was welcomed by kings of the Maharashtra provinces. Shantisagar fasted to oppose the restrictions imposed on Digambara monks by the British Raj and prompted their discontinuance. The laws were abolished by India after independence.

Modern era

Followers of Jainism are called "Jains", a word derived from the Sanskrit verbal root ji, which means to conquer. In the Jain context, monks have to conquer their senses and karma for liberation. Those who have succeeded are jinas (victors), which means an omniscient person who teaches the path of salvation, and their followers are Jains. The majority of Jains currently reside in India. With four to five million followers worldwide, Jainism is small compared to major world religions. Jains form 0.37% of India's population, mostly in the states of Maharashtra (1.4 million in 2011, 31.46% of Indian Jains), Rajasthan (13.97%), Gujarat (13.02%) and Madhya Pradesh (12.74%). Significant Jain populations exist in Karnataka (9.89%), Uttar Pradesh (4.79%), Delhi (3.73%) and Tamil Nadu (2.01%). Outside India, Jain communities can be found in most areas hosting large Indian populations, such as Europe, the United Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Australia and Kenya. Jainism also counts non-Indian converts; for example, it is spreading rapidly in Japan, where more than 5,000 families have converted between 2010 and 2020.

According to the National Family Health Survey (NFHS-4) conducted in 2015–16, Jains form the wealthiest community in India. According to its 2011 census, they have the country's highest literacy rate (87%) among those aged seven and older, and the most college graduates; excluding the retired, Jain literacy in India exceeded 97%. The female to male sex ratio among Jains is .940; among Indians in the 0–6 year age range the ratio was second lowest (870 girls per 1,000 boys), higher only than Sikhs. Jain males have the highest work participation rates in India, while Jain females have the lowest.

Jainism has been praised for some of its practices and beliefs. Greatly influenced by Shrimad Rajchandra, the leader of the campaign for Indian independence, Mahatma Gandhi stated regarding Jainism:

No religion in the World has explained the principle of Ahiṃsā so deeply and systematically as is discussed with its applicability in every human life in Jainism. As and when the benevolent principle of Ahiṃsā or non-violence will be ascribed for practice by the people of the world to achieve their end of life in this world and beyond, Jainism is sure to have the uppermost status and Mahāvīra is sure to be respected as the greatest authority on Ahiṃsā.

Chandanaji became the first Jain woman to receive the title of Acharya in 1987.

See also

  • Outline of Jainism
  • Jain law
  • Jain cosmology
  • List of ancient Jains
  • List of Jains
  • Nonviolence
  • Vegetarianism

Notes

  1. This view, however, is not shared by all Jain sub-traditions. For example, the Terapanthi Jain tradition, with about 250,000 followers, considers both good karma such as compassionate charity, and bad karma such as sin, as binding one's soul to worldly morality. It states that any karma leads to a negation of the "absolute non-violence" principle, given man's limited perspective. It recommends that the monk or nun seeking salvation must avoid hurting or helping any being in any form.
  2. Jain literature, like Buddhist and Hindu literature, has also debated the aspects of violence and non-violence in food creation.
  3. In Jainism, the ahiṃsā precept for a mendicant requires avoidance of touching or disturbing any living being including plants. It also mandates never swimming in water, nor lighting or fire or extinguish one, nor thrashing arms in the air as such actions can torment or hurt other beings that live in those states of matter.
  4. The first is desavakasika (staying in a restrained surrounding, cutting down worldly activities). The third is posadhopavasa (fasting on the 8th and 14th days on lunar waxing and waning cycles). The fourth is dana (giving alms to Jain monks, nuns or spiritual people).
  5. According to Dundas, samayika seems to have meant "correct behavior" in early Jainism.
  6. Not to be confused with the four Vedas of Hinduism.
  7. That Which Is, known as the Tattvartha Sūtra to Jains, is recognized by all four Jain traditions as the earliest, most authoritative and comprehensive summary of their religion."
  8. According to Richard Gombrich and other scholars, Buddhism too was not a rejection or rebellion against any ancient caste system and it too was focused on individual's liberation from rebirths and suffering. The caste system in Buddhist societies and monasteries outside India have been documented. Gombrich states, "Some modernists go so far as to say that the Buddha was against caste altogether: this is not the case, but is one of the mistakes picked up from western authors."
  9. Whether the begging utensils of a monk, such as robe and begging bowl, were justified and legitimate for a Jain monk and were not considered an impediment on the path to salvation, remained a bone of contention among various splinter groups within Jainism, and was partly responsible for the ultimate Digambara-Svetambara split, although it would be a grave oversimplification to reduce the roots of the split to just monks' robes and bowls.
  10. Some texts refer to the place as Mount Sammeta.
  11. Long notes that , the first Tīrthaṅkara of Jainism, means "bull," and that images of bulls are found at seals from the Indus Valley civilization, speculating that they may be related to Jainism.

