Jainism - The gentle conquerors
by Swati Chopra
It's a cold morning in early January. The sun, enveloped in thick fog,
provides little warmth. Wrapping my woolen shawl around my head, I walk
briskly to an assignation with a Digambar (sky-clad, as naked and
unadorned as the sky) Jain muni (monk).
I catch
sight of him from where I take off my leather shoes and empty my leather
wallet. He is sitting cross-legged a few feet away, his morpicchi
(peacock feather whiskbroom) next to him. He is sky-clad, a complete
aparigrahi (one who has no possessions). For more than five decades,
he walked the land, in good weather and bad, through forests and mountains,
preaching and practicing the creed of the Jinas, the gentle spiritual
conquerors. Till the elements no longer bothered him, nor did afflictive
emotions. And his body took on the color of the earth he treads.
Greeting
me with a toothless smile that transforms his face into the kindest
I have ever seen, Muni Vidyanand says: "What is Jainism? It is
a dharma rooted in nature, as dynamic as it. It is a recognition of
the ever-changing nature of reality and a search for that which is constant."
A quest for
what is strong and beautiful and true. A quest as old as humankind. A
quest that is at the heart of the Jain dharma of nonviolence and compassion.
AN ANCIENT CREED
Contrary to popular perception among non-Jains, Vardhaman Mahavir, the
prince-turned-ascetic who lived 2,600 years ago and was a contemporary
of Gautam Buddha, was not the 'founder' of Jainism. In fact, there is
no concept of a 'founder' here. The Jains believe their faith to be an
imperishable self-perpetuating one, woven into the ever-moving wheel of
time and spooling at its every turn.
During every
upward and downward motion of this wheel of time, called utsarpini
and avasarpini respectively, 24 Tirthankars (pathfinders) are
thought to appear to propagate and revive for their age the eternal
truth contained in the dharma. Every Tirthankar is a Jina, he who has
attained kevalajnana (infinite knowledge) by conquering his passions,
and in his compassion for all beings, builds bridges (tirthas)
to enable them across earthly sufferings. The present cycle, thought
to be a downward swing, has had its share of 24 Tirthankars, the first
of which was Rishabhdev and the last, Vardhaman Mahavir.
Historians
have even found evidence of the existence of a Jain-like religion in the
Indus Valley Civilization that flourished almost 5,000 years ago. Says
Osho, who was born a Jain, in I Am That: "In Harappa and Mohenjodaro
statues have been found which can only be related to the religion of the
Jains—naked statues, sitting in a lotus posture or standing like
Mahavir, meditating.
Only Jains are known to meditate standing: no other religion has prescribed
standing meditation. And they are all naked—only the Jain religion
has believed in naked masters. Jain religion seems to be far older than
Hindu religion; it must have come from Harappa and Mohenjodaro. They must
have been Jain cultures; remnants of it remained and they infiltrated
the Aryan mind."
KAIVALYA, THE ULTIMATE AIM
It is, I think, significant that at the core of this most ancient of world
religions is a direct, and permanent, perception of reality, called kaivalya.
This supreme state of being is the moksha of the Vedantist, the
nirvana of the Buddhist, the satori of the Zen practitioner, the Holy
Grail of all spiritual seeking.
According to
Jain belief, the individual soul progresses through lifetimes, sloughing
off some karmic debts, and incurring others. This cycle goes on repeating
until a crucial (human) lifetime is reached where strict penance is required
to get rid of the remaining good and bad karma and, more importantly, to
conquer once and for all bondage to one's desires and consequently, to samsara
(earthly desires). Kaivalya is the great state of oneness where the
soul experiences everything as it is, without the filters and veils of samsara,
beyond the strain of constant being and becoming.
Of
Bhagwan Mahavir's kaivalya, the revered Jain text, Uttarpurana,
says: "After fasting for two and a half days, taking not even water,
engaged in deep meditation, he (the Venerable One) reached the highest
jnana (knowledge) and darsana (intuition), called kevala,
which is infinite, supreme, unobstructed, unimpeded, complete and full."
