Saturday, November 10, 2012

Diwali Muhurat: Diwali in Jain Dharma 2012


There is a sequence to doing a puja. As per standard practise, we start with deva darshana, then circumambulate the Jina image three times while reciting the darshana patha {recitation while paying obeisance to the image of a Jina}. We bow our head in front of the image, which is seen as a symbolic representation of the supreme qualities of the Jina

We then recite the vinaya patha {Recitation of Humility}

We then recite the svasti patha {Recitation of the Names of the Auspicious Ones}

We then recite the first puja, which is the deva-shastra-guru puja {adoration of the auspicous triumvirate of god-scripture-preceptor }, the best known version of which was composed by Pandit Dyanataraya a few hundred years ago. On normal days, this puja is followed by a minimum of two otherpujas. One may do more pujas if one likes. But it is convention to carry out a minimum of three pujas. 

Mahavira puja (composed by Pt Dyanataraya) is performed on Dipavali day. The nirvana kanda {segment dealing with the liberation of the Jina} ofBhagavan Mahavira is recited by all present. At the conclusion of the nirvana kanda, a nirvana ladu {sweet offered to commemorate the liberation of the Jina} is offered with great devotion by all those present in the temple, to the Jina image. 

After finishing the puja, one offers the argha {devotional offering},  recites the shanti patha (in Sanskrit or in Hindi) and then recites the visarjana patha {formal leave taking}, which concludes the puja. 

This is the Mahavira puja as carried out in the temple. 

The same puja may be carried out at home as well. Jains normally do not have consecrated images of Jinas at home. So just place a nice framed photograph of Lord Mahavira on a table, light lamps in front of it and perform the puja as you would in a temple. 

After the puja, spend some time in solitude, reflecting upon the life and teachings of Tirthankara Mahavira. He was born a prince and yet he gave up all the trapping of luxurious life in order to become a naked ascetic wandering in the forest. He realised that eternal bliss could only be achieved by one who ceased indentifying with his body; followed the five vows of non-violence, truthfulness, non-stealing, purity of mind and body and detachment from material objects; controled the activities of his mind, speech and body; practised the five types of carefulness related to walking, eating, speaking, carrying and placing objects and disposal of bodily wastes; conquered his base passions of anger, arrogance, artifice and avarice; and attained a sense of oneness with the self. Mahavira immersed his consciousness in his self and attained supreme detachment and self-realisation. 

We must ponder upon his path and resolve to follow in his footsteps. I have found occasions like Dipavali are a great opportunity to look inwards and reflect upon my life, my conduct and whether it is capable of taking me on the path of spiritual emancipation. At all times, it is important to be honest. But especially so when we meditate upon the sublime teachings of the Jinas. It is best to carry out a self-assessment and see where we fall short of the teachings of Lord Mahavira. 

Each of us is capable of attaining liberation. The question is, do we really want it? If the answer is yes, are we willing to drop everything and focus completely on the path of self-realisation? If the answer is no, we need to think again, about what we want, whether we can actually get it, and even if we do, will it really give us the happiness we think it will?

I read somewhere, that we have endless sensual desires, but our capacity to partake of  sensual delectations is miniscule. Who are we kidding when we choose the pursuit of fleeting sensual pleasure over the attainment of lasting spiritual bliss? Only ourselves! 

The Tirthankaras are our ideals. We need to follow their teachings and live them. Unless we walk on the path of the Jinas, we cannot reach the destination that they reached - liberation. 

In devotion to the Jinas, and the Jain path of purification. 

Article by Manish Modi, Hindi Granth Karyalay

जैन धर्म में दीपावली

जैनधर्म के २४ वें तीर्थंकर भगवान महावीर स्वामी को कार्तिक कृष्ण अमावस्या को प्रत्यूष बेला (सूर्य की पहली किरण निकलने के साथ) में निर्वाण की प्राप्ति पावापुरी (नालंदा, विहार) से हुई थी इन्द्रों ने भगवान का निर्वाण कल्याणक बड़े ही धूमधाम से मनाया.