References

Citations

  1. "BBC - Religions - Jainism: Dharma". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 19 July 2024.
  2. Long 2009, pp. 20–22.
  3. Archana, K. C. (23 February 2020). "Jainism Gains Traction In Japan, Thousands Travel To India To Transition From Zen To Jain". The Times of India. Retrieved 18 May 2021.
  4. Yandell 1999, p. 243.
  5. Sinha 1944, p. 20.
  6. Grimes 1996, pp. 118–119.
  7. Nemicandra & Balbir 2010, p. 1 of Introduction.
  8. Champat Rai Jain 1917, p. 15.
  9. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 188–190.
  10. Jaini 1980, pp. 219–228.
  11. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 177–187.
  12. Jaini 1998, p. 151.
  13. Dundas 2002, pp. 96–98.
  14. Bailey 2012, p. 108.
  15. Long 2013, pp. 18, 98–100.
  16. Grimes 1996, p. 238.
  17. Soni 2000, pp. 367–377.
  18. Dundas 2002, pp. 75–76, 131, 229–230.
  19. Dundas 2002, pp. 229–230.
  20. S.A. Jain 1992, p. 16.
  21. Vijay K. Jain 2011, p. 6.
  22. Jaini 1998, p. 103.
  23. Jaini 1998, pp. 104–106.
  24. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 194.
  25. Long 2013, pp. 92–95.
  26. Dundas 2002, pp. 99–103.
  27. Jaini 1980, p. 226.
  28. Jaini 1980, p. 228.
  29. Jaini 2000, pp. 130–131.
  30. Jaini 1980, pp. 223–225.
  31. Jaini 1980, pp. 224–225.
  32. Sethia 2004, pp. 30–31.
  33. Jaini 1980, pp. 227–228.
  34. Dundas 2002, pp. 104–105.
  35. Jaini 1980, p. 225.
  36. Jaini 1980, pp. 222–223.
  37. Dundas 2002, pp. 90–92.
  38. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 241.
  39. Long 2013, pp. 83–85.
  40. Natubhai Shah 1998, p. 25.
  41. Doniger 1999, p. 551.
  42. Vijay K. Jain 2011, p. 46.
  43. Upinder Singh 2016, p. 313.
  44. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 271–272.
  45. Dundas 2002, p. 13.
  46. Champat Rai Jain 1929b, p. 124.
  47. Dalal 2010a, p. 27.
  48. Zimmer 1953, p. 182.
  49. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 241–242.
  50. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 241–243.
  51. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 247–249, 262–263.
  52. Dundas 2002, pp. 20–21, 34–35, 74, 91, 95–96, 103.
  53. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 262–263.
  54. Dundas 2002, pp. 91, 95–96.
  55. Rankin & Mardia 2013, p. 40.
  56. Cort 2001a, pp. 6–7.
  57. Fohr 2015, pp. 9–10, 37.
  58. Jaini 1998, pp. 141–147.
  59. Jaini 1998, pp. 148, 200.
  60. Cort 2001a, p. 7.
  61. Dundas 2002, p. 160.
  62. Markham & Lohr 2009, p. 71.
  63. Price 2010, p. 90.
  64. Dundas 2002, pp. 160–162.
  65. Flügel 2002, pp. 1266–1267.
  66. Sundararajan & Mukherji 1997, pp. 392–417.
  67. Izawa 2008, pp. 78–81.
  68. Sethia 2004, p. 2.
  69. Winternitz 1993, p. 409.
  70. Dundas 2002, pp. 88–89, 257–258.
  71. Taylor 2008, pp. 892–894.
  72. Granoff 1992.
  73. Dundas 2002, pp. 162–163.
  74. Lorenzen 1978, pp. 61–75.
  75. Dundas 2002, p. 163.
  76. Olson 2014, pp. 1–7.
  77. Charitrapragya 2004, pp. 75–79.
  78. Dundas 2002, pp. 229–231.
  79. Webb, Mark Owen. "Jain philosophy". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. ISSN 2161-0002. Archived from the original on 21 February 2015. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  80. Schwartz 2018.
  81. Matilal 1990, pp. 301–305.
  82. Balcerowicz 2015, pp. 205–218.
  83. Matilal 1998, pp. 128–135.
  84. Dundas 2002, pp. 90–99, 104–105, 229–233.
  85. Dundas 2002, pp. 232–234.
  86. Sethia 2004, pp. 86–91.
  87. Long 2009, pp. 98–106.
  88. Dundas 2002, p. 233.
  89. Natubhai Shah 2004, p. 112.
  90. Dundas 2002, pp. 117, 152.
  91. Natubhai Shah 2004, pp. 112–113.
  92. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 228–231.
  93. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 228.
  94. Shah, Pravin K. (2011). "Five Great Vows (Maha-vratas) of Jainism". Harvard University Literature Center. Archived from the original on 31 December 2014. Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  95. Vijay K. Jain 2012, p. 33.
  96. Vijay K. Jain 2012, p. 68.
  97. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 231.
  98. Long 2009, p. 109.
  99. Vijay K. Jain 2012, pp. 87–88.
  100. Tukol 1976, p. 5.
  101. Dundas 2002, pp. 179–180.
  102. Jaini 2000, p. 16.
  103. Tukol 1976, p. 7.
  104. Williams 1991, pp. 166–167.
  105. Cort 2001a, pp. 118–122.
  106. Qvarnström 2003, p. 113.
  107. Qvarnström 2003, pp. 169–174, 178–198 with footnotes.
  108. Qvarnström 2003, pp. 205–212 with footnotes.
  109. Balcerowicz 2015, pp. 144–150.
  110. Cort 2001a, pp. 120–21.
  111. Cort 2001a, pp. 120–122.
  112. Qvarnström 2003, p. 182 with footnote 3.
  113. Johnson 1995, pp. 196–197.
  114. Cort 2001a, pp. 121–122.
  115. Shanti Lal Jain 1998, p. 51.
  116. Balcerowicz 2015, pp. 15–18, 41–43.
  117. Cort 2001a, pp. 48–49.
  118. Balcerowicz 2009, p. 17.
  119. Natubhai Shah 2004, pp. 2–3.
  120. Vijay K. Jain 2013, p. 197.
  121. Dundas 2002, pp. 152, 163–164.
  122. Jaini 1998, p. 190.
  123. Voorst 2015, p. 105.
  124. Sangave 1980, p. 260.
  125. Jaini 2000, p. 285.
  126. Wiley 2009, p. 85.
  127. Wiley 2009, pp. 85–86.
  128. Ram Bhushan Prasad Singh 2008, pp. 92–94.
  129. Wiley 2009, p. 72.
  130. Wiley 2009, pp. 72, 85–86.
  131. Wiley 2009, p. 86.
  132. Dundas 2002, pp. 166–169.
  133. Jaini 1998, pp. 180–181.
  134. Jaini 1998, pp. 180–182.
  135. S.A. Jain 1992, p. 261.
  136. Natubhai Shah 2004, pp. 128–131.
  137. Johnson 1995, pp. 189–190.
  138. Dundas 2002, p. 170.
  139. Dundas 2002, pp. 187–189.
  140. Jaini 1998, pp. 162–165, 295–296.
  141. Jaini 1998, pp. 291–299.
  142. Wiley 2009, pp. 186–187.
  143. Jaini 1998, pp. 295–299.
  144. Dundas 2002, p. 40.
  145. Cort 2010, pp. 182–184.
  146. Jaini 1998, pp. 196, 343, 347.
  147. Jaini 1998, pp. 196–199.
  148. Wiley 2009, pp. 45–46, 215.
  149. Lindsay Jones 2005, p. 4771.
  150. Wiley 2009, pp. 33, 59, 92, 138, 191.
  151. Cort 1987, pp. 235–255.
  152. Mishra & Ray 2016, pp. 141–148.
  153. Dalal 2010a, p. 365.
  154. Jaini 1998, pp. 199–200.
  155. Pratapaditya Pal 1986, p. 29.
  156. Dundas 2002, pp. 204–205.
  157. Salvadori 1989, pp. 169–170.
  158. Babb 1996, pp. 32–33.
  159. Dundas 2002, pp. 81–82.
  160. Nayanar 2005, p. 35.
  161. Voorst 2015, p. 107.
  162. Gough 2012, pp. 1–47.
  163. Cort 2001b, pp. 417–419.
  164. Dalal 2010a, pp. 164, 284.
  165. Melton 2011, p. 673.
  166. Dalal 2010a, p. 284.
  167. Cort 1995, p. 160.
  168. Dalal 2010a, p. 220.
  169. Natubhai Shah 2004, p. 211.
  170. Pechilis & Raj 2013, p. 86.
  171. Pechilis & Raj 2013, p. 85.
  172. Dalal 2010a, p. 164.
  173. Dundas 2002, p. 45.
  174. Rao, B. S. L. Hanumantha (1973). Religion in Āndhra: A Survey of Religious Developments in Āndhra from Early Times Upto A.D. 1325. Welcome Press.
  175. Murti, D. Bhaskara (2004). Prāsādam: Recent Researches on Archaeology, Art, Architecture, and Culture : Professor B. Rajendra Prasad Festschrift. Harman Publishing House. ISBN 978-81-86622-67-4.
  176. Bhandarkar, Sir Ramkrishna Gopal (1927). Collected Works of Sir R. G. Bhandarkar: Miscellaneous articles, reviews, addresses &c. Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute.
  177. Hastings, James; Selbie, John Alexander (1914). Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics: Confirmation-Drama. T. & T. Clark. ISBN 978-0-567-06509-4.
  178. Dundas 2002, pp. 46–48.
  179. The Jaina Stupa at Mathura: Art and Icons, Renuka Porwal, Prachya Vidyapeeth, Shajapur, 2016
  180. Dundas 2002, pp. 47–48.
  181. Sogani, Kamal Chand (1967). Ethical Doctrines in Jainism. Lalchand Hirachand Doshi; [copies can be had from Jaina Saṁskṛti Saṁrakshaka Sangha].
  182. Paszkiewicz, Joshua R. (7 May 2024). Indian Spirituality: An Exploration of Hindu, Jain, Buddhist, and Sikh Traditions. Wellfleet Press. ISBN 978-1-57715-425-9.
  183. Dahyalal Mehta, Dhirajlal. "Nihnavad".
  184. Bombay, Anthropological Society of (1928). Journal ... Anthropological Society of Bombay.
  185. Nagraj, Muni. "Āgama Aura Tripiṭaka, Eka Anuśilana: Language and Literature".
  186. Bhandarkar, R. G. "Report On The Search For Sanskrit Manuscripts In The Bombay Presidency".
  187. Fleet, J. F. "Note on a Jain Inscription at Mathura". The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland.
  188. Clarke & Beyer 2009, p. 326.
  189. Dundas 2002, p. 47.
  190. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 46.
  191. Price 2010, pp. 104–105.
  192. Fohr 2015, pp. 21–22.
  193. Jaini 1991, p. 3.
  194. Devasena, Digambara. "Darśanasār".
  195. Jacobi, Hermann. "Gaina Sutras".
  196. Bhandarkar, R. G. "Report On The Search For Sanskrit Manuscripts In The Bombay Presidency".
  197. Dahyalal Mehta, Dhirajlal. "Nihnavad".
  198. Jones & Ryan 2007, p. 211.
  199. Umakant P. Shah 1987, p. 5.
  200. Dundas 2002, pp. 31–33.
  201. Jaini 2000, pp. 27–28.
  202. Kailash Chand Jain 1991, p. 12.
  203. Natubhai Shah 2004, pp. 73–74.
  204. Dundas 2002, p. 21.
  205. Umakant P. Shah 1987, p. 17.
  206. Umakant P. Shah 1987, pp. 79–80.
  207. Dalal 2010a, p. 167.
  208. Cort 2001a, p. 47.
  209. Flügel 2006, pp. 314–331, 353–361.
  210. Long 2013, pp. 36–37.
  211. Harvey 2016, pp. 182–183.
  212. Dundas 2002, pp. 55–59.
  213. Vallely 2002, p. 15.
  214. Dundas 2002, p. 56.
  215. Vyas 1995, p. 16.
  216. "Gender and Salvation". publishing.cdlib.org. Retrieved 1 August 2024.
  217. The Ādi Granth: Or, Holy Scriptures of the Sikhs. Wm. H. Allen. 1877.
  218. "Nudity". Retrieved 1 August 2024.
  219. "Guide To Buddhism A To Z". www.buddhisma2z.com. Retrieved 1 August 2024.
  220. Jaini 2000, p. 167.
  221. Flügel 2005, pp. 194–243.
  222. "Suryaprajnapti Sūtra". The Schøyen Collection. Archived from the original on 15 June 2017. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
  223. Dundas 2002, pp. 60–61.
  224. Champat Rai Jain 1929b, pp. 135–136.
  225. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 109–110.
  226. Dundas 2002, p. 61.
  227. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 112–113, 121–122.
  228. Vijay K. Jain 2016, p. xii.
  229. Jaini 1998, pp. 78–81.
  230. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 124.
  231. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 121–122.
  232. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 123–124.
  233. Dalal 2010a, pp. 164–165.
  234. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 125–126.
  235. Jones & Ryan 2007, pp. 439–440.
  236. Dundas 2006, pp. 395–396.
  237. Umāsvāti 1994, p. xi–xiii.
  238. Finegan 1989, p. 221.
  239. Balcerowicz 2003, pp. 25–34.
  240. Chatterjee 2000, pp. 282–283.
  241. Jaini 1991, pp. 32–33.
  242. Quintanilla, Sonya Rhie (2000). "Āyāgapaṭas: Characteristics, Symbolism, and Chronology". Artibus Asiae. 60 (1): 79–137 Fig.26. doi:10.2307/3249941. ISSN 0004-3648. JSTOR 3249941.
  243. "Collections-Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds". vmis.in.
  244. Solomon & Higgins 1998, pp. 11–22.
  245. Appleton 2016, pp. 1–21, 25–27, 57–58, 82–84.
  246. McFaul 2006, pp. 27–28.
  247. Shaw & Demy 2017.
  248. Solomon & Higgins 1998, pp. 18–22.
  249. McFaul 2006, pp. 27–40.
  250. Dundas 2002, pp. 87–88.
  251. Wiley 2004, pp. 2–5.
  252. Long 2013, pp. 122–125.
  253. Hiriyanna 1993, pp. 157–158, 168–169.
  254. Hiriyanna 1993, pp. 54–62, 77–82, 132.
  255. Perrett 2013, pp. 247–248.
  256. Bartley 2013, pp. 1–10, 76–79, 87–98.
  257. "Atmasiddhi–The Jain Path of Enlightenment". 28 December 2008.
  258. "Discovery of Truth (Satya Ki Khoj)". 4 November 2002.
  259. Jaini 1998, pp. 58, 102–105.
  260. Dalal 2010b, pp. 174–175.
  261. Juergensmeyer 2011, p. 54.
  262. Kelting 2009, pp. 206 note 4.
  263. Nesfield 1885, pp. 116–117.
  264. Pope 1880, pp. 40–41.
  265. Alberts 2007, pp. 258–259.
  266. Dundas 2002, pp. 147–149, 304 footnote 24.
  267. Babb 1996, pp. 137–145, 54, 172.
  268. Sangave 1980, pp. 73, 316–317.
  269. Gombrich 2012, pp. 344–353 with footnotes.
  270. Florida 2005, pp. 134–137.
  271. Johnston 2000, pp. 681–683.
  272. Caillat 2003a, pp. 30–34 with footnote 28.
  273. Hirakawa 1993, pp. 4–7.
  274. Balcerowicz 2015, pp. 42–43.
  275. Nisithabhasya (in Nisithasutra) 289; Jinadatta Suri: Upadesharasayana 26; Dundas pp. 162–163; Tähtinen p. 31.
  276. Jindal pp. 89–90; Laidlaw pp. 154–155; Jaini, Padmanabh S.: Ahimsa and "Just War" in Jainism, in: Ahimsa, Anekanta and Jainism, ed. Tara Sethia, New Delhi 2004, p. 52–60; Tähtinen p. 31.
  277. Harisena, Brhatkathakosa 124 (10th century); Jindal pp. 90–91; Sangave p. 259.
  278. Long 2009, pp. 5–6.
  279. Sharma & Ghosal 2006, pp. 100–103.
  280. Michell 2014, pp. 38–52, 60–61.
  281. Ring, Watson & Schellinger 1996, pp. 468–470.
  282. Fynes, Richard C.C. (1996). "Plant Souls in Jainism and Manichaeism The Case for Cultural Transmission". East and West. 46 (1/2). Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente (IsIAO): 21–44. ISSN 0012-8376. JSTOR 29757253.
  283. "Udaygiri and Khandagiri Caves". Archaeological Survey of India, Government of India. Archived from the original on 29 October 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  284. Natubhai Shah 1998, p. 184.
  285. Umakant P. Shah 1987, p. 95.
  286. Kishore 2015, pp. 17–43.
  287. Jain & Fischer 1978, pp. 9–10.
  288. Wiley 2009, p. 184.
  289. Owen 2012a, pp. 1–2.
  290. Natubhai Shah 1998, p. 183.
  291. Natubhai Shah 1998, p. 113.
  292. Jain & Fischer 1978, p. 16.
  293. Natubhai Shah 1998, p. 187.
  294. Babb 1996, p. 66.
  295. Babb 1996, p. 68.
  296. Settar 1989, p. 195.
  297. Sangave 2001, p. 188.
  298. Barik, Bibhuti (23 June 2015). "Plan to beautify Khandagiri – Monument revamp to attract more tourists". The Telegraph. Bhubaneswar. Archived from the original on 23 February 2016. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  299. Cunningham, Alexander (1879). Report of a Tour in the Central Provinces in 1873–74 and 1874–75. Archaeological Survey of India. Vol. 9. Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing. p. 31.
  300. Sehdev Kumar 2001, p. 106.
  301. Cort 2010, pp. 130–133.
  302. Jacobi 1964, p. 275.
  303. Berger 2010, p. 352.
  304. ""Murtipujakas, Jainism", Encyclopedia of World Religions (PHILTAR)". Division of Religion and Philosophy, St Martin's College. Archived from the original on 13 October 2007. Retrieved 13 October 2007.
  305. "Khajuraho Group of Monuments". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Archived from the original on 18 February 2017. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  306. "Group of Monuments at Pattadakal". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Archived from the original on 26 March 2014. Retrieved 14 March 2017.
  307. Butalia & Small 2004, p. 367.
  308. Fergusson 1876, p. 271.
  309. Pandya 2014, p. 17.
  310. Kavitha, S. S. (31 October 2012). "Namma Madurai: History hidden inside a cave". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 3 January 2014. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  311. "Dravidi Or Kalinga Syllabary". proel.org. Archived from the original on 1 December 2018. Retrieved 13 January 2019.
  312. Upinder Singh 2016, p. 460.
  313. Owen 2012a, p. 50.
  314. Kavitha, S. S. (3 February 2010). "Preserving the past". The Hindu. Archived from the original on 3 January 2014. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  315. "Arittapatti inscription throws light on Jainism". The Hindu. 15 September 2003. Archived from the original on 23 November 2013. Retrieved 15 November 2013.
  316. Titze 1998.
  317. "Nagarparkar Cultural Landscape". Tantative Lists. UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Archived from the original on 10 May 2017.
  318. Arora 2007, p. 405.
  319. Cort 2010, p. 184.
  320. "And India's 7 wonders are..." The Times of India. 5 August 2007. Archived from the original on 18 October 2012. Retrieved 3 January 2013.
  321. Botekar, Abhilash (4 December 2015). "70-crore plan for idol installation at Mangi-Tungi". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 19 January 2016. Retrieved 7 February 2016.
  322. Pratapaditya Pal 1986, p. 22.
  323. "Jain Sculpture". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Archived from the original on 6 May 2017. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  324. "Om – Significance in Jainism". Department of Computer Science of Colorado State University. Archived from the original on 1 October 1999. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  325. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 410–411.
  326. Titze 1998, p. 234.
  327. Vijay K. Jain 2012, p. iv.
  328. Cort 2001a, p. 17.
  329. Jansma & Jain 2006, p. 123.
  330. Cort 2001a, pp. 17–18.
  331. Robinson 2006, p. 225.
  332. Sangave 2001, p. 123.
  333. Vallely 2013, p. 358.
  334. "ऋषभनाथ तीर्थंकर | भारतकोश". bharatdiscovery.org.
  335. Sangave 2001, p. 185.
  336. Rankin & Mardia 2013, p. 975.
  337. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 13.
  338. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 16.
  339. Lochtefeld 2002b, p. 639.
  340. Billimoria 1988, pp. 1–30.
  341. Jambuvijaya 2002, p. 114.
  342. Pande 1957, p. 353.
  343. Long 2013, pp. 53–54.
  344. Sangave 2001, pp. 104, 129.
  345. Saraswati 1908, p. 444.
  346. Zimmer 1953, p. 183.
  347. Jaini 1998, p. 10.
  348. Barnett 1957, p. 7.
  349. "Rude Travel: Down The Sages Vir Sanghavi". 13 September 2013.
  350. Basham 1951, p. 108.
  351. Dundas 2002, p. 30-31.
  352. Dundas 2003a, p. 383.
  353. Keown & Prebish 2013, pp. 127–130.
  354. Sangave 2001, p. 105.
  355. Neelis 2010, pp. 72–76.
  356. Qvarnström 2003, pp. ix–xi, 151–162.
  357. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 41.
  358. Kulke & Rothermund 2004, pp. 63–65.
  359. Boesche 2003, pp. 7–18.
  360. Mookerji 1988, pp. 39–46, 234–236.
  361. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 43.
  362. Upinder Singh 2016, p. 444.
  363. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 49.
  364. Cort 2010, p. 202.
  365. Natubhai Shah 2004, pp. 69–70.
  366. Pereira 1977, pp. 21–24.
  367. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 52.
  368. Lochtefeld 2002a, p. 409.
  369. Arunachalam 1981, p. 170.
  370. "World Heritage Sites – Ellora Caves". Archaeological Survey of India, Government of India. Archived from the original on 7 October 2015. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  371. Gopal 1990, p. 178.
  372. Owen 2012b, pp. 1–10.
  373. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 52–54.
  374. von Glasenapp 1925, p. 56.
  375. von Glasenapp 1925, pp. 75–77.
  376. Das 2005, p. 161.
  377. Burjor Avari (April 2015). The Age of Wrath: A History of The Delhi Sultanate. Penguin UK. ISBN 9789351186588.
  378. Pushpa Prasad. "The Jain Community in the Delhi Sultanate". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 54. Indian History Congress: 224, 225.
  379. Peter Jackson (2003). The Delhi Sultanate: A Political and Military History. Cambridge University Press. p. 288. ISBN 978-0-521-54329-3.
  380. Iqtidar Alam Khan (2008). Historical Dictionary of Medieval India. Scarecrow Press. p. 101. ISBN 9780810864016. Muhammad bin Tughlaq (1325–1351) is mentioned in Jain texts as showing favour to Jain scholars
  381. Audrey Truschke (23 February 2017). "What Aurangzeb did to preserve Hindu temples (and protect non-Muslim religious leaders)". Scroll.in. Retrieved 13 August 2022.
  382. Kurt Titze; Klaus Bruhn (1998). Jainism: A Pictorial Guide to the Religion of Non-violence. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 101–102. ISBN 978-81-208-1534-6. In 1527, the Urvahi Jinas were mutilated by the Mughal emperor Babar, a fact he records in his memoirs
  383. Ram Vallabh Somani (1976). History of Mewar, from Earliest Times to 1751 A.D. Mateshwari. p. 221. OCLC 2929852. A glaring example of this sort of feeling is the destruction of several Hindu and Jain shrines, made at Chittor, during the course of invasion by the forces of Akbar
  384. EATON, RICHARD M. (2000). "Temple Desecration and Indo-Muslim States". Journal of Islamic Studies. 11 (3): 283–319. doi:10.1093/jis/11.3.283. ISSN 0955-2340. JSTOR 26198197.
  385. Cort 1998, pp. 85–86.
  386. "Virchand Gandhi – a Gandhi before Gandhi An unsung Gandhi who set course for his namesake". India Tribune. Archived from the original on 22 August 2012. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
  387. Howard, Mrs. Charles (April 1902). The Open Court, Vol. 16, Nr. 4 "The Death of Mr. Virchand R. Gandhi". Chicago: The Open Court Publishing Company.
  388. Bhagu F. Karbhari; Vīrchand Rāghavajī Gāndhī (1911). The Jain Philosophy: Collected and Ed. by Baghu F. Karbhari. N.M. Tripathi & Company. pp. 116–120.
  389. Salter 2002, p. 145.
  390. Wiley, Kristi L. (2006). The A to Z of Jainism. New Delhi: Vision Books. ISBN 81-7094-690-5. OCLC 647405338.
  391. Doshi, Manu. Srimad Rajachandra's Atma-Siddhi (in Gujarati and English). Koba: Srimad Rajachandra Adhyatmik Sadhana Kendra.
  392. Bhatavadekar, Gajanan Krishna (1867). Report on the Census of the Baroda Territories 1881. Government of India. p. 31 note 140.
  393. Hopkins 1902, p. 283.
  394. Sunavala 1934, pp. 91–93.
  395. Jaini 2000, p. 33.
  396. Hackett 2008, pp. 63–68.
  397. Cort 2010, pp. 12–16, 200–207, 218–219, 251 with note 10.
  398. Flügel 2006, pp. 348–349.
  399. Natubhai Shah 2004, p. 56.
  400. Flügel 2006, pp. 359–360.
  401. Sangave 2006, p. 15.
  402. Jr, Donald S. Lopez (30 June 2020). Asian Religions in Practice: An Introduction. Princeton University Press. p. 20. ISBN 978-0-691-21478-8.
  403. Voorst 2014, p. 96.
  404. Melton & Baumann 2010, p. lix, 1395.
  405. "C-1 Population By Religious Community". Office of the Registrar General & Census Commissioner, Ministry of Home Affairs, Government of India. 2011. Archived from the original on 13 September 2015. Retrieved 9 September 2015.
  406. Wiley 2009, p. 43.
  407. Mugambi 2010, p. 108.
  408. Chhapia, Hemali (23 February 2020). "Thousands of Japanese making a smooth transition from Zen to Jain". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 23 February 2020. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  409. Kishore, Roshan (13 January 2018). "Delhi and Punjab richest states, Jain wealthiest community: National survey". Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 13 January 2018. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  410. Jain, Bharti (31 August 2016). "Jains have highest percentage of literates: Census 2011". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 29 January 2017. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
  411. "Distribution of Population by Religions" (PDF). Census of India, Government of India. 2011. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 May 2017.
  412. Rudolph & Rudolph 1984, p. 171.
  413. Janardan Pandey 1998, p. 50.
  414. Miller, Long & Reading 2019, pp. 7, 10–.