Then again,
in the Kalpa-Sutra: "When the Venerable Ascetic Mahavira had
become a Jina and an arhat (worthy of worship), he was a kevalin,
Omniscient, comprehending all objects. He saw and knew whence they had
come, where they would go, and whether they would be reborn as men, animals,
gods, or hell-beings. He knew the ideas and thoughts, the food, doings,
desires and deeds of all the living beings in the world."
It is towards
this ultimate omniscience experience that the entire gamut of Jain views,
thought processes and conduct is geared and its asceticism, morality and
lifestyle focused.
JAIN PARTICLE PHYSICS
Although the concept of karma is present in varying degrees of importance
in Hindu and Buddhist streams of thought, Jainism has its own interpretation
of it that to me, as somebody not born a Jain, has a ring of familiarity,
but then again, not quite. There is, of course, the familiar strain of
each act attaining its logical fruition and keeping the soul involved
in cyclical births and deaths. Cessation of all karma then is the desired aim.
What Jain
philosophy also offers is a detailed understanding and description of
the mechanics of the entire process, that in some ways, almost seems borrowed
from quantum and particle physics! According to it, the soul-defiling
karma actually exists as minute particulate matter in the universe and
interacts with the pure, omniscient soul.
Now if the
soul harbors any passions or desires, the karmic matter settles upon it
and bonds with it, thereby obscuring its pure nature. This soul-karma
bondage remains until the fruition of the relevant desire, when the karmic
bond falls away like ripened fruit from a tree. But there's a catch. In
bringing that particular karma to fruition, many others have been created.
And so the process continues.
In The
Scientific Foundations of Jainism, Yorkshire-based scientist, Prof
K.V. Mardia divides the entire process in four axioms:
1. The soul
exists in contamination with karmic matter and it longs to be purified.
2. Living beings differ due to the varying density of karmic matter.
3. The karmic bondage leads the soul through states of existences (cycles).
4. a) Karmic fusion is due to perverted views, non-restraint, carelessness,
passions and activities.
b) Violence to oneself and others results in the formation of the heaviest
new karmic matter, whereas helping others towards moksha with positive
nonviolence results into the lightest new karmic matter.
c) Austerity forms the karmic shield against new 'karmons' as well as setting
the decaying process in the old karmic matter.
Prof Mardia goes on to discuss the soul-karmic matter (which he calls 'karmons')
bonding in terms of interactions between quarks, leptons and gauge bosons,
three elementary particles being researched in modern particle physics.
MY TRUTH, YOUR TRUTH
That is not all, however, that is of interest in Jainism to contemporary
minds. There is something uplifting and liberating, and thus germane,
about an ancient faith that looks at the world with a complete openness
towards its many different 'truths'. At a time in history when every religion,
ideology and economic system claims to possess the best, most successful,
superior-most truth, the gentle Jina whispers reassuringly: "My truth
is fine from my standpoint, and so is yours!"
In the
past few decades, there have been, in many small ways and in different
parts of the world, efforts to move towards societies that embody not
only 'unity in diversity', but more importantly, 'diversity in unity'.
As the world begins talking about integrating the voice of the 'other',
the subaltern, the dispossessed, the marginalized, into a plural, multicultural,
multiethnic society, I think it's time the twin Jain ideals of the manyness
and relativity of truth (anekantavad-syadvad) are reexamined.
In The
Jain Declaration on Nature, presented to HRH Prince Philip of England,
eminent scholar and Chancellor of the Jain Vishwa Bharati (Deemed University),
Dr L.M. Singhvi explains: "Anekantavad, or the doctrine
of manifold aspects, describes the world as a multifaceted, ever-changing
reality with an infinity of viewpoints depending on the time, place,
nature and state of the one who is the viewer and that which is viewed."
About syadvad,
he says: "Anekantavad leads to syadvad or relativity,
which states that truth is relative to different viewpoints. Absolute
truth cannot be grasped from any particular viewpoint alone because it
is the sum total of all the different viewpoints that make up the universe.
