Jainism in India
Jainism is primarily an Indian religion and it is
doubtful whether it crossed the frontiers of India. The Jain
religion is contemporary to Buddhism and bears much resemblance to
it. It was founded around 500 B.C. by Mahavira, the 24th and last of
the Jain prophets called as Tirthankars or "finders of the path".
Mahavira cannot be called the founder of Jainism rather its
reformer. The first Jain prophet was Rsabha who is mentioned in the
Vedas and hence Jainism can be considered to be of great antiquity.
The Jains number a few millions in India and are predominantly found
in the west and southwest.
They believe that the Universe is infinite. In Jainism, God as such
does not exist. A liberated soul, that of a prophet is God. A
voluntary death by penance is considered highly esteem. They also
believe in reincarnation and eventual spiritual salvation or Moksha.
One factor in the search for salvation is Ahimsa or reverence for
all life and the avoidance of injury to all living things. Due to
this belief the Jains are all vegetarians and some monks even cover
their mouth with a piece of cloth actually to avoid the risk of
accidentally swallowing an insect. They also walk in the streets
with a tiny duster that clears their way of any tiny creatures that
they might accidentally hurt!
The Jains are divided into two sects, the Shvetembara and the
Digambara.The Digambaras are the more austere sect and as a sign of
their contempt for material possessions they wear no clothes. Most
of the Digambaras are monks and they confine their nudity within the
monasteries. The famous Shravanbelagola temple in Karnataka is a
Digambara temple.
A good Shvetambara Jain should vow to avoid injury, falsehood and
theft. He is also supposed to make a pilgrimage to one of the sacred
Tirthas, Mount Abu, Mount Samneta, and Mount Girnar near Junagadh
and Mount Shatrunjaya near Palitana. The last one is very famous
where a visit to the vast temple with more than 1000 Jain shrines
and 800 mini temples is said to be meritorious as visiting all other
hills combined.
Jain Temples
SHRAVANABELAGOLA TEMPLE
Shravanbelgola,
the Digambara's temple near Mysore has a statue of the saint
Gomateshvara carved in its peak. Here the architecture, worship
and everything take their cue from Hinduism. Most of the Jains
take their vows, go on pilgrimages and fast on "Pavan" meaning
holy days, the 8th and 14th days of the moon's waxing and waning
every month. They also accept Sallakhana, the fast to death while
meditating, as an honorable way of ending ones life. Since two of
the sacred hills are in Gujarat most of the Jains live there or in
nearby Bombay.
The Jains tend to be
clever and commercially successful and have a great influence
anywhere they move. They chiefly belong to the mercantile class
spread mainly over central, eastern and southern India. There are
many Jains in Rajasthan, Gujarat and Bombay. In general the Jains
are self-effacing, neither giving money ostentatiously to the
community nor lavishing it themselves. Health and education, such
as hospitals, libraries and schools, are often their choice of
patronage. They have set up many trusts and charitable
institutions in India.
PALITANA TEMPLE
Jains
take their temple buildings very seriously; constructing temples is one way
to achieve good karma and so Jain temples are found in huge concentrations
in some places. Shatrunjaya, a temple in Gujarat is a complex made of 863
temples. Most of the Jain temples date back between 1000 and 1300 A.D. when
the Solani Dynasty of western India was patronizing the religion
Jain temples are similar to the Hindu temples with the difference being in
the number of cells built to hold the images. Many Jain temples hide their
spectacular interiors behind non-descript walls. Most of the temples are
aligned along an east-west axis. Temples may be either rock-cut or
freestanding. The hilltop complex of Shatrunjaya, the Place of victory, in
Gujarat is one of the most evocative Jain memorials in India. The Dilwara
temples of Mt. Abu in Rajasthan are renowned as the country's finest Jain
architecture. The Jain temple complex at Ranakpur in Rajasthan is one of the
largest. With an area of 100 meters square, it has 29 halls supported by
1444 pillars.
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