Sources

  • Alberts, Wanda (2007), Integrative Religious Education in Europe: A Study-of-Religions Approach, Walter de Gruyter, ISBN 978-3-11-097134-7
  • Appleton, Naomi (2016), Shared Characters in Jain, Buddhist and Hindu Narrative: Gods, Kings and Other Heroes, Taylor & Francis, ISBN 978-1-317-05574-7
  • Arora, Udai Prakash (2007), Udayana, Anamika Publishers & Distributors, ISBN 978-8-179-75168-8
  • Arunachalam, M., ed. (1981), Aintām Ulakat Tamil̲ Mānāṭu-Karuttaraṅku Āyvuk Kaṭṭuraikaḷ, International Association of Tamil Research
  • Babb, Lawrence A. (1996), Absent Lord: Ascetics and Kings in a Jain Ritual Culture, University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-91708-8
  • Bailey, William (2012), The Theological Universe, Bailey Publishing, PA, ISBN 978-1-312-23861-9
  • Balcerowicz, Piotr (2003), Essays in Jain Philosophy and Religion, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-1977-1
  • Balcerowicz, Piotr (2009), Jainism and the definition of religion (1st ed.), Mumbai: Hindi Granth Karyalay, ISBN 978-81-88769-29-2
  • Balcerowicz, Piotr (2015), Early Asceticism in India: Ājīvikism and Jainism, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-317-53853-0
  • Barnett, Lincoln; et al. (1957), Welles, Sam (ed.), The World's Great Religions (1st ed.), New York: Time Incorporated
  • Bartley, C.J. (2013), The Theology of Rāmānuja: Realism and Religion, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-136-85306-7
  • Basham, A.L. (1951). History and Doctrines of the Ājīvikas: A Vanished Indian Religion. Jainism Series. Motilal Banarsidass. ISBN 978-81-208-1204-8.
  • Berger, Peter (2010), The Anthropology of Values: Essays in Honour of Georg Pfeffer, India: Pearson Education, ISBN 978-81-317-2820-8
  • Billimoria, P. (1988), Śabdapramāṇa: Word and Knowledge, Studies of Classical India, vol. 10, Springer, Springer, ISBN 978-94-010-7810-8
  • Boesche, Roger (2003), The First Great Political Realist: Kautilya and His Arthashastra, Lexington Books, ISBN 978-0-7391-0607-5
  • Butalia, Tarunjit Singh; Small, Dianne P., eds. (2004), Religion in Ohio: Profiles of Faith Communities, Ohio University Press, ISBN 978-0-8214-1551-1
  • Caillat, Colette (2003a), Gleanings from a Comparative Reading of Early Canonical Buddhist and Jain Texts, vol. 26, Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies
  • Champat Rai Jain (1917), The Practical Path, The Central Jain Publishing House
  • Charitrapragya, Samani (2004), Sethia, Tara (ed.), Ahimsā, Anekānta, and Jaininsm, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-2036-4
  • Chatterjee, Asim Kumar (2000), A Comprehensive History of Jainism: From the Earliest Beginnings to AD 1000, Munshiram Manoharlal, ISBN 978-81-215-0931-2
  • Clarke, Peter; Beyer, Peter (2009), The World's Religions: Continuities and Transformations, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-203-87212-3
  • Cort, John (1987), "Medieval Jain Goddess Traditions", Numen, 34 (2): 235–255, doi:10.1163/156852787x00047, ISSN 0029-5973
  • Cort, John E. (1995), "The Jain Knowledge Warehouses : Traditional Libraries in India", Journal of the American Oriental Society, 115 (1): 77–87, doi:10.2307/605310, JSTOR 605310
  • Cort, John E., ed. (1998), Open Boundaries: Jain Communities and Cultures in Indian History, SUNY Press, ISBN 978-0-7914-3785-8
  • Cort, John E. (2001a), Jains in the World : Religious Values and Ideology in India, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-513234-2
  • Cort, John E (2001b), White, David Gordon (ed.), Tantra in Practice, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-81-208-1778-4
  • Cort, John E. (2010), Framing the Jina: Narratives of Icons and Idols in Jain History, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-538502-1
  • Dalal, Roshen (2010a) [2006], The Religions of India: A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths, Penguin books], ISBN 978-0-14-341517-6
  • Dalal, Roshen (2010b), Hinduism: An Alphabetical Guide, Penguin Books, ISBN 978-0-14-341421-6
  • Das, Sisir Kumar (2005), A History of Indian Literature, 500–1399: From Courtly to the Popular, Sahitya Akademi, ISBN 978-81-260-2171-0
  • Doniger, Wendy, ed. (1999), Encyclopedia of World Religions, Merriam-Webster, ISBN 978-0-87779-044-0
  • Dundas, Paul (2002) [1992], The Jains (Second ed.), London and New York: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-26605-5
  • Dundas, Paul (2003a), "Jainism and Buddhism", in Buswell, Robert E. (ed.), Encyclopedia of Buddhism, New York: Macmillan Reference Lib., ISBN 978-0-02-865718-9
  • Dundas, Paul (2006), Olivelle, Patrick (ed.), Between the Empires : Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-977507-1
  • Fergusson, James (1876), A History of Architecture in All Countries: From the Earliest Times to the Present Day, vol. 3, John Murray
  • Finegan, Jack (1989), An Archaeological History of Religions of Indian Asia, Paragon House, ISBN 978-0-913729-43-4
  • Florida, Robert E. (2005), Human Rights and the World's Major Religions: The Buddhist tradition, ABC-CLIO, ISBN 978-0-313-31318-9
  • (2002), "Terapanth Śvētāmbara Jain Tradition", in Melton, J.G.; Baumann, G. (eds.), Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, ABC-CLIO, ISBN 978-1-57607-223-3
  • Flügel, Peter (2005), King, Anna S.; Brockington, John (eds.), "Present Lord: Simandhara Svami and the Akram Vijnan Movement" (PDF), The Intimate Other: Love Divine in the Indic Religions, New Delhi: Orient Longman, ISBN 978-81-250-2801-7
  • , ed. (2006), Studies in Jain History and Culture: Disputes and Dialogues, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-134-23552-0
  • Fohr, Sherry (2015), Jainism: A Guide for the Perplexed, Bloomsbury Academic, ISBN 978-1-4411-5116-2 PB: ISBN 978-1-4411-6594-7; ePDF: ISBN 978-1-4742-2756-8; ePub: ISBN 978-1-4742-2755-1.
  • Gombrich, Richard (2012), Buddhist Precept & Practice, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-136-15623-6
  • Gopal, Madan (1990), Gautam, K.S. (ed.), India through the ages, Publication Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India
  • Gough, Ellen (2012), Shades of Enlightenment: A Jain Tantric Diagram and the Colours of the Tirthankaras, International Journal of Jain Studies, vol. 8, archived from the original on 30 January 2017, retrieved 9 May 2017
  • Granoff, Phyllis (1992), "The violence of non-violence: a study of some Jain responses to non-Jain religious practices", The Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies, 15 (1)
  • Grimes, John (1996), A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy: Sanskrit Terms Defined in English, New York: SUNY Press, ISBN 0-7914-3068-5