"Because
it is rooted in the doctrines of anekantavad and syadvad,
Jainism does not look upon the universe from an anthropocentric, ethnocentric
or egocentric viewpoint. It takes into account the viewpoints of other
species, other communities and nations and other human beings." Ideal
for successfully managing conflicts, nations, relationships, lives!
Ganini
Pramukh Shri Gyanmati Mataji, a Digambar Jain sadhvi (nun) from
Jambudweep, Hastinapur, India, explained these abstract concepts in
more homely terms to me: "If a man is a father, he is so in relation
to his son. If someone is an uncle, he is so in relation to his nephew
or niece. That is one of the things he is, he is not simply an uncle.
That is a relative truth. And syad means 'from one point of view' and
vad means 'to say'. So we can say, from one point of view, this person
is a father, from another he is a son, and maybe from others, he is
so many different things."
Intolerance
creeps into attitudes with an unwillingness to accept difference. Of beliefs,
skin color, race, gender, caste, clothes. An acceptance with open arms
of otherness and difference lies at the heart of anekantavad, and
it is here that ahimsa, abstinence from violence, really begins.
Says DR V.P.
Jain, director of the Bhogilal Leherchand Institute of Indology: "Anekantavad
says in effect, 'you are right, but I am also right'. Each one of us
has a personality that has been created by our circumstances. So we
cannot expect everybody to have the same view as us! And so, in a conflict,
the anekanta viewpoint helps move towards ahimsa or nonviolence.
In the inclusiveness of anekanta lie the seeds of true ahimsa.
This translates into a deep reverence for all life, without which there
is no anekanta."
DHARMA OF AHIMSA
"All of Jain philosophy and ethics can be explained in one word—ahimsa,"
points out an ascetic from Gyanmati Mataji's entourage. Indeed, the Jain
dharma has perfected nonviolence not only in action, but in thoughts and
ideas as well. The Jain way of life is a perfect exposition of the ancient
Sanskrit saying: Ahimsa paramo dharmaha, ahimsa is the supreme
religion.
According
to Jain philosophy, the densest karmic defilement of the soul takes place
when one causes hurt to any other creature. Hence the high place accorded
to nonviolent conduct. This is also the motivation behind many Jain practices
that seem strange and even somewhat eccentric to non-Jains. These include
strict vegetarianism to the extent of even avoiding vegetables that grow
underground, abstinence from food and water after sundown, sweeping the
ground by ascetics as they walk, use of a strip of cloth over the mouth
by Terapanth Shwetambar ascetics, the pulling out of their hair by sadhus
(monks) and sadhvis (nuns), and so on. All these practices have
to do with avoiding even unintentional harm to any other creature.
Says Jitubhai
Shah, director of the L.D. Institute of Indology in Ahmedabad, India, and
a practicing Jain: "The Jain lifestyle is a perfect enunciation of
ahimsa. Even the rigid principles make a lot of sense, if you really
examine them. For instance, the reason Jains don't normally eat or drink
anything after sundown is because it is believed that doing so would cause
the death of minute microorganisms that emerge in the dark. The entire lifestyle
is geared towards causing least harm to other creatures and the environment,
although for life activities, some harm is unavoidable. One can begin doing
this by opting for products and practices in which minimum violence is involved."
COMPASSION
FOR ALL BEINGS
A natural corollary to nonviolence is jiva daya or compassion towards
all, the importance of which cannot be emphasized enough in today's 'eye-for-an-eye'
world. As DR Singhvi says in The Jain Declaration on Nature: "Ancient
Jain texts explain that it is the intention to harm, the absence of compassion,
that makes an action violent. Without violent thought there could be no
violent action. When violence enters our thoughts, we remember Mahavir's
words—you are that which you intend to hit, injure, insult, torment,
persecute, torture, enslave or kill."
Agrees Jitubhai
Shah: "Ahimsa or nonviolence is not only non-killing, it also
means that one's attitude must be of maitri (amity) and peace.
The real meaning of ahimsa is maitri. There are thought
to be countless jivas, life or life forms, that populate the earth,
air, water and are present all around us. How are we to behave towards
these? With maitri."