Jainism ˈ dʒ eɪ n ɪ z em JAY niz em also known as Jain Dharma is an Indian religion Jainism traces its spiritual ideas and history through the succession of twenty four tirthankaras supreme preachers of dharma with the first in the current time cycle being Rishabhadeva whom the tradition holds to have lived millions of years ago the twenty third tirthankara Parshvanatha traditionally dated to the 9th century BCE and the twenty fourth tirthankara Mahavira historically around the 6th or 5th BCE Jainism is considered an eternal dharma with the tirthankaras guiding every time cycle of the cosmology Central to understanding Jain philosophy is the concept of bhedavijnana or the clear distinction in the nature of the soul and non soul entities This principle underscores the innate purity and potential for liberation within every soul distinct from the physical and mental elements that bind it to the cycle of birth and rebirth Recognizing and internalizing this separation is essential for spiritual progress and the attainment of samyaka darsana or self realization which marks the beginning of the aspirant s journey towards liberation The three main pillars of Jainism are ahiṃsa non violence anekantavada non absolutism and aparigraha asceticism JainismJain temples on Shatrunjaya hill near Palitana GujaratClassificationIndian religion Jain monks take five main vows ahiṃsa non violence satya truth asteya not stealing brahmacharya chastity and aparigraha non possessiveness These principles have affected Jain culture in many ways such as leading to a predominantly lacto vegetarian lifestyle Parasparopagraho jivanam the function of souls is to help one another is the faith s motto and the Namokar Mantra is its most common and strongest prayer Jainism is one of the oldest religions still practiced today It has two major ancient sub traditions Digambaras and Svetambaras which hold different views on ascetic practices gender and the texts considered canonical Both sub traditions have mendicants supported by laypersons sravakas and sravikas The Svetambara tradition in turn has two sub traditions Deravasi also known as Mandirmargis and Sthanakavasi The religion has between four and five million followers known as Jains or Jainas who reside mostly in India where they numbered around 4 5 million at the 2011 census Outside India some of the largest Jain communities can be found in Canada Europe and the United States Japan is also home to a fast growing community of converts Major festivals include Paryushana and Das Lakshana Ashtanika Mahavir Janma Kalyanak Akshaya Tritiya and Dipawali Beliefs and philosophyThe hand symbolizes Ahiṃsa the wheel dharmachakra the resolve to halt saṃsara transmigration Jainism is transtheistic and forecasts that the universe evolves without violating the law of substance dualism and the actual realization of this principle plays out through the phenomena of both parallelism and interactionism Dravya Ontological facts Dravya means substances or entity in Sanskrit Jains believe the universe is made up of six eternal substances sentient beings or souls jiva non sentient substance or matter pudgala the principle of motion dharma the principle of rest adharma space akasa and time kala The last five are united as the ajiva non living Jains distinguish a substance from a complex body or thing by declaring the former a simple indestructible element while the latter is a compound made of one or more substances that can be destroyed Tattva Soteriological facts Tattva connotes reality or truth in Jain philosophy and is the framework for salvation According to Digambara Jains there are seven tattvas the sentient jiva or living the insentient ajiva or non living the karmic influx to the soul Asrava which is a mix of living and non living the bondage of karmic particles to the soul Bandha the stoppage of karmic particles Saṃvara the wiping away of past karmic particles Nirjara and the liberation Moksha Svetambaras add two further tattvas namely good karma Punya and bad karma Paapa The true insight in Jain philosophy is considered as faith in the tattvas The spiritual goal in Jainism is to reach moksha for ascetics but for most Jain laypersons it is to accumulate good karma that leads to better rebirth and a step closer to liberation Pramana Epistemological facts Jain philosophy accepts three reliable means of knowledge pramana It holds that correct knowledge is based on perception pratyaksa inference anumana and testimony sabda or the word of scriptures These ideas are elaborated in Jain texts such as Tattvarthasutra Parvacanasara Nandi and Anuyogadvarini Some Jain texts add analogy upamana as the fourth reliable means in a manner similar to epistemological theories found in other Indian religions In Jainism jnana knowledge is said to be of five kinds mati jnana sensory knowledge srutu jnana scriptural knowledge avadhi jnana clairvoyance manah prayaya Jnana telepathy and kevala jnana omniscience According to the Jain text Tattvartha sutra the first two are indirect knowledge and the remaining three are direct knowledge Soul and karma Classification of Saṃsari Jivas transmigrating souls in Jainism According to Jainism the existence of a bound and ever changing soul is a self evident truth an axiom which does not need to be proven It maintains that there are numerous souls but every one of them has three qualities Guṇa consciousness chaitanya the most important bliss sukha and vibrational energy virya It further claims the vibration draws karmic particles to the soul and creates bondages but is also what adds merit or demerit to the soul Jain texts state that souls exist as clothed with material bodies where it entirely fills up the body Karma as in other Indian religions connotes in Jainism the universal cause and effect law However it is envisioned as a material substance subtle matter that can bind to the soul travel with the soul in bound form between rebirths and affect the suffering and happiness experienced by the jiva in the lokas Karma is believed to obscure and obstruct the innate nature and striving of the soul as well as its spiritual potential in the next rebirth Saṃsara The conceptual framework of the Saṃsara doctrine differs between Jainism and other Indian religions Soul jiva is accepted as a truth as in Hinduism but not Buddhism The cycle of rebirths has a definite beginning and end in Jainism Jain theosophy asserts that each soul passes through 8 400 000 birth situations as they circle through Saṃsara going through five types of bodies earth bodies water bodies fire bodies air bodies and vegetable lives constantly changing with all human and non human activities from rainfall to breathing Harming any life form is a sin in Jainism with negative karmic effects Jainism states that souls begin in a primordial state and either evolve to a higher state or regress if driven by their karma It further clarifies that abhavya incapable souls can never attain moksha liberation It explains that the abhavya state is entered after an intentional and shockingly evil act Souls can be good or evil in Jainism unlike the nondualism of some forms of Hinduism and Buddhism According to Jainism a Siddha liberated soul has gone beyond Saṃsara is at the apex is omniscient and remains there eternally Cosmology Rebirth loka realms of existence in Jain cosmologyDivision of time in Jain cosmology Jain texts propound that the universe consists of many eternal lokas realms of existence As in Buddhism and Hinduism both time and the universe are eternal but the universe is transient The universe body matter and time are considered separate from the soul jiva Their interaction explains life living death and rebirth in Jain philosophy The Jain cosmic universe has three parts the upper middle and lower worlds urdhva loka madhya loka and adho loka Jainism states that Kala time is without beginning and eternal the cosmic wheel of time kalachakra rotates ceaselessly In this part of the universe it explains there are six periods of time within two eons ara and in the first eon the universe generates and in the next it degenerates Thus it divides the worldly cycle of time into two half cycles utsarpiṇi ascending progressive prosperity and happiness and avasarpiṇi descending increasing sorrow and immorality It states that the world is currently in the fifth ara of avasarpiṇi full of sorrow and religious decline where the height of living beings shrinks According to Jainism after the sixth ara the universe will be reawakened in a new cycle God Jain miniature painting of 24 tirthankaras Jaipur c 1850 Jainism is a transtheistic religion holding that the universe was not created and will exist forever It is independent having no creator governor judge or destroyer In this it is unlike the Abrahamic religions and the theistic strands of Hinduism but similar to Buddhism However Jainism believes in the world of heavenly and hellish beings who are born die and are reborn like earthly beings The souls who live happily in the body of a heavenly celestial do so because of their positive karma It is further stated that they possess a more transcendent knowledge about material things and can anticipate events in the human realms However once their past karmic merit is exhausted it is explained that their souls are reborn again as humans animals or other beings The perfect enlightened souls with a body are called Arihants victors and perfect souls without a body are called Siddhas liberated souls Only a soul with human body can attain enlightenment and liberation The liberated beings are the supreme beings and are worshipped by all heavenly earthly and hellish beings who aspire to attain liberation themselves Salvation liberation Purification of soul and liberation can be achieved through the path of three jewels Samyak Darsana Correct View meaning faith acceptance of the truth of soul jiva Samyak Gyana Correct Knowledge meaning undoubting knowledge of the tattvas and Samyak Charitra Correct Conduct meaning behavior consistent with the Five vows Jain texts often add samyak tapas Correct Asceticism as a fourth jewel emphasizing belief in ascetic practices as the means to liberation moksha The four jewels are called Moksha Marga the path of liberation Main principlesNon violence ahimsa The principle of ahimsa non violence or non injury is a fundamental tenet of Jainism It holds that one must abandon all violent activity and that without such a commitment to non violence all religious behavior is worthless In Jain theology it does not matter how correct or defensible the violence may be one must not kill or harm any being and non violence is the highest religious duty Jain texts such as Acaraṅga Sutra and Tattvarthasutra state that one must renounce all killing of living beings whether tiny or large movable or immovable Its theology teaches that one must neither kill another living being nor cause another to kill nor consent to any killing directly or indirectly Furthermore Jainism emphasizes non violence against all beings not only in action but also in speech and in thought It states that instead of hate or violence against anyone all living creatures must help each other Jains believe that violence negatively affects and destroys one s soul particularly when the violence is done with intent hate or carelessness or when one indirectly causes or consents to the killing of a human or non human living being The doctrine exists in Hinduism and Buddhism but is most highly developed in Jainism The theological basis of non violence as the highest religious duty has been interpreted by some Jain scholars not to be driven by merit from giving or compassion to other creatures nor a duty to rescue all creatures but resulting from continual self discipline a cleansing of the soul that leads to one s own spiritual development which ultimately affects one s salvation and release from rebirths Jains believe that causing injury to any being in any form creates bad karma which affects one s rebirth future well being and causes suffering Late medieval Jain scholars re examined the Ahiṃsa doctrine when faced with external threat or violence For example they justified violence by monks to protect nuns According to Dundas the Jain scholar Jinadattasuri wrote during a time of destruction of temples and persecution that anybody engaged in a religious activity who was forced to fight and kill somebody would not lose any spiritual merit but instead attain deliverance However examples in Jain texts that condone fighting and killing under certain circumstances are relatively rare Many sided reality anekantavada Jain temple painting explaining Anekantavada with Blind men and an elephant The second main principle of Jainism is anekantavada from anekanta many sidedness etymologically non oneness or not being one and vada doctrine The doctrine states that truth and reality are complex and always have multiple aspects It further states that reality can be experienced but cannot be fully expressed with language It suggests that human attempts to communicate are Naya partial expression of the truth According to it one can experience the taste of truth but cannot fully express that taste through language It holds that attempts to express experience are syat or valid in some respect but remain perhaps just one perspective incomplete It concludes that in the same way spiritual truths can be experienced but not fully expressed It suggests that the great error is belief in ekanta one sidedness where some relative truth is treated as absolute The doctrine is ancient found in Buddhist texts such as the Samannaphala Sutta The Jain Agamas suggest that Mahavira s approach to answering all metaphysical philosophical questions was a qualified yes syat These texts identify anekantavada as a key difference from the Buddha s teachings The Buddha taught the Middle Way rejecting extremes of the answer it is or it is not to metaphysical questions The Mahavira in contrast taught his followers to accept both it is and it is not qualified with perhaps to understand Absolute Reality The permanent being is conceptualized as jiva soul and ajiva matter within a dualistic anekantavada framework According to Paul Dundas in contemporary times the anekantavada doctrine has been interpreted by some Jains as intending to promote a universal religious tolerance and a teaching of plurality and benign attitude to other ethical religious positions Dundas states this is a misreading of historical texts and Mahavira s teachings According to him the many pointedness multiple perspective teachings of the Mahavira is about the nature of absolute reality and human existence He claims that it is not about condoning activities such as killing animals for food nor violence against disbelievers or any other living being as perhaps right The five vows for Jain monks and nuns for example are strict requirements and there is no perhaps about them Similarly since ancient times Jainism co existed with Buddhism and Hinduism according to Dundas but Jainism disagreed in specific areas with the knowledge systems and beliefs of these traditions and vice versa Non attachment aparigraha The third main principle in Jainism is aparigraha which means non attachment to worldly possessions For monks and nuns Jainism requires a vow of complete non possession of any property relations and emotions The ascetic is a wandering mendicant in the Digambara tradition or a resident mendicant in the Svetambara tradition For Jain laypersons it recommends limited possession of property that has been honestly earned and giving excess property to charity According to Natubhai Shah aparigraha applies to both the material and the psychic Material possessions refer to various forms of property Psychic possessions refer to emotions likes and dislikes and attachments of any form Unchecked attachment to possessions is said to result in direct harm to one s personality Jain ethics and five vows Nishidhi stone depicting the vow of sallekhana 14th century Karnataka Jainism teaches five ethical duties which it calls five vows These are called anuvratas small vows for Jain laypersons and mahavratas great vows for Jain mendicants For both its moral precepts preface that the Jain has access to a guru teacher counsellor deva Jina god doctrine and that the individual is free from five offences doubts about the faith indecisiveness about the truths of Jainism insincerity of desire for Jain teachings non recognition of fellow Jains and insufficient admiration of fellow Jains spiritual endeavors Such a person undertakes the following Five vows of Jainism Ahiṃsa intentional non violence or noninjury The first major vow taken by Jains is to cause no harm to other human beings as well as all living beings particularly animals This is the highest ethical duty in Jainism and it applies not only to one s actions but demands that one be non violent in one s speech and thoughts Satya truth This vow is to always speak the truth Neither lie nor speak what is not true and do not encourage others or approve anyone who speaks an untruth Asteya not stealing A Jain layperson should not take anything that is not willingly given Additionally a Jain mendicant should ask for permission to take it if something is being given Brahmacharya celibacy Abstinence from sex and sensual pleasures is prescribed for Jain monks and nuns For laypersons the vow means chastity faithfulness to one s partner Aparigraha non possessiveness This includes non attachment to material and psychological possessions avoiding craving and greed Jain monks and nuns completely renounce property and social relations own nothing and are attached to no one Jainism prescribes seven supplementary vows including three guna vratas merit vows and four siksa vratas The Sallekhana or Santhara vow is a religious death ritual observed at the end of life historically by Jain monks and nuns but rare in the modern age In this vow there is voluntary and gradual reduction of food and liquid intake to end one s life by choice and with dispassion This is believed to reduce negative karma that affects a soul s future rebirths PracticesAsceticism and monasticism Digambara sadhu monk Svetambara Deravasi sadhu monk Svetambara Sthanakwasi sadhu monk A Svetambara sadhvi nun early 20th century A Digambara sadhvi nun Of the major Indian religions Jainism has had the strongest ascetic tradition Ascetic life may include nakedness symbolizing non possession even of clothes fasting body mortification and penance to burn away past karma and stop producing new karma both of which are believed essential for reaching siddha and moksha liberation from rebirths and salvation Jain texts like Tattvartha Sutra and Uttaradhyayana Sutra discuss austerities in detail Six outer and six inner practices are oft repeated in later Jain texts Outer austerities include complete fasting eating limited amounts eating restricted items abstaining from tasty foods mortifying the flesh and guarding the flesh avoiding anything that is a source of temptation Inner austerities include expiation confession respecting and assisting mendicants studying meditation and ignoring bodily wants in order to abandon the body Lists of internal and external austerities vary with the text and tradition Asceticism is viewed as a means to control desires and to purify the jiva soul The tirthankaras such as the Mahavira Vardhamana set an example by performing severe austerities for twelve years Monastic organization sangh has a four fold order consisting of sadhu male ascetics muni sadhvi female ascetics aryika sravaka laymen and sravika laywomen The latter two support the ascetics and their monastic organizations called gacch or samuday in autonomous regional Jain congregations Jain monastic rules have encouraged the use of mouth cover as well as the Dandasan a long stick with woolen threads to gently remove ants and insects that may come in their path Food and fasting The practice of non violence towards all living beings has led to Jain culture being vegetarian Devout Jains practice lacto vegetarianism meaning that they eat no eggs but accept dairy products if there is no violence against animals during their production Veganism is encouraged if there are concerns about animal welfare Jain monks nuns and some followers avoid root vegetables such as potatoes onions and garlic because tiny organisms are injured when the plant is pulled up and because a bulb or tuber s ability to sprout is seen as characteristic of a higher living being Jain monks and advanced lay people avoid eating after sunset observing a vow of ratri bhojana tyaga vrata Monks observe a stricter vow by eating only once a day Jains fast particularly during festivals This practice is called upavasa tapasya or vrata and may be practiced according to one s ability Digambaras fast for Dasa laksana parvan eating only one or two meals per day drinking only boiled water for ten days or fasting completely on the first and last days of the festival mimicking the practices of a Jain mendicant for the period Svetambara Jains do similarly in the eight day paryusana with samvatsari pratikramana The practice is believed to remove karma from one s soul and provides merit punya A one day fast lasts about 36 hours starting at sunset before the day of the fast and ending 48 minutes after sunrise the day after Among laypeople fasting is more commonly observed by women as it shows their piety and religious purity gains merit earning and helps ensure future well being for their family Some religious fasts are observed in a social and supportive female group Long fasts are celebrated by friends and families with special ceremonies Meditation Left Jain nuns meditating Right 10th century Gommateshwara statue depicting standing meditation Kayotsarga posture Jainism considers meditation dhyana a necessary practice but its goals are very different from those in Buddhism and Hinduism In Jainism meditation is concerned more with stopping karmic attachments and activity not as a means to transformational insights or self realization in other Indian religions According to Padmanabh Jaini Samayika is a practice of brief periods in meditation in Jainism that is a part of siksavrata ritual restraint The goal of Samayika is to achieve equanimity and it is the second siksavrata The samayika ritual is practiced at least three times a day by mendicants while a layperson includes it with other ritual practices such as Puja in a Jain temple and doing charity work According to Johnson as well as Jaini samayika connotes more than meditation and for a Jain householder is the voluntary ritual practice of assuming temporary ascetic status Rituals and worship Praying at the feet of a statue of Bahubali There are many rituals in Jainism s various sects According to Dundas the ritualistic lay path among Svetambara Jains is heavily imbued with ascetic values where the rituals either revere or celebrate the ascetic life of tirthankaras or progressively approach the psychological and physical life of an ascetic The ultimate ritual is sallekhana a religious death through ascetic abandonment of food and drinks The Digambara Jains follow the same theme but the life cycle and religious rituals are closer to a Hindu liturgy The overlap is mainly in the life cycle rites of passage rituals and likely developed because Jain and Hindu societies overlapped and rituals were viewed as necessary and secular Jains ritually worship numerous deities especially the Jinas In Jainism a Jina as deva is not an avatar incarnation but the highest state of omniscience that an ascetic tirthankara achieved Out of the 24 tirthankaras Jains predominantly worship four Mahavira Parshvanatha Neminatha and Rishabhanatha Among the non tirthankara saints devotional worship is common for Bahubali among the Digambaras The Panch Kalyanaka rituals remember the five life events of the tirthankaras including the Panch Kalyanaka Pratishtha Mahotsava Panch Kalyanaka Puja and Snatrapuja Jain worship may include ritual offerings and recitals The basic ritual is darsana seeing of deva which includes Jina or other yaksas gods and goddesses such as Brahmadeva 52 Viras Padmavati Ambika and 16 Vidyadevis including Sarasvati and Lakshmi Terapanthi Digambaras limit their ritual worship to tirthankaras The worship ritual is called devapuja and is found in all Jain sub traditions Typically the Jain layperson enters the Derasar Jain temple inner sanctum in simple clothing and bare feet with a plate filled with offerings bows down says the namaskar completes his or her litany and prayers sometimes is assisted by the temple priest leaves the offerings and then departs Jain practices include performing abhisheka ceremonial bath of the images Some Jain sects employ a pujari also called upadhye who may be a Hindu to perform priestly duties at the temple More elaborate worship includes offerings such as rice fresh and dry fruits flowers coconut sweets and money Some may light up a lamp with camphor and make auspicious marks with sandalwood paste Devotees also recite Jain texts particularly the life stories of the tirthankaras Traditional Jains like Buddhists and Hindus believe in the efficacy of mantras and that certain sounds and words are inherently auspicious powerful and spiritual The most famous of the mantras broadly accepted in various sects of Jainism is the five homage panca namaskara mantra which is believed to be eternal and existent since the first tirthankara s time Medieval worship practices included making tantric diagrams of the Rishi mandala including the tirthankaras The Jain tantric traditions use mantra and rituals that are believed to accrue merit for rebirth realms Festivals Celebrating Das Lakshana Paryushana Jain Center of America New York City The most important annual Jain festival is called the Paryushana by Svetambaras and by the Digambaras It is celebrated from the 12th day of the waning moon in the traditional lunisolar month of Bhadrapada in the Indian calendar This typically falls in August or September of the Gregorian calendar It lasts eight days for Svetambaras and ten days among the Digambaras It is a time when lay people fast and pray The five vows are emphasized during this time Svetambaras recite the Kalpasutras while Digambaras read their own texts The festival is an occasion where Jains make active effort to stop cruelty towards other life forms freeing animals in captivity and preventing the slaughter of animals Forgiveness I forgive all living beings may all living beings forgive me All in this world are my friends I have no enemies Jain festival prayer on the last day The last day involves a focused prayer and meditation session known as Samvatsari Jains consider this a day of atonement granting forgiveness to others seeking forgiveness from all living beings physically or mentally asking for forgiveness and resolving to treat everyone in the world as friends Forgiveness is asked by saying Micchami Dukkadam or Khamat khamna to others This means If I have offended you in any way knowingly or unknowingly in thought word or action then I seek your forgiveness The literal meaning of Paryushana is abiding or coming together Mahavir Janma Kalyanak celebrates the birth of Mahavira It is celebrated on the 13th day of the lunisolar month of Chaitra in the traditional Indian calendar This typically falls in March or April of the Gregorian calendar The festivities include visiting Jain temples pilgrimages to shrines reading Jain texts and processions of Mahavira by the community At his legendary birthplace of Kundagrama in Bihar north of Patna special events are held by Jains The next day of Dipawali is observed by Jains as the anniversary of Mahavira s attainment of moksha The Hindu festival of Diwali is also celebrated on the same date Kartika Amavasya Jain temples homes offices and shops are decorated with lights and diyas small oil lamps The lights are symbolic of knowledge or removal of ignorance Sweets are often distributed On Diwali morning Nirvan Ladoo is offered after praying to Mahavira in all Jain temples across the world The Jain new year starts right after Diwali Some other festivals celebrated by Jains are Akshaya Tritiya and Raksha Bandhan similar to those in the Hindu communities Traditions and sectsDigambara Mahavira iconographySvetambara Simandhar Swami iconography The Jain community is divided into two major denominations Digambara and Svetambara Monks of the Digambara sky clad tradition do not wear clothes Female monastics of the Digambara sect wear unstitched plain white sarees and are referred to as Aryikas Svetambara white clad monastics on the other hand wear seamless white clothes According to Viseṣavasyaka Bhaṣya a 5th century CE Svetambara text they are the original followers which is corroborated by the pattavali of the Kalpa Sutra and that Digambaras arose 609 years after the death of Mahavira in about the 1st century CE or 82 AD because of an arrogant man named Sivabhuti who became a Jain monk in a fit of pique after a fight at home He is accused of starting the Digambara Jain tradition with what Svetambara call as eight concealments of rejecting Jain texts preserved by the Svetambara tradition and misunderstanding the Jain ideology including those related to nuns and clothes The claim of them being the original followers of Jainism is further corroborated by the naked idols excavated from Kankali Tila but consecrated by Svetambara ascetics whose names match exactly with those mentioned in the pattavali of the Kalpa Sutra According to Jinabhadra Gaṇi Sivabhuti was the eighth heretic who is regarded as the founder of the Digambara sect Another Svetambara work Nihnavavad also confirms this account A condition was enforced that since women possess clothes in the Digambara tradition they are not fit to attain Moksha or liberation This aligns with the current day Digambara belief regarding women attaining salvation Several well known scholars such as R G Bhandarkar and Professor J F Fleet of Cambridge University agree with the Svetambara account more than later Digambara accounts During Chandragupta Maurya s reign Jain tradition states that Acharya Bhadrabahu predicted a twelve year long famine and moved to Karnataka with his disciples Sthulabhadra a pupil of Acharya Bhadrabahu is believed to have stayed in Magadha Later as stated in tradition when followers of Acharya Bhadrabahu returned they found those who had remained at Magadha had started wearing white clothes which was unacceptable to the others who remained naked This is how Jains believe the Digambara and Svetambara schism began with the former being naked while the latter wore white clothes Digambara saw this as being opposed to the Jain tenet of aparigraha which according to them required not even possession of clothes i e complete nudity In the fifth century CE the Council of Valabhi was organized by Svetambara which Digambara did not attend At the council the Svetambara adopted the texts they had preserved as canonical scriptures which Digambara has ever since rejected This council is believed to have solidified the historic schism between these two major traditions of Jainism The earliest record of Digambara beliefs is contained in the Prakrit Suttapahuda of Kundakunda The earliest mention and description of the schism is in the 5th century CE Svetambara texts Digambara texts do not mention the schism at least until the 10th century CE Even after a much later mention of the schism several important Digambara texts differ greatly on the narrative about the Svetambara sect s emergence Bhadrabahucaritra by Digambara monk Ratnanandi states that the Svetambara sect emerged after the famine in Magadha While this is one account of the schism as per the Digambara scriptures another alternate story is described in Darsanasar also a Digambara text authored by Digambara monk Devasena states that the Svetambara sect emerged in Vallabhi in Saurashtra 136 years after the death of Vikramaditya or 50 AD after a monk named Jinacandra spread the narrative that women could attain omniscience and salvation It is worth mentioning that none of the two accounts from Digambara texts are confirmed and are believed to be much later additions at least after 10th century CE Pattavalis of both the sects confirm that there did not exist a pupil of Bhadrabahu who was named Jinacandra On the contrary such anomalies are not observed in Svetambara texts which describe only one account of the schism i e the one about Sahasramalla or Sivabhuti Digambaras and Svetambara differ in their practices and dress code interpretations of teachings and on Jain history especially concerning the tirthankaras Their monasticism rules differ as does their iconography Svetambara has had more female than male mendicants where Digambara has mostly had male monks and considers males closest to the soul s liberation The Svetambaras believe that women can also achieve liberation through asceticism and state that the 19th Tirthankara Mallinatha was female which Digambara rejects Early Jain images from Mathura depict Digambara iconography until late fifth century CE where Svetambara iconography starts appearing Several scholars and scriptures of other religions as well as those of their counterpart Svetambara Jainscriticize Digambara sect s practices of public nudity as well as their belief that women are incapable of attaining spiritual liberation Excavations at Mathura revealed Jain statues from the time of the Kushan Empire c 1st century CE Tirthankara represented without clothes and monks with cloth wrapped around the left arm are identified as the Ardhaphalaka half clothed mentioned in texts The Yapaniyas believed to have originated from the Ardhaphalaka followed Digambara nudity along with several Svetambara beliefs In the modern era according to Flugel new Jain religious movements that are a primarily devotional form of Jainism have developed which resemble Jain Mahayana style devotionalism Scriptures and textsStela depicting Shrut Jnana or complete scriptural knowledgeThe Suryaprajnaptisutra a fourth or third century BCE astronomy text of Svetambara Jains Above its manuscript from c 1500 CE Mangulam inscription dated 3rd century BCE Jain canonical scriptures are called Agamas They are believed to have been verbally transmitted much like the ancient Buddhist and Hindu texts and to have originated from the sermons of the tirthankaras whereupon the Ganadharas chief disciples transmitted them as Shrut Jnana heard knowledge The spoken scriptural language is believed to be Ardhamagadhi by the Svetambara Jains and a form of sonic resonance by the Digambara Jains The Svetambaras believe that they have preserved 45 of the 50 original Jain scriptures having lost an Anga text and four Purva texts while the Digambaras believe that all were lost and that Acharya Bhutabali was the last ascetic who had partial knowledge of the original canon According to them Digambara Acharyas recreated the oldest known Digambara Jain texts including the four anuyoga The Digambara texts partially agree with older Svetambara texts but there are also gross differences between the texts of the two major Jain traditions The Digambaras created a secondary canon between 600 and 900 CE compiling it into four groups or Vedas history cosmography philosophy and ethics The most popular and influential texts of Jainism have been its non canonical literature Of these the Kalpa Sutras are particularly popular among Svetambaras