A beautiful
example of this jiva daya is epitomized in the Charity Birds Hospital
in the Digambar Lal Mandir complex in Old Delhi, India. The only one of
its kind in the world, the hospital was founded in 1929 by Laccho Mal
Jain. He would sit in the temple every evening and often see birds fly
into the temple's ceiling and get hurt. Looking to relieve their suffering,
he devoted one room in his house for treating sick birds. Today, the hospital
is housed in a two-storied building and even has an OPD and has a separate
floor for convalescing birds.
People from
far and near often write in for advice on bird diseases. A young boy,
Irfan, who brought his sick pigeon to the OPD while I was there said:
"Whenever any of my birds is sick, I rush it to this hospital. Afterwards,
I let the hospital staff release them." A Jain restaurant owner in
nearby Chandani Chowk, Delhi says: "Sometimes when birds fly into
the fans in my restaurant and are injured, we take them to the bird hospital.
As a Jain, this is my small way of following jiva daya."
Another
aspect of jiva daya are the large-scale charitable activities
undertaken by Jains. Rupali Mehta, a trustee of the Mumbai-based Diwaliben
Mohanlal Mehta Charitable Trust, says: "I was inspired by my grandfather-in-law,
Mafatlal Mehta, founder of the Trust and a staunch Jain. I believe that
the heart of Jainism is its focus on serving and helping humanity and,
indeed, all life. There are nine punyas (good karma) in Jainism
some of which are anna daan (donation of food), jal daan
(donation of water), vastra daan (donation of clothes) and so
on. If you go to any Jain temple you will find many donation boxes,
including one marked pashu daan, for the welfare of animals."
The trust's activities include 30 boarding schools for girls in Maharashtra
and Gujarat, India, a residential school for blind girls, and a home
for destitute women. The trust also sponsors patients for treatment.
MAHATMA GANDHI'S JAIN GURU
It is little known that the apostle of nonviolence, Mahatma Gandhi, had
a Jain 'spiritual mentor', a young diamond merchant, Shrimad Rajchandra.
Once, in despair, Gandhi wrote to Shrimad Rajchandra that he wanted to change
his religion. Rajchandra, a householder-ascetic, asked him to look within
himself first. This changed Gandhi's life. Thereafter, he would often say
that he had learned most of his lessons of self-improvement, truth and nonviolence
from Rajchandra's Jain views. In fact, Rajchandra, who died young at the
age of 33, is one of the three whom Gandhi considered as having been instrumental
in molding his ideas, the other two being the writings of Leo Tolstoy and
Ruskin's poem 'Unto this last'.
THE GREEN RELIGION
Ahimsa and jiva daya have made Jains great environmental conservationists.
Eco-friendliness is interwoven into their day-to-day living and is based
on a feeling of being trustees of the earth. "We are like the adivasis
or tribals," says Muni Vidyanand, "We exist in harmony with the
earth. The earth takes care of us, and so we take care of her. Man has polluted
the earth because he thinks of her as a possession." He picks up a
speck of dust. "Tell me, who owns this?"
An attitude of reverence towards the earth, air, water, stems from the Jain
belief that everywhere exist beings in different forms and in various stages
of spiritual evolution. So if I cut a tree, I have killed a jiva
(life) and therefore caused violence.
Ordained
Jain ascetics of all sects, till today, travel on foot. The Shwetambars
wear white cotton cloth, and the Digambar monks remain naked. The former
eat twice a day, the latter once and that too using their palms as plates.
As Jitubhai Shah points out: "The lifestyle of Jain monks is the
way of least violence. They don't use any vehicles and eat only to sustain
themselves. Their eating is called gochari, the way the cow eats,
a little from here and a little from there, so that no one is burdened."
These activities,
which make the life of Jain monks and even the laity, seem harsh are actually
calculated to increase one's awareness of one's immediate environment.
The only other possession that Digambar monks carry is a broom of peacock
feathers to sweep away insects. And the third article of clothing allowed
to Terapanth Shwetambara ascetics is the 'muhpatti', a strip of
cloth to mask their mouth so that the stream of moist air from it does
not cause the minute single-sense organisms present everywhere to perish.