which they attribute to Bhadrabahu c 300 BCE This ancient scholar is revered in the Digambara tradition and they believe he led their migration into the ancient south Karnataka region and created their tradition Svetambaras believe instead that Bhadrabahu moved to Nepal Both traditions consider his Niryuktis and Samhitas important The earliest surviving Sanskrit text by Umaswati the Tattvarthasutra is considered authoritative by all traditions of Jainism In the Digambara tradition the texts written by Kundakunda are highly revered and have been historically influential while the oldest being Kasayapahuda and Shatkhandagama attributed to Acharya pushpdanta and Bhutbali Other important Digambara Jain texts include Samayasara Ratnakaranda sravakacara and Niyamasara Comparison with other religionsJain stupaJain votive plaque with Jain stupa the Vasu Silapaṭa ayagapata 1st century CE excavated from Kankali Tila Mathura The inscription reads Adoration to the Arhat Vardhamana The daughter of the matron courtesan Lonasobhika Lavanasobhika the disciple of the ascetics the junior courtesan Vasu has erected a shrine of the Arhat a hall of homage ayagasabha cistern and a stone slab at the sanctuary of the Nirgrantha Arhats together with her mother her daughter her son and her whole household in honour of the Arhats Sivayasa Ayagapata with stupa fragment Kankali Tila 75 100 CE All four Dharmic religions viz Jainism Hinduism Sikhism and Buddhism share concepts and doctrines such as karma and rebirth They do not believe in eternal heaven or hell or judgment day and leave it up to individual discretion to choose whether or not to believe in gods to disagree with core teachings and to choose whether to participate in prayers rituals and festivals They all consider values such as ahimsa non violence to be important p 635 link suffering to craving individual s actions intents and karma and believe spirituality is a means to enlightened peace bliss and eternal liberation moksha Jainism differs from both Buddhism and Hinduism in its ontological premises All believe in impermanence but Buddhism incorporates the premise of anatta no eternal self or soul Hinduism incorporates an eternal unchanging atman soul while Jainism incorporates an eternal but changing jiva soul In Jain thought there are infinite eternal jivas predominantly in cycles of rebirth and a few siddhas liberated ones Unlike Jainism Hindu philosophies encompass nondualism where all souls are identical as Brahman and posited as interconnected one Jainism rejected the non dual concept stating that if there were only one universal consciousness which was already liberated the purpose of dharma would be nullified Additionally the need and desire for an infinitely blissful consciousness to create the universe would imply a limitation within that consciousness Jainism also criticized Vedanta s inability to explain how an intangible consciousness could create a material universe filled with countless living beings who experience suffering Jain scholar Dr Hukumchand Bharill explains that according to both Jainism and Vedanta only consciousness can perceive itself while the mind and body are incapable of recognizing and experiencing the soul In Jainism the soul in its state of ignorance mistakenly identifies with the body and consequently experiences suffering When the soul realizes its true nature it attains enlightenment gaining infinite knowledge and bliss If there were only a singular universal consciousness Bharill questions who attains realization as the consciousness is already liberated and the mind is incapable of experiencing soul s boundless knowledge bliss nature While both Hinduism and Jainism believe soul exists to be a self evident truth most Hindu systems consider it to be eternally present infinite and constant vibhu but some Hindu scholars propose soul to be atomic Hindu thought generally discusses Atman and Brahman through a monistic or dualistic framework In contrast Jain thought denies the Hindu metaphysical concept of Brahman and Jain philosophy considers the soul to be ever changing and bound to the body or matter for each lifetime thereby having a finite size that infuses the entire body of a living being Jainism is similar to Buddhism in not recognizing the primacy of the Vedas and the Hindu Brahman Jainism and Hinduism however both believe soul exists as a self evident truth Jains and Hindus have frequently intermarried particularly in northern central and western regions of India Some early colonial scholars stated that Jainism like Buddhism was in part a rejection of the Hindu caste system but later scholars consider this a Western error A caste system not based on birth has been a historic part of Jain society and Jainism focused on transforming the individual not society Monasticism is similar in all three traditions with similar rules hierarchical structure not traveling during the four month monsoon season and celibacy originating before the Buddha or the Mahavira Jain and Hindu monastic communities have traditionally been more mobile and had an itinerant lifestyle while Buddhist monks have favored belonging to a sangha monastery and staying in its premises Buddhist monastic rules forbid a monk to go outside without wearing the sangha s distinctive ruddy robe or to use wooden bowls In contrast Jain monastic rules have either required nakedness Digambara or white clothes Svetambara and they have disagreed on the legitimacy of the wooden or empty gourd as the begging bowl by Jain monks Jains have similar views with Hindus that violence in self defence can be justified and that a soldier who kills enemies in combat is performing a legitimate duty Jain communities accepted the use of military power for their defence there were Jain monarchs military commanders and soldiers The Jain and Hindu communities have often been very close and mutually accepting Some Hindu temples have included a Jain Tirthankara within its premises in a place of honour while temple complexes such as the Badami cave temples and Khajuraho feature both Hindu and Jain monuments Fynes 1996 argues that various Jain influences particularly ideas on the existence of plant souls were transmitted from Western Kshatrapa territories to Mesopotamia and then integrated into Manichaean beliefs Art and architectureThe birth of Mahavira from the Kalpa Sutra c 1375 1400 CE Sihanamdika ayagapata 25 50 CE Kankali Tila Mathura Uttar PradeshInscriptions at a Udaygiri Khandagiri 2nd 1st century BCE Jain rock cut cave Odisha Jainism has contributed significantly to Indian art and architecture Jain arts depict life legends of tirthankara or other important people particularly with them in a seated or standing meditative posture Yakshas and yakshinis attendant spirits who guard the tirthankara are usually shown with them The earliest known Jain image is in the Patna museum It is dated approximately to the third century BCE Bronze images of Parsva can be seen in the Prince of Wales Museum Mumbai and in the Patna museum these are dated to the second century BCE Ayagapata is a type of votive tablet used in Jainism for donation and worship in the early centuries These tablets are decorated with objects and designs central to Jain worship such as the stupa dharmacakra and triratna They present simultaneous trends or image and symbol worship Numerous such stone tablets were discovered during excavations at ancient Jain sites like Kankali Tila near Mathura in Uttar Pradesh India The practice of donating these tablets is documented from first century BCE to the third century CE Samavasarana a preaching hall of tirthankaras with various beings concentrically placed is an important theme of Jain art Kirti Stambh in Chittor Fort 12th century CE The Jain tower in Chittor Rajasthan is a good example of Jain architecture Decorated manuscripts are preserved in Jain libraries containing diagrams from Jain cosmology Most of the paintings and illustrations depict historical events known as Panch Kalyanaka from the life of the tirthankara Rishabha the first tirthankara is usually depicted in either the lotus position or kayotsarga the standing position He is distinguished from other tirthankara by the long locks of hair falling to his shoulders Bull images also appear in his sculptures In paintings incidents from his life like his marriage and Indra marking his forehead are depicted Other paintings show him presenting a pottery bowl to his followers he is also seen painting a house weaving and being visited by his mother Marudevi Each of the twenty four tirthankara is associated with distinctive emblems which are listed in such texts as Tiloyapannati Kahavaali and Pravacanasaarodhara Temples PalitanaGirnarMount AbuSonagiriHastinapurAyodhyaShikharjiKundalpurPawapuriBawangajaRanakpurKhajurahoVaranasiShravanabelagolaMoodabidriUdayagiriKumbhojOsianPattadakalHalebiduElloraGunturKulpakjiMattancherryTirumalaiPudukottaiMaduraiChitharalclass notpageimage Major pilgrimage and temple sites in Jainism A Jain temple a Derasar or Basadi is a place of worship Temples contain tirthankara images some fixed others moveable These are stationed in the inner sanctum one of the two sacred zones the other being the main hall One of the images is marked as the moolnayak primary deity A manastambha column of honor is a pillar that is often constructed in front of Jain temples Temple construction is considered a meritorious act Ancient Jain monuments include the Udaigiri Hills near Bhelsa Vidisha and Pataini temple in Madhya Pradesh the Ellora in Maharashtra the Palitana temples in Gujarat and the Jain temples at Dilwara Temples near Mount Abu Rajasthan Chaumukha temple in Ranakpur is considered one of the most beautiful Jain temples and is famous for its detailed carvings According to Jain texts Shikharji is the place where twenty of the twenty four Jain Tirthaṅkaras along with many other monks attained moksha died without being reborn with their soul in Siddhashila The Shikharji site in northeastern Jharkhand is therefore a revered pilgrimage site The Palitana temples are the holiest shrine for the Svetambara Murtipujaka sect Along with Shikharji the two sites are considered the holiest of all pilgrimage sites by the Jain community The Jain complex Khajuraho and Jain Narayana temple are part of a UNESCO World Heritage Site Shravanabelagola Saavira Kambada Basadi or 1000 pillars and Brahma Jinalaya are important Jain centers in Karnataka In and around Madurai there are 26 caves 200 stone beds 60 inscriptions and over 100 sculptures The second first century BCE Udayagiri and Khandagiri Caves are rich with carvings of tirthanakars and deities with inscriptions including the Elephant Cave inscription Jain cave temples at Badami Mangi Tungi and the Ellora Caves are considered important The Sittanavasal Cave temple is a fine example of Jain art with an early cave shelter and a medieval rock cut temple with excellent fresco paintings comparable to Ajantha Inside are seventeen stone beds with second century BCE Tamil Brahmi inscriptions The eighth century Kazhugumalai temple marks the revival of Jainism in South India Jain temples of varied styles in India and abroad Ranakpur Jain Temple Dilwara Temples Parshvanath Temple in Khajuraho Girnar Jain temples Jal Mandir Pawapuri Lodhurva Jain temple Palitana temples Saavira Kambada Basadi Moodbidri Karnataka Jain temple Antwerp Belgium Brahma Jinalaya Lakkundi Hutheesing Jain TemplePilgrimages Shikharji Jain Tirtha pilgrim sites are divided into the following categories Siddhakshetra Site of the moksha of an arihant kevalin or tirthankara such as Ashtapada of Rishabhanatha Shikharji of 20 Tirthankara Girnar of Neminatha Pawapuri of Mahaveera Champapuri capital of Anga of Vasupujya Mangi Tungi of Ram Palitana of 3 Pandavas Atishayakshetra Locations where divine events are believed to have occurred such as Mahavirji Rishabhdeo Kundalpur Tijara and Aharji Puranakshetra Places associated with the lives of great men such as Ayodhya Vidisha Hastinapur and Rajgir Gyanakshetra Places associated with famous acharyas or centers of learning such as Shravanabelagola Outside contemporary India Jain communities built temples in locations such as Nagarparkar Sindh Pakistan However according to a UNESCO tentative world heritage site application Nagarparkar was not a major religious centre or a place of pilgrimage for Jainism but it was once an important cultural landscape before the last remaining Jain community left the area in 1947 at Partition Statues and sculptures Gommateshwara Bahubali The 58 8 foot high monolithic statue of Bahubali built in 981 CEReligionAffiliationJainismIdol of Suparsvanatha Jain sculptures usually depict one of the twenty four tirthaṅkaras Parshvanatha Rishabhanatha and Mahavira are among the more popular often seated in lotus position or kayotsarga along with Arihant Bahubali and protector deities like Ambika Quadruple images are also popular Tirthankar idols look similar differentiated by their individual symbol except for Parshvanatha whose head is crowned by a snake Digambara images are naked without any beautification whereas Svetambara depictions are clothed and ornamented A monolithic 18 metre 59 foot statue of Bahubali Gommateshvara built in 981 CE by the Ganga minister and commander Chavundaraya is situated on a hilltop in Shravanabelagola in Karnataka This statue was voted first in the SMS poll Seven Wonders of India conducted by The Times of India The 33 metre 108 foot tall Statue of Ahiṃsa depicting Rishabhanatha was erected in the Nashik district in 2015 Idols are often made in Ashtadhatu literally eight metals namely Akota Bronze brass gold silver stone monoliths rock cut and precious stones Symbols Om in JainismJain flag Jain icons and arts incorporate symbols such as the swastika Om and the Ashtamangala In Jainism Om is a condensed reference to the initials A A A U M of the five parameshthis Arihant Ashiri Acharya Upajjhaya Muni The Ashtamangala is a set of eight auspicious symbols in the Digambara tradition these are chatra dhvaja kalasha fly whisk mirror chair hand fan and vessel In the Svetambar tradition they are Swastika Srivatsa Nandavarta Vardhmanaka food vessel Bhadrasana seat Kalasha pot Darpan mirror and pair of fish A symbol to represent the Jain community was chosen in 1975 as part of the commemoration of the 2 500th anniversary of Mahavira s nirvana The hand with a wheel on the palm symbolizes ahimsa The wheel represents the dharmachakra which stands for the resolve to halt the saṃsara wandering through the relentless pursuit of ahimsa The five colours of the Jain flag represent the Panca Parameṣṭhi and the five vows The swastika s four arms symbolise the four realms in which rebirth occurs according to Jainism humans heavenly beings hellish beings and non humans The three dots on the top represent the three jewels mentioned in ancient texts correct faith correct understanding and correct conduct believed to lead to spiritual perfection In 1974 on the 2500th anniversary of the nirvana of Mahavira the Jain community chose a single combined image for Jainism It depicts the three lokas heaven the human world and hell The semi circular topmost portion symbolizes Siddhashila a zone beyond the three realms The Jain swastika and the symbol of Ahiṃsa are included with the Jain mantra Parasparopagraho Jivanam from sutra 5 21 of Umaswati s Tattvarthasutra meaning souls render service to one another HistoryJainism is a religion founded in ancient India Jains trace their history through twenty four tirthankaras and revere Rishabhanatha as the first tirthankara in the present time cycle Some artifacts found in the Indus River Valley civilization have been suggested as a link to ancient Jain culture but very little is known about the Indus Valley iconography and script The last two tirthankaras the 23rd tirthankara Parshvanatha c 9th 8th century BCE and the 24th tirthankara Mahavira c 599 c 527 BCE are historical figures Mahavira was a contemporary of the Buddha According to Jain texts the 22nd Tirthankara Neminatha lived about 85 000 years ago and was the cousin of Krishna Ancient Jainism is an ancient Indian religion of obscure origins Jains claim it to be eternal and consider the first tirthankara Rishabhanatha as the reinforcer of Jain Dharma in the current time cycle It is one of the Sramaṇa traditions of ancient India those that rejected the Vedas and according to the twentieth century scholar of comparative religion Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan Jainism was in existence before the Vedas were composed The first twenty two tirthankaras are not considered by non Jain scholars as historical figures The 23rd Tirthankara Parshvanatha was likely a historical being dated by the Jain tradition to the ninth century BCE historians date him to the eighth or seventh century BCE Parshvanatha may have founded a proto Jain ascetic community which subsequently got revived and reformed by Mahavira Mahavira is considered a contemporary of the Buddha in around the sixth or 5th century BCE The interaction between the two religions began with the Buddha later they competed for followers and the merchant trade networks that sustained them Buddhist and Jain texts sometimes have the same or similar titles but present different doctrines Kings Bimbisara c 558 491 BCE Ajatashatru c 492 460 BCE and Udayin c 460 440 BCE of the Haryanka dynasty were patrons of Jainism Jain tradition states that Chandragupta Maurya 322 298 BCE the founder of the Mauryan Empire and grandfather of Ashoka became a monk and disciple of Jain ascetic Bhadrabahu in the later part of his life Jain texts state that he died intentionally at Shravanabelagola by fasting The third century BCE emperor Ashoka in his pillar edicts mentions the Niganthas Jains Tirthankara statues date back to the second century BCE Archeological evidence suggests that Mathura was an important Jain center from the second century BCE onwards Inscriptions from as early as the first century CE already show the schism between Digambara and Svetambara There is inscriptional evidence for the presence of Jain monks in south India by the second or first centuries BCE and archaeological evidence of Jain monks in Saurashtra in Gujarat by the second century CE Royal patronage has been a key factor in the growth and decline of Jainism In the second half of the first century CE Hindu kings of the Rashtrakuta dynasty sponsored major Jain cave temples King Harshavardhana of the seventh century championed Jainism Buddhism and all traditions of Hinduism The Pallava King Mahendravarman I 600 630 CE converted from Jainism to Shaivism His work Mattavilasa Prahasana ridicules certain Shaiva sects and the Buddhists and expresses contempt for Jain ascetics The Yadava dynasty built many temples at the Ellora Caves between 700 and 1000 CE King Ama of the eighth century converted to Jainism and the Jain pilgrimage tradition was well established in his era Mularaja 10th century CE the founder of the Chalukya dynasty constructed a Jain temple even though he was not a Jain During the 11th century Basava a minister to the Jain Kalachuri king Bijjala converted many Jains to the Lingayat Shaivite sect The Lingayats destroyed Jain temples and adapted them to their use The Hoysala King Vishnuvardhana c 1108 1152 CE became a Vaishnavite under the influence of Ramanuja and Vaishnavism then grew rapidly in what is now Karnataka Rishabhdev believed to have lived over 592 704 1018 years ago is considered the traditional founder of Jainism Jain inscription of Ashoka c 236 BCE Chaumukha Sculpture with Four Jinas Rishabhanatha Adinatha Parshvanatha Neminatha and Mahavira LACMA sixth century Udayagiri and Khandagiri Caves built by King Kharavela of Mahameghavahana dynasty in second century CE The Indra Sabha cave at the Ellora Caves are co located with Hindu and Buddhist monuments Kazhugumalai Jain bedsMedieval The ruins of Gori Jain temples in Nagarparkar Pakistan a pilgrimage site before 1947 Jainism faced persecution during and after the Muslim conquests on the Indian subcontinent The scholarship in context of Jain relations with the ruler of Delhi Sultanate remains scarce notwithstanding there were several instances of cordial relations of Jains with prominent rulers of the Sultanate Alauddin Khalji 1296 1316 as attested by the Jain texts held discussions with Jain sages and once specially summoned Acharya Mahasena to Delhi One more prominent Jain figure Acharya Ramachandra Suri was also honored by him During his reign his governor of Gujarat Alp Khan permitted the reconstruction of the temples razed during earlier Muslim conquests and himself made huge donation for the renovation of Jain temples Muhammad bin Tughluq 1325 1351 according to the Jain chronicles favoured the Jain scholars The Mughal emperors in general were influenced by the Jain scholars and made patronage and grants for their pilgrimage sites under Humayun 1540 1556 Akbar 1556 1605 Jahangir 1605 1627 and even Aurangzeb 1658 1707 Despite this there were instances of religious bigotry during the Mughal rule towards Jains Babur 1526 1530 the first Mughal emperor ordered the destruction of various Jain idols in Gwalior In 1567 Akbar ravaged the fort of Chittor After the conquest of the fort Akbar ordered the destruction of several Jain shrines and temples in Chittor Similarly there were instances of desecration of Jain religious shrines under Jahangir Shah Jahan and most notably under Aurangzeb The Jain community were the traditional bankers and financiers and this significantly impacted the Muslim rulers However they rarely were a part of the political power during the Islamic rule period of the Indian subcontinent Colonial era A poster of Virchand Gandhi who represented Jainism at the Parliament of the World s Religions in Chicago in 1893A 34 foot tall idol of Shrimad Rajchandra at Dharampur Valsad A Gujarati Jain scholar Virchand Gandhi represented Jainism at the first World Parliament of Religions in 1893 held in America during the Chicago World s Fair He worked to defend the rights of Jains and wrote and lectured extensively on Jainism Shrimad Rajchandra a mystic poet and philosopher from Gujarat is believed to have attained jatismaran gnana ability to recollect past lives at the age of seven Virchand Gandhi mentioned this feat at the Parliament of the World s Religions He is best known because of his association with Mahatma Gandhi Shrimad Rajchandra composed Shri Atmasiddhi Shastra considered his magnum opus containing the essence of Jainism in a single sitting of 1 5 2 hours He expounds on the six fundamental truths of the soul Self soul exists It is permanent and eternal It is the doer of its own actions It is the enjoyer or the sufferer of its actions Liberation exists There is a path to achieve liberation Colonial era reports and Christian missions variously viewed Jainism as a sect of Hinduism a sect of Buddhism or a distinct religion Christian missionaries were frustrated at Jain people without pagan creator gods refusing to convert to Christianity while colonial era Jain scholars such as Champat Rai Jain defended Jainism against criticism and misrepresentation by Christian activists Missionaries of Christianity and Islam considered Jain traditions idolatrous and superstitious These criticisms states John E Cort were flawed and ignored similar practices within sects of Christianity The British colonial government in India and Indian princely states promoted religious tolerance However laws were passed that made roaming naked by anyone an arrestable crime This drew popular support from the majority Hindu population but particularly impacted Digambara monks The Akhil Bharatiya Jain Samaj opposed this law claiming that it interfered with Jain religious rights Acharya Shantisagar entered Bombay now Mumbai in 1927 but was forced to cover his body He then led an India wide tour as the naked monk with his followers to various Digambara sacred sites and was welcomed by kings of the Maharashtra provinces Shantisagar fasted to oppose the restrictions imposed on Digambara monks by the British Raj and prompted their discontinuance The laws were abolished by India after independence Modern eraFollowers of Jainism are called Jains a word derived from the Sanskrit verbal root ji which means to conquer In the Jain context monks have to conquer their senses and karma for liberation Those who have succeeded are jinas victors which means an omniscient person who teaches the path of salvation and their followers are Jains The majority of Jains currently reside in India With four to five million followers worldwide Jainism is small compared to major world religions Jains form 0 37 of India s population mostly in the states of Maharashtra 1 4 million in 2011 31 46 of Indian Jains Rajasthan 13 97 Gujarat 13 02 and Madhya Pradesh 12 74 Significant Jain populations exist in Karnataka 9 89 Uttar Pradesh 4 79 Delhi 3 73 and Tamil Nadu 2 01 Outside India Jain communities can be found in most areas hosting large Indian populations such as Europe the United Kingdom the United States Canada Australia and Kenya Jainism also counts non Indian converts for example it is spreading rapidly in Japan where more than 5 000 families have converted between 2010 and 2020 According to the National Family Health Survey NFHS 4 conducted in 2015 16 Jains form the wealthiest community in India According to its 2011 census they have the country s highest literacy rate 87 among those aged seven and older and the most college graduates excluding the retired Jain literacy in India exceeded 97 The female to male sex ratio among Jains is 940 among Indians in the 0 6 year age range the ratio was second lowest 870 girls per 1 000 boys higher only than Sikhs Jain males have the highest work participation rates in India while Jain females have the lowest Jainism has been praised for some of its practices and beliefs Greatly influenced by Shrimad Rajchandra the leader of the campaign for Indian independence Mahatma Gandhi stated regarding Jainism No religion in the World has explained the principle of Ahiṃsa so deeply and systematically as is discussed with its applicability in every human life in Jainism As and when the benevolent principle of Ahiṃsa or non violence will be ascribed for practice by the people of the world to achieve their end of life in this world and beyond Jainism is sure to have the uppermost status and Mahavira is sure to be respected as the greatest authority on Ahiṃsa Chandanaji became the first Jain woman to receive the title of Acharya in 1987 See alsoReligion portalOutline of Jainism Jain law Jain cosmology List of ancient Jains List of Jains Nonviolence VegetarianismNotesThis view however is not shared by all Jain sub traditions For example the Terapanthi Jain tradition with about 250 000 followers considers both good karma such as compassionate charity and bad karma such as sin as binding one s soul to worldly morality It states that any karma leads to a negation of the absolute non violence principle given man s limited perspective It recommends that the monk or nun seeking salvation must avoid hurting or helping any being in any form Jain literature like Buddhist and Hindu literature has also debated the aspects of violence and non violence in food creation In Jainism the ahiṃsa precept for a mendicant requires avoidance of touching or disturbing any living being including plants It also mandates never swimming in water nor lighting or fire or extinguish one nor thrashing arms in the air as such actions can torment or hurt other beings that live in those states of matter The first is desavakasika staying in a restrained surrounding cutting down worldly activities The third is posadhopavasa fasting on the 8th and 14th days on lunar waxing and waning cycles The fourth is dana giving alms to Jain monks nuns or spiritual people According to Dundas samayika seems to have meant correct behavior in early Jainism Not to be confused with the four Vedas of Hinduism That Which Is known as the Tattvartha Sutra to Jains is recognized by all four Jain traditions as the earliest most authoritative and comprehensive summary of their religion According to Richard Gombrich and other scholars Buddhism too was not a rejection or rebellion against any ancient caste system and it too was focused on individual s liberation from rebirths and suffering The caste system in Buddhist societies and monasteries outside India have been documented Gombrich states Some modernists go so far as to say that the Buddha was against caste altogether this is not the case but is one of the mistakes picked up from western authors Whether the begging utensils of a monk such as robe and begging bowl were justified and legitimate for a Jain monk and were not considered an impediment on the path to salvation remained a bone of contention among various splinter groups within Jainism and was partly responsible for the ultimate Digambara Svetambara split although it would be a grave oversimplification to reduce the roots of the split to just monks robes and bowls Some texts refer to the place as Mount Sammeta Long notes that the first Tirthaṅkara of Jainism means bull and that images of bulls are found at seals from the Indus Valley civilization speculating that they may be related to Jainism ReferencesCitations BBC Religions Jainism Dharma www bbc co uk Retrieved 19 July 2024 Long 2009 pp 20 22 Archana K C 23 February 2020 Jainism Gains Traction In Japan Thousands Travel To India To Transition From Zen To Jain The Times of India Retrieved 18 May 2021 Yandell 1999 p 243 Sinha 1944 p 20 Grimes 1996 pp 118 119 Nemicandra amp Balbir 2010 p 1 of Introduction Champat Rai Jain 1917 p 15 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 188 190 Jaini 1980 pp 219 228 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 177 187 Jaini 1998 p 151 Dundas 2002 pp 96 98 Bailey 2012 p 108 Long 2013 pp 18 98 100 Grimes 1996 p 238 Soni 2000 pp 367 377 Dundas 2002 pp 75 76 131 229 230 Dundas 2002 pp 229 230 S A Jain 1992 p 16 Vijay K Jain 2011 p 6 Jaini 1998 p 103 Jaini 1998 pp 104 106 von Glasenapp 1925 p 194 Long 2013 pp 92 95 Dundas 2002 pp 99 103 Jaini 1980 p 226 Jaini 1980 p 228 Jaini 2000 pp 130 131 Jaini 1980 pp 223 225 Jaini 1980 pp 224 225 Sethia 2004 pp 30 31 Jaini 1980 pp 227 228 Dundas 2002 pp 104 105 Jaini 1980 p 225 Jaini 1980 pp 222 223 Dundas 2002 pp 90 92 von Glasenapp 1925 p 241 Long 2013 pp 83 85 Natubhai Shah 1998 p 25 Doniger 1999 p 551 Vijay K Jain 2011 p 46 Upinder Singh 2016 p 313 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 271 272 Dundas 2002 p 13 Champat Rai Jain 1929b p 124 Dalal 2010a p 27 Zimmer 1953 p 182 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 241 242 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 241 243 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 247 249 262 263 Dundas 2002 pp 20 21 34 35 74 91 95 96 103 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 262 263 Dundas 2002 pp 91 95 96 Rankin amp Mardia 2013 p 40 Cort 2001a pp 6 7 Fohr 2015 pp 9 10 37 Jaini 1998 pp 141 147 Jaini 1998 pp 148 200 Cort 2001a p 7 Dundas 2002 p 160 Markham amp Lohr 2009 p 71 Price 2010 p 90 Dundas 2002 pp 160 162 Flugel 2002 pp 1266 1267 Sundararajan amp Mukherji 1997 pp 392 417 Izawa 2008 pp 78 81 Sethia 2004 p 2 Winternitz 1993 p 409 Dundas 2002 pp 88 89 257 258 Taylor 2008 pp 892 894 Granoff 1992 Dundas 2002 pp 162 163 Lorenzen 1978 pp 61 75 Dundas 2002 p 163 Olson 2014 pp 1 7 Charitrapragya 2004 pp 75 79 Dundas 2002 pp 229 231 Webb Mark Owen Jain philosophy Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy ISSN 2161 0002 Archived from the original on 21 February 2015 Retrieved 22 February 2015 Schwartz 2018 Matilal 1990 pp 301 305 Balcerowicz 2015 pp 205 218 Matilal 1998 pp 128 135 Dundas 2002 pp 90 99 104 105 229 233 Dundas 2002 pp 232 234 Sethia 2004 pp 86 91 Long 2009 pp 98 106 Dundas 2002 p 233 Natubhai Shah 2004 p 112 Dundas 2002 pp 117 152 Natubhai Shah 2004 pp 112 113 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 228 231 von Glasenapp 1925 p 228 Shah Pravin K 2011 Five Great Vows Maha vratas of Jainism Harvard University Literature Center Archived from the original on 31 December 2014 Retrieved 7 May 2017 Vijay K Jain 2012 p 33 Vijay K Jain 2012 p 68 von Glasenapp 1925 p 231 Long 2009 p 109 Vijay K Jain 2012 pp 87 88 Tukol 1976 p 5 Dundas 2002 pp 179 180 Jaini 2000 p 16 Tukol 1976 p 7 Williams 1991 pp 166 167 Cort 2001a pp 118 122 Qvarnstrom 2003 p 113 Qvarnstrom 2003 pp 169 174 178 198 with footnotes Qvarnstrom 2003 pp 205 212 with footnotes Balcerowicz 2015 pp 144 150 Cort 2001a pp 120 21 Cort 2001a pp 120 122 Qvarnstrom 2003 p 182 with footnote 3 Johnson 1995 pp 196 197 Cort 2001a pp 121 122 Shanti Lal Jain 1998 p 51 Balcerowicz 2015 pp 15 18 41 43 Cort 2001a pp 48 49 Balcerowicz 2009 p 17 Natubhai Shah 2004 pp 2 3 Vijay K Jain 2013 p 197 Dundas 2002 pp 152 163 164 Jaini 1998 p 190 Voorst 2015 p 105 Sangave 1980 p 260 Jaini 2000 p 285 Wiley 2009 p 85 Wiley 2009 pp 85 86 Ram Bhushan Prasad Singh 2008 pp 92 94 Wiley 2009 p 72 Wiley 2009 pp 72 85 86 Wiley 2009 p 86 Dundas 2002 pp 166 169 Jaini 1998 pp 180 181 Jaini 1998 pp 180 182 S A Jain 1992 p 261 Natubhai Shah 2004 pp 128 131 Johnson 1995 pp 189 190 Dundas 2002 p 170 Dundas 2002 pp 187 189 Jaini 1998 pp 162 165 295 296 Jaini 1998 pp 291 299 Wiley 2009 pp 186 187 Jaini 1998 pp 295 299 Dundas 2002 p 40 Cort 2010 pp 182 184 Jaini 1998 pp 196 343 347 Jaini 1998 pp 196 199 Wiley 2009 pp 45 46 215 Lindsay Jones 2005 p 4771 Wiley 2009 pp 33 59 92 138 191 Cort 1987 pp 235 255 Mishra amp Ray 2016 pp 141 148 Dalal 2010a p 365 Jaini 1998 pp 199 200 Pratapaditya Pal 1986 p 29 Dundas 2002 pp 204 205 Salvadori 1989 pp 169 170 Babb 1996 pp 32 33 Dundas 2002 pp 81 82 Nayanar 2005 p 35 Voorst 2015 p 107 Gough 2012 pp 1 47 Cort 2001b pp 417 419 Dalal 2010a pp 164 284 Melton 2011 p 673 Dalal 2010a p 284 Cort 1995 p 160 Dalal 2010a p 220 Natubhai Shah 2004 p 211 Pechilis amp Raj 2013 p 86 Pechilis amp Raj 2013 p 85 Dalal 2010a p 164 Dundas 2002 p 45 Rao B S L Hanumantha 1973 Religion in Andhra A Survey of Religious Developments in Andhra from Early Times Upto A D 1325 Welcome Press Murti D Bhaskara 2004 Prasadam Recent Researches on Archaeology Art Architecture and Culture Professor B Rajendra Prasad Festschrift Harman Publishing House ISBN 978 81 86622 67 4 Bhandarkar Sir Ramkrishna Gopal 1927 Collected Works of Sir R G Bhandarkar Miscellaneous articles reviews addresses amp c Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute Hastings James Selbie John Alexander 1914 Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics Confirmation Drama T amp T Clark ISBN 978 0 567 06509 4 Dundas 2002 pp 46 48 The Jaina Stupa at Mathura Art and Icons Renuka Porwal Prachya Vidyapeeth Shajapur 2016 Dundas 2002 pp 47 48 Sogani Kamal Chand 1967 Ethical Doctrines in Jainism Lalchand Hirachand Doshi copies can be had from Jaina Saṁskṛti Saṁrakshaka Sangha Paszkiewicz Joshua R 7 May 2024 Indian Spirituality An Exploration of Hindu Jain Buddhist and Sikh Traditions Wellfleet Press ISBN 978 1 57715 425 9 Dahyalal Mehta Dhirajlal Nihnavad Bombay Anthropological Society of 1928 Journal Anthropological Society of Bombay Nagraj Muni Agama Aura Tripiṭaka Eka Anusilana Language and Literature Bhandarkar R G Report On The Search For Sanskrit Manuscripts In The Bombay Presidency Fleet J F Note on a Jain Inscription at Mathura The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland Clarke