Lives lived
simply, in awareness, with no strain on the land's resources and in recognition
of the ideal: Parasparopagraho jivanam, which means that all life
is bound together by mutual support and interdependence.
A JAIN MONK-ACTIVIST
In the January/February 2002 issue of the UK-based eco-spiritual magazine,
Resurgence, editor Satish Kumar talks about meeting a Jain monk,
Hitaruchi, in Palitana, a Jain pilgrimage place in Gujarat, India. Hitaruchi
is a diamond merchant turned monk who has consciously switched to organic
food, handmade utensils and renewable fuels. Satish quotes this 'prophet
of Jain ecology': "Nonviolence is not just a matter or personal behavior.
Nonviolence includes social, political, economic and ecological dimensions.
If there is social injustice, political oppression, wasteful industrial
production and destruction of natural resources, then it is impossible
to practice nonviolence." Muni Hitaruchi, says Satish, is walking
from village to village "asking people to seek contentment in quality
of life rather than in the quantity of material possessions."
I OWN NOTHING
Hitaruchi's message, as indeed that of Jain dharma, sorely begs to be
heard above the din of 'yeh dil maange more' (the heart desires
more, a very catchy phrase in India these days). Indeed, as the winds
of materialism and consumerism blow forcefully across the country, we
need to plant our feet more firmly in our soil and turn within. And perhaps
remember the Jain ideal of aparigraha when toying with the temptation
to buy an umpteenth pair of Levi's jeans.
A-parigraha
literally means nonpossession, although it can also mean nonattachment
to possessions. Among Jain ascetics, this is evidenced in the literal
giving up of all possessions. At various other levels, it might also be
interpreted as 'letting go' of attachments to objects, and even people
and relationships. The complete aparigraha of the Jinas is often
depicted in Jaina sculpture by showing the Jina in the kayotsarga
(abandonment of the body) position—standing up straight, hands hanging
by the side, noble and beautiful.
This abandonment
of the body has acquired the form of the Jain practice of sallekhana,
or voluntary death.
DEATH
BY CHOICE
I remember the first time I heard of sallekhana. It was from
Satish Kumar, who had been a Jain monk for many years in his youth, before
becoming a Gandhian. Satish's mother, to whom he was very close, had performed
sallekhana after living to a ripe old age. "After receiving
permission from her guru, she went to all her relatives and asked their
forgiveness. There was an air of festivity in our home as she began fasting.
First she gave up food, and then water. After a few days, she died peacefully."
I looked at Satish's face for any hint of pain. There was none.
Sallekhana,
the ultimate aparigraha, must not be mistaken for suicide. Explains
Muni Vidyanand: "Try and live life fully till the last moment. But
when you feel that death is near, you must leave all else and turn inwards.
Sallekhana is the Jain way of making death a time for contemplation
and celebration, and not mourning. Every creature instinctively knows
the time of its death. A tiger, when it knows that it is going to die,
lies down quietly and refuses to eat. Sallekhana is a brave way
to die, it is an embracing of the inevitable, instead of trying to run
away from it."
GENDER (IN)EQUALITY
Interestingly, it is the definition of aparigraha, among certain
other beliefs, that caused the Jain society to split into Shwetambars
(white-clothed) and Digambars (sky-clad). Complete aparigraha
is an essential prerequisite for kaivalya in Jain dharma. The
Digambars interpret this as meaning the casting away of all possessions,
including clothes, whereas for Shwetambars it is more a state of mind.
This has,
in turn, given rise to other debates, like that over enlightenment for
women. Since women could not be allowed to go naked, not even for so august
a cause as enlightenment, Digambars deny that women can attain kaivalya.
The Shwetambars, of course, do not face this dilemma and even take the
19th Tirthankara, Mallinath, to be a woman.
To get a
woman Digambar's view, I asked Gyanmati Mataji about this. "A muni
(monk) owns nothing, not even clothes, and it is only in that extreme
form of aparigraha that kaivalya is possible. A Jain sadhvi
(nun) cannot do complete aparigraha, she has to have at least two
saris. As a woman, I will have to escape this form first and move towards
the deva (God) form. And then from there to the human male form
in which again I will have to do the requisite penance for kaivalya.