amp Beyer 2009 p 326 Dundas 2002 p 47 von Glasenapp 1925 p 46 Price 2010 pp 104 105 Fohr 2015 pp 21 22 Jaini 1991 p 3 Devasena Digambara Darsanasar Jacobi Hermann Gaina Sutras Bhandarkar R G Report On The Search For Sanskrit Manuscripts In The Bombay Presidency Dahyalal Mehta Dhirajlal Nihnavad Jones amp Ryan 2007 p 211 Umakant P Shah 1987 p 5 Dundas 2002 pp 31 33 Jaini 2000 pp 27 28 Kailash Chand Jain 1991 p 12 Natubhai Shah 2004 pp 73 74 Dundas 2002 p 21 Umakant P Shah 1987 p 17 Umakant P Shah 1987 pp 79 80 Dalal 2010a p 167 Cort 2001a p 47 Flugel 2006 pp 314 331 353 361 Long 2013 pp 36 37 Harvey 2016 pp 182 183 Dundas 2002 pp 55 59 Vallely 2002 p 15 Dundas 2002 p 56 Vyas 1995 p 16 Gender and Salvation publishing cdlib org Retrieved 1 August 2024 The Adi Granth Or Holy Scriptures of the Sikhs Wm H Allen 1877 Nudity Retrieved 1 August 2024 Guide To Buddhism A To Z www buddhisma2z com Retrieved 1 August 2024 Jaini 2000 p 167 Flugel 2005 pp 194 243 Suryaprajnapti Sutra The Schoyen Collection Archived from the original on 15 June 2017 Retrieved 16 June 2017 Dundas 2002 pp 60 61 Champat Rai Jain 1929b pp 135 136 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 109 110 Dundas 2002 p 61 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 112 113 121 122 Vijay K Jain 2016 p xii Jaini 1998 pp 78 81 von Glasenapp 1925 p 124 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 121 122 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 123 124 Dalal 2010a pp 164 165 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 125 126 Jones amp Ryan 2007 pp 439 440 Dundas 2006 pp 395 396 Umasvati 1994 p xi xiii Finegan 1989 p 221 Balcerowicz 2003 pp 25 34 Chatterjee 2000 pp 282 283 Jaini 1991 pp 32 33 Quintanilla Sonya Rhie 2000 Ayagapaṭas Characteristics Symbolism and Chronology Artibus Asiae 60 1 79 137 Fig 26 doi 10 2307 3249941 ISSN 0004 3648 JSTOR 3249941 Collections Virtual Museum of Images and Sounds vmis in Solomon amp Higgins 1998 pp 11 22 Appleton 2016 pp 1 21 25 27 57 58 82 84 McFaul 2006 pp 27 28 Shaw amp Demy 2017 Solomon amp Higgins 1998 pp 18 22 McFaul 2006 pp 27 40 Dundas 2002 pp 87 88 Wiley 2004 pp 2 5 Long 2013 pp 122 125 Hiriyanna 1993 pp 157 158 168 169 Hiriyanna 1993 pp 54 62 77 82 132 Perrett 2013 pp 247 248 Bartley 2013 pp 1 10 76 79 87 98 Atmasiddhi The Jain Path of Enlightenment 28 December 2008 Discovery of Truth Satya Ki Khoj 4 November 2002 Jaini 1998 pp 58 102 105 Dalal 2010b pp 174 175 Juergensmeyer 2011 p 54 Kelting 2009 pp 206 note 4 Nesfield 1885 pp 116 117 Pope 1880 pp 40 41 Alberts 2007 pp 258 259 Dundas 2002 pp 147 149 304 footnote 24 Babb 1996 pp 137 145 54 172 Sangave 1980 pp 73 316 317 Gombrich 2012 pp 344 353 with footnotes Florida 2005 pp 134 137 Johnston 2000 pp 681 683 Caillat 2003a pp 30 34 with footnote 28 Hirakawa 1993 pp 4 7 Balcerowicz 2015 pp 42 43 Nisithabhasya in Nisithasutra 289 Jinadatta Suri Upadesharasayana 26 Dundas pp 162 163 Tahtinen p 31 Jindal pp 89 90 Laidlaw pp 154 155 Jaini Padmanabh S Ahimsa and Just War in Jainism in Ahimsa Anekanta and Jainism ed Tara Sethia New Delhi 2004 p 52 60 Tahtinen p 31 Harisena Brhatkathakosa 124 10th century Jindal pp 90 91 Sangave p 259 Long 2009 pp 5 6 Sharma amp Ghosal 2006 pp 100 103 Michell 2014 pp 38 52 60 61 Ring Watson amp Schellinger 1996 pp 468 470 Fynes Richard C C 1996 Plant Souls in Jainism and Manichaeism The Case for Cultural Transmission East and West 46 1 2 Istituto Italiano per l Africa e l Oriente IsIAO 21 44 ISSN 0012 8376 JSTOR 29757253 Udaygiri and Khandagiri Caves Archaeological Survey of India Government of India Archived from the original on 29 October 2015 Retrieved 29 October 2015 Natubhai Shah 1998 p 184 Umakant P Shah 1987 p 95 Kishore 2015 pp 17 43 Jain amp Fischer 1978 pp 9 10 Wiley 2009 p 184 Owen 2012a pp 1 2 Natubhai Shah 1998 p 183 Natubhai Shah 1998 p 113 Jain amp Fischer 1978 p 16 Natubhai Shah 1998 p 187 Babb 1996 p 66 Babb 1996 p 68 Settar 1989 p 195 Sangave 2001 p 188 Barik Bibhuti 23 June 2015 Plan to beautify Khandagiri Monument revamp to attract more tourists The Telegraph Bhubaneswar Archived from the original on 23 February 2016 Retrieved 16 February 2016 Cunningham Alexander 1879 Report of a Tour in the Central Provinces in 1873 74 and 1874 75 Archaeological Survey of India Vol 9 Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing p 31 Sehdev Kumar 2001 p 106 Cort 2010 pp 130 133 Jacobi 1964 p 275 Berger 2010 p 352 Murtipujakas Jainism Encyclopedia of World Religions PHILTAR Division of Religion and Philosophy St Martin s College Archived from the original on 13 October 2007 Retrieved 13 October 2007 Khajuraho Group of Monuments UNESCO World Heritage Centre Archived from the original on 18 February 2017 Retrieved 14 March 2017 Group of Monuments at Pattadakal UNESCO World Heritage Centre Archived from the original on 26 March 2014 Retrieved 14 March 2017 Butalia amp Small 2004 p 367 Fergusson 1876 p 271 Pandya 2014 p 17 Kavitha S S 31 October 2012 Namma Madurai History hidden inside a cave The Hindu Archived from the original on 3 January 2014 Retrieved 15 November 2013 Dravidi Or Kalinga Syllabary proel org Archived from the original on 1 December 2018 Retrieved 13 January 2019 Upinder Singh 2016 p 460 Owen 2012a p 50 Kavitha S S 3 February 2010 Preserving the past The Hindu Archived from the original on 3 January 2014 Retrieved 15 November 2013 Arittapatti inscription throws light on Jainism The Hindu 15 September 2003 Archived from the original on 23 November 2013 Retrieved 15 November 2013 Titze 1998 Nagarparkar Cultural Landscape Tantative Lists UNESCO World Heritage Centre Archived from the original on 10 May 2017 Arora 2007 p 405 Cort 2010 p 184 And India s 7 wonders are The Times of India 5 August 2007 Archived from the original on 18 October 2012 Retrieved 3 January 2013 Botekar Abhilash 4 December 2015 70 crore plan for idol installation at Mangi Tungi The Times of India Archived from the original on 19 January 2016 Retrieved 7 February 2016 Pratapaditya Pal 1986 p 22 Jain Sculpture Metropolitan Museum of Art Archived from the original on 6 May 2017 Retrieved 16 April 2017 Om Significance in Jainism Department of Computer Science of Colorado State University Archived from the original on 1 October 1999 Retrieved 23 September 2021 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 410 411 Titze 1998 p 234 Vijay K Jain 2012 p iv Cort 2001a p 17 Jansma amp Jain 2006 p 123 Cort 2001a pp 17 18 Robinson 2006 p 225 Sangave 2001 p 123 Vallely 2013 p 358 ऋषभन थ त र थ कर भ रतक श bharatdiscovery org Sangave 2001 p 185 Rankin amp Mardia 2013 p 975 von Glasenapp 1925 p 13 von Glasenapp 1925 p 16 Lochtefeld 2002b p 639 Billimoria 1988 pp 1 30 Jambuvijaya 2002 p 114 Pande 1957 p 353 Long 2013 pp 53 54 Sangave 2001 pp 104 129 Saraswati 1908 p 444 Zimmer 1953 p 183 Jaini 1998 p 10 Barnett 1957 p 7 Rude Travel Down The Sages Vir Sanghavi 13 September 2013 Basham 1951 p 108 Dundas 2002 p 30 31 Dundas 2003a p 383 Keown amp Prebish 2013 pp 127 130 Sangave 2001 p 105 Neelis 2010 pp 72 76 Qvarnstrom 2003 pp ix xi 151 162 von Glasenapp 1925 p 41 Kulke amp Rothermund 2004 pp 63 65 Boesche 2003 pp 7 18 Mookerji 1988 pp 39 46 234 236 von Glasenapp 1925 p 43 Upinder Singh 2016 p 444 von Glasenapp 1925 p 49 Cort 2010 p 202 Natubhai Shah 2004 pp 69 70 Pereira 1977 pp 21 24 von Glasenapp 1925 p 52 Lochtefeld 2002a p 409 Arunachalam 1981 p 170 World Heritage Sites Ellora Caves Archaeological Survey of India Government of India Archived from the original on 7 October 2015 Retrieved 23 September 2021 Gopal 1990 p 178 Owen 2012b pp 1 10 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 52 54 von Glasenapp 1925 p 56 von Glasenapp 1925 pp 75 77 Das 2005 p 161 Burjor Avari April 2015 The Age of Wrath A History of The Delhi Sultanate Penguin UK ISBN 9789351186588 Pushpa Prasad The Jain Community in the Delhi Sultanate Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 54 Indian History Congress 224 225 Peter Jackson 2003 The Delhi Sultanate A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press p 288 ISBN 978 0 521 54329 3 Iqtidar Alam Khan 2008 Historical Dictionary of Medieval India Scarecrow Press p 101 ISBN 9780810864016 Muhammad bin Tughlaq 1325 1351 is mentioned in Jain texts as showing favour to Jain scholars Audrey Truschke 23 February 2017 What Aurangzeb did to preserve Hindu temples and protect non Muslim religious leaders Scroll in Retrieved 13 August 2022 Kurt Titze Klaus Bruhn 1998 Jainism A Pictorial Guide to the Religion of Non violence Motilal Banarsidass pp 101 102 ISBN 978 81 208 1534 6 In 1527 the Urvahi Jinas were mutilated by the Mughal emperor Babar a fact he records in his memoirs Ram Vallabh Somani 1976 History of Mewar from Earliest Times to 1751 A D Mateshwari p 221 OCLC 2929852 A glaring example of this sort of feeling is the destruction of several Hindu and Jain shrines made at Chittor during the course of invasion by the forces of Akbar EATON RICHARD M 2000 Temple Desecration and Indo Muslim States Journal of Islamic Studies 11 3 283 319 doi 10 1093 jis 11 3 283 ISSN 0955 2340 JSTOR 26198197 Cort 1998 pp 85 86 Virchand Gandhi a Gandhi before Gandhi An unsung Gandhi who set course for his namesake India Tribune Archived from the original on 22 August 2012 Retrieved 17 August 2012 Howard Mrs Charles April 1902 The Open Court Vol 16 Nr 4 The Death of Mr Virchand R Gandhi Chicago The Open Court Publishing Company Bhagu F Karbhari Virchand Raghavaji Gandhi 1911 The Jain Philosophy Collected and Ed by Baghu F Karbhari N M Tripathi amp Company pp 116 120 Salter 2002 p 145 Wiley Kristi L 2006 The A to Z of Jainism New Delhi Vision Books ISBN 81 7094 690 5 OCLC 647405338 Doshi Manu Srimad Rajachandra s Atma Siddhi in Gujarati and English Koba Srimad Rajachandra Adhyatmik Sadhana Kendra Bhatavadekar Gajanan Krishna 1867 Report on the Census of the Baroda Territories 1881 Government of India p 31 note 140 Hopkins 1902 p 283 Sunavala 1934 pp 91 93 Jaini 2000 p 33 Hackett 2008 pp 63 68 Cort 2010 pp 12 16 200 207 218 219 251 with note 10 Flugel 2006 pp 348 349 Natubhai Shah 2004 p 56 Flugel 2006 pp 359 360 Sangave 2006 p 15 Jr Donald S Lopez 30 June 2020 Asian Religions in Practice An Introduction Princeton University Press p 20 ISBN 978 0 691 21478 8 Voorst 2014 p 96 Melton amp Baumann 2010 p lix 1395 C 1 Population By Religious Community Office of the Registrar General amp Census Commissioner Ministry of Home Affairs Government of India 2011 Archived from the original on 13 September 2015 Retrieved 9 September 2015 Wiley 2009 p 43 Mugambi 2010 p 108 Chhapia Hemali 23 February 2020 Thousands of Japanese making a smooth transition from Zen to Jain The Times of India Archived from the original on 23 February 2020 Retrieved 23 September 2021 Kishore Roshan 13 January 2018 Delhi and Punjab richest states Jain wealthiest community National survey Hindustan Times Archived from the original on 13 January 2018 Retrieved 23 September 2021 Jain Bharti 31 August 2016 Jains have highest percentage of literates Census 2011 The Times of India Archived from the original on 29 January 2017 Retrieved 19 May 2017 Distribution of Population by Religions PDF Census of India Government of India 2011 Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 19 May 2017 Rudolph amp Rudolph 1984 p 171 Janardan Pandey 1998 p 50 Miller Long amp Reading 2019 pp 7 10 Sources Alberts Wanda 2007 Integrative Religious Education in Europe A Study of Religions Approach Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 097134 7 Appleton Naomi 2016 Shared Characters in Jain Buddhist and Hindu Narrative Gods Kings and Other Heroes Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 05574 7 Arora Udai Prakash 2007 Udayana Anamika Publishers amp Distributors ISBN 978 8 179 75168 8 Arunachalam M ed 1981 Aintam Ulakat Tamil Manaṭu Karuttaraṅku Ayvuk Kaṭṭuraikaḷ International Association of Tamil Research Babb Lawrence A 1996 Absent Lord Ascetics and Kings in a Jain Ritual Culture University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 91708 8 Bailey William 2012 The Theological Universe Bailey Publishing PA ISBN 978 1 312 23861 9 Balcerowicz Piotr 2003 Essays in Jain Philosophy and Religion Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1977 1 Balcerowicz Piotr 2009 Jainism and the definition of religion 1st ed Mumbai Hindi Granth Karyalay ISBN 978 81 88769 29 2 Balcerowicz Piotr 2015 Early Asceticism in India Ajivikism and Jainism Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 53853 0 Barnett Lincoln et al 1957 Welles Sam ed The World s Great Religions 1st ed New York Time Incorporated Bartley C J 2013 The Theology of Ramanuja Realism and Religion Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 85306 7 Basham A L 1951 History and Doctrines of the Ajivikas A Vanished Indian Religion Jainism Series Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1204 8 Berger Peter 2010 The Anthropology of Values Essays in Honour of Georg Pfeffer India Pearson Education ISBN 978 81 317 2820 8 Billimoria P 1988 Sabdapramaṇa Word and Knowledge Studies of Classical India vol 10 Springer Springer ISBN 978 94 010 7810 8 Boesche Roger 2003 The First Great Political Realist Kautilya and His Arthashastra Lexington Books ISBN 978 0 7391 0607 5 Butalia Tarunjit Singh Small Dianne P eds 2004 Religion in Ohio Profiles of Faith Communities Ohio University Press ISBN 978 0 8214 1551 1 Caillat Colette 2003a Gleanings from a Comparative Reading of Early Canonical Buddhist and Jain Texts vol 26 Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies Champat Rai Jain 1917 The Practical Path The Central Jain Publishing House Charitrapragya Samani 2004 Sethia Tara ed Ahimsa Anekanta and Jaininsm Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 2036 4 Chatterjee Asim Kumar 2000 A Comprehensive History of Jainism From the Earliest Beginnings to AD 1000 Munshiram Manoharlal ISBN 978 81 215 0931 2 Clarke Peter Beyer Peter 2009 The World s Religions Continuities and Transformations Routledge ISBN 978 0 203 87212 3 Cort John 1987 Medieval Jain Goddess Traditions Numen 34 2 235 255 doi 10 1163 156852787x00047 ISSN 0029 5973 Cort John E 1995 The Jain Knowledge Warehouses Traditional Libraries in India Journal of the American Oriental Society 115 1 77 87 doi 10 2307 605310 JSTOR 605310 Cort John E ed 1998 Open Boundaries Jain Communities and Cultures in Indian History SUNY Press ISBN 978 0 7914 3785 8 Cort John E 2001a Jains in the World Religious Values and Ideology in India Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 513234 2 Cort John E 2001b White David Gordon ed Tantra in Practice Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 1778 4 Cort John E 2010 Framing the Jina Narratives of Icons and Idols in Jain History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 538502 1 Dalal Roshen 2010a 2006 The Religions of India A Concise Guide to Nine Major Faiths Penguin books ISBN 978 0 14 341517 6 Dalal Roshen 2010b Hinduism An Alphabetical Guide Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 341421 6 Das Sisir Kumar 2005 A History of Indian Literature 500 1399 From Courtly to the Popular Sahitya Akademi ISBN 978 81 260 2171 0 Doniger Wendy ed 1999 Encyclopedia of World Religions Merriam Webster ISBN 978 0 87779 044 0 Dundas Paul 2002 1992 The Jains Second ed London and New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 26605 5 Dundas Paul 2003a Jainism and Buddhism in Buswell Robert E ed Encyclopedia of Buddhism New York Macmillan Reference Lib ISBN 978 0 02 865718 9 Dundas Paul 2006 Olivelle Patrick ed Between the Empires Society in India 300 BCE to 400 CE Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 977507 1 Fergusson James 1876 A History of Architecture in All Countries From the Earliest Times to the Present Day vol 3 John Murray Finegan Jack 1989 An Archaeological History of Religions of Indian Asia Paragon House ISBN 978 0 913729 43 4 Florida Robert E 2005 Human Rights and the World s Major Religions The Buddhist tradition ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 31318 9 2002 Terapanth Svetambara Jain Tradition in Melton J G Baumann G eds Religions of the World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 57607 223 3 Flugel Peter 2005 King Anna S Brockington John eds Present Lord Simandhara Svami and the Akram Vijnan Movement PDF The Intimate Other Love Divine in the Indic Religions New Delhi Orient Longman ISBN 978 81 250 2801 7 ed 2006 Studies in Jain History and Culture Disputes and Dialogues Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 23552 0 Fohr Sherry 2015 Jainism A Guide for the Perplexed Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 4411 5116 2 PB ISBN 978 1 4411 6594 7 ePDF ISBN 978 1 4742 2756 8 ePub ISBN 978 1 4742 2755 1 Gombrich Richard 2012 Buddhist Precept amp Practice Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 15623 6 Gopal Madan 1990 Gautam K S ed India through the ages Publication Division Ministry of Information and Broadcasting Government of India Gough Ellen 2012 Shades of Enlightenment A Jain Tantric Diagram and the Colours of the Tirthankaras International Journal of Jain Studies vol 8 archived from the original on 30 January 2017 retrieved 9 May 2017 Granoff Phyllis 1992 The violence of non violence a study of some Jain responses to non Jain religious practices The Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 15 1 Grimes John 1996 A Concise Dictionary of Indian Philosophy Sanskrit Terms Defined in English New York SUNY Press ISBN 0 7914 3068 5

rec-icon Recommended Topics
Share this article
Read the free encyclopedia and learn everything...
See more
Read the free encyclopedia. All information in Wikipedia is available. No payment required.
Share this article on
Share
XXX 0C
Friday, 14 March, 2025
Follow Us On