This is what the Digambars believe in. I agree with this totally."
As a woman
interested in enlightenment issues, I probably looked horrified. Aryika
Chandanaji, Gyanmati Mataji's prime disciple, noticed the look on my face
and laughed: "We need not worry too much about that, because in this
era, the men are also not getting anywhere near enlightenment!"
CULT OF
THE FEMININE
Having come upon this gender bias among the Digambars, I was pleasantly
surprised to find an enthusiastic kirtan (devotional music) in
full swing before the idol of a goddess, Padmavati, in a small corner
of the Digambar Jain Lal Mandir. In fact, Padmavati's shrine was the busiest
in the entire temple, with people actually queuing up for darshan
(divine glimpse or sight). Ashok Jain, a devotee, explained: "The
Tirthankars have passed out of our realm. Whether you pray to them or
not is immaterial. Padmavati Mataji, the 23rd Tirthankar Parshvanath's
goddess, is still in the deva realm. So we pray to her to grant
our wishes."
According to
DR VP Jain and Jitubhai Shah, there does exist a cult of the feminine
in Jainism and most Tirthankars, as many as 18 to 20, have female counterparts
that are worshipped as goddesses. Jain scriptures do talk of women having
been enlightened, some among them being Chandanbala, Mahavir's first woman
disciple and Marudevi, the first Tirthankar, Rishabhdev's mother.
JAINISM
TODAY
I often think of the Jinas of yore walking along the shore the other
side of eternity, picking up issues and ideas from the sand and examining
them with powerful electron microscope-like eyes. Taking in the changes
time has wrought and making note of the Constant. Knowing that as the
wheel turned and changed, so did their dharma.
Although
the principles have remained more or less constant, many changes have
appeared in their practice by the followers of the Jinas. Among the
laity for instance, for many it is no longer taboo to use leather articles
and eat at night. Ascetics from various sects do travel by airplanes
and visit foreign countries. As children question the faith of their
parents and religious, social and spiritual identities lie fragmented,
the religion that has come thus far on the basis of its eternal values,
takes a hard look at itself and tries to reinvent itself, at least in
parts.
THE REFORMERS
In a large part of the 20th century, under the leadership of the dynamic
Acharya Tulsi, the Terapanth Shwetambars,
with their distinctive muhpattis, have been the most popular
face of Jainism both in India and abroad. Tulsi not only started the
'Anuvrat Movement' to popularize universal Jain ideals like satya,
ahimsa, and aparigraha among the general populace, he
also created a new order midway between Jain householders and ascetics—samans
and samanis—who could use vehicles and travel abroad, but
otherwise followed the austere lifestyle of the sadhus and sadhvis.
I met two
samanis who had just returned from a year's stay at their center
in Houston, USA. About the experience, Samani Akshayapragya says: "This
is the first time in the history of Jainism that it is reaching people
around the world. This is because of Acharya Tulsi's courage in starting
a new order that can use vehicles. We travel around the world, talk
at schools and colleges, and hold prayer meetings and meditation camps.
We talk not only about Jain principles but also about a universal human
dharma. While in the USA, we were invited to the prayer meeting held
in the US Senate to pay respects to the victims of the September 11
attacks on the World Trade Center buildings in New York."
Acharya
Tulsi's vision of a university to teach and research Jain values culminated
in the impressive Jain Vishwa Bharati at the Terapanth headquarters
in Ladnun in Rajasthan, India. Says Sudhamahi Regunathan, vice-chancellor
of the university: "We are a university with a difference, as is
obvious from our motto: Nanassa Saram Ayaro, which means right
conduct is the essence of knowledge. Here, faith comes first, and enquiry
later whereas in a regular university, it is the opposite. We are trying,
through our contact and research programs, to help people look inwards."
The university conducts graduate, postgraduate, doctoral and postdoctoral
programs and certificate courses in ahimsa, Jainology, ancient
Indian languages like Pali and Prakrit, and other topics of Jain interest.
A JAIN
HEALING SYSTEM
After Acharya Tulsi's death in 1997, his mantle passed on to the scholarly
Acharya Mahapragya. Earlier, Mahapragya had devised a uniquely Jain
system of meditation—preksha dhyan. The Delhi-based All
India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) conducted a research on
preksha dhyan in the 1990s and found it extremely effective in
reversing heart disease.
Dharmanand,
who was the head of the meditation department at the Jain Vishwa Bharati
and now teaches preksha dhyan at the Adhyatma Sadhna Kendra in
Delhi, says: "Preksha dhyan is not only meditation, it also
includes dietary restrictions, asanas,
pranayam,
relaxation, contemplation and anuvrat (vows for a happier and
calmer life). It is a complete change of lifestyle. As Acharya Mahapragya
says: 'Dhyan (meditation) won't come alone, it brings along its
family.'
"Preksha
dhyan is not only meditation, it is a holistic approach to life.
It is effective because most diseases, especially those of the heart,
are psychosomatic. Tension and stress
cause the body to function abnormally. The entire preksha dhyan
process creates peace and harmony in the individual. We have cured patients
with almost 70 per cent artery blockage, and even a man all three of
whose arteries were blocked."
YOUNG AND RESTLESS
Many in the younger generation today have little respect for anything
they are told to do. They would like to try, as much as possible, things
for themselves and reach their own conclusions. Like Manish Modi, a 32-year-old
bookseller who worked in Dubai for some time. "Dubai gave me exposure
to big money. The decisive moment was when I saw a sheikh buy a watch
for 4,00,000 dirhams. After three months, he was back to buy another one.
I realized then that money is not the answer, because obviously there's
no end to desire. What I wanted lay beyond worldly desire. I was also
doing a lot of reading of Jain texts around that time, and interacting
with many Jains who seem to have their balance right. They had identified
their worldly goals and were moving ahead in their quest for spiritual
perfection."
Manish is
now interested in reaching out to young people and telling them about
Mahavir's message and Jain ideals. They are the ones more likely to be
influenced by logic rather than rituals. "We have been an introverted
community, but Mahavir belongs to the world. I have started with a website
that has a list of 400 Jain members, drawn from all over the world. It's
a vibrant site where we discuss basic issues such as veganism, the meaning
of certain principles, Jain literature, ideas, among others. I am also
translating Jain philosophy books from Hindi and Sanskrit to English."
AN AUSPICIOUS BEGINNING
As the Jain community gathers together to celebrate the 2,600th Janma
Kalyanak Mahotsav or birth anniversary of Bhagwan Mahavir, we have attempted
to examine their unique, and very contemporary worldview so that we
might glean some jewels of wisdom from its bosom. Maybe like Mahatma
Gandhi, or then again, like Lakshman, the resident artist at the Digambar
Jain Lal Mandir. "Are you a Jain?" I ask. "I wasn't born
one, but since I love the Jain way of life, I guess I am?" he smiles back.
And although
the Jain Navakar Mantra is recited at the beginning of every endeavor, I
think I will reproduce it here at the end, where we are in a better position
to appreciate its true meaning with our hearts and minds after our journey
into the Jain dharma:
Namo Arihantanam
I
bow to the Arihantas (the ever-perfect spiritual beings)
Namo Siddhanam
I bow to the Siddhas (the liberated souls)
Namo Ayariyanam
I bow to the Acharyas (leaders of the Jain order)
Namo Uvajjhayanam
I
bow to the Upadhyayas (the learned preceptors)
Namo Loe Savva-Sahunam
I bow to all the saints and sages everywhere in the world
Eso Panch Namukkaro
These
five obeisances
Savva Pavappanasano
destroy
all sins
Mangalanam Cha Savvesim
amongst
all that is auspicious
Padhamam Havai Mangalam
—with inputs from Suma Varughese; photographs by Martin Louis
Contact:
Adhyatma Sadhna Kendra,
Tel: 91-11-6802708
Kundkund Bharati,
Tel: 91-11-6564510
Jain Vishwa
Bharati,
Tel: 91-11-22116/ 22230
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