उसी दिन सायंकाल गोधूलि बेला में तीर्थंकर भगवान महावीर स्वामी  के प्रथम शिष्य गणधर श्री गौतम स्वामी को केवल ज्ञान की उत्पत्ति हुई थी.

ये दो महत्त्वपूर्ण घटनाएँ आज से २५३९ वर्ष पूर्व घटित हुई थीं, तभी से भारतवर्ष में दीपावली का त्यौहार बड़े उत्साह और धूमधाम से मनाया जाता है.

इस दिन जैन धर्मावलंबी प्रातःकाल में शुद्ध वस्त्र धारण कर जिनालयों में जाते हैं और भगवान महावीर की पूजा करते हैं और 'निर्वाण कांड' पढ़कर निर्वाण कल्याणक महोत्सव मानते हुए निर्वाण लाडू समर्पित  करते हैं  और तीर्थंकरों से प्रार्थना करते हैं कि हे भगवन ! एक दिन हमको भी अपने जैसा बना लेना.

शाम को घरों को सजाया जाता है और अंधेरा होने से पहले सोलह्करण के प्रतीक १६ दिए प्रज्ज्वलित किये जाते हैं और भगवान गौतम स्वामी की पूजा व आरती की जाती है.

जैनागम के अनुसार मुनिगण जैन श्रावकों को पटाखे ना चलाने एवं गरीब और असहाय लोंगों की सेवा करने एवं उनके घरों में रौशनी/ज्ञान के दिए जलाने का उपदेश देते हैं ताकि कोई भी घर अज्ञान और मिथ्यात्व के अँधेरे में ना रहे और चहुँओर अहिंसा धर्म की ज्योति प्रकशित होती रहे.

साधुओं का उपदेश है कि इस दिन जैन श्रावक केवल और केवल देव-शास्त्र और गुरु की आराधना ही करें एवं विशेष रूप से भगवान महावीर स्वामी एवं गणधर श्री गौतम स्वामी की पूजा करें, अन्धविश्वास में पड़कर धन-दौलत, रुपये-पैसे अथवा मकान-दूकान की पूजा ना करें.

पटाखे चलाने से लाखों जीवों का घाट होता है, उन्हें कष्ट पहुँचता है, गर्भवती नारी एवं गर्भस्थ शिशु, बीमार और वृद्धजनों को अत्यन्त कष्ट और परेशानियां सहनी पड़ती हैं, छोटे-जानवरों और पक्षियों की भी मौत हो जाती है.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Protest against blast of an ancient (1000 yr old) idol of Aadinath Jina at ALLUR (Karnataka)


हम जानते है कि रक्षाबंधन धरम की रक्षा का पर्व है, आपने कई बार सुना या पढ़ा ही होगा किस प्रकार 700 जैन मुनिराजो कि रक्षा हुई थी, आज फिर धर्म के लिए वैसा ही कुछ कर दिखाने का अवसर हमारे पास (सिर्फ हमारे पास) आया है-घटना इस प्रकार है- पिछले सप्ताह मोक्ष सप्तमी के दिन अलुर (जिला- गुलबर्गा – कर्नाटक) में कुछ समाजकंटको ने आदिनाथ प्रभु की १००० वर्ष प्राचीन जिन प्रतिमा बारूद से तोड़ दी- कई जगह धरने और प्रदर्शन हो रहे है, कर्णाटक में – किन्तु क्या हमें इस मामले में चुप रहना चाहिए- बिलकुल नहीं – आज जो अवसर आया है धर्म रक्षा का, रक्षाबंधन के इस शुभ पर्व पर – आइये हाथ से हाथ मिलाये..धर्म का साथ निभाए..नीचे पढ़े आपको क्या और किस प्रकार करना है |आपको कुछ नहीं करना है- बस ये नीचे लिखी इ-मेल नीचे दिए गए इ-मेल पतों पर भेजनी है – बस हो गया | एक एक करके नीचे लिखे पांचो ईमेल पतों पर भेज दे या फिर एक साथ भी भेज सकते है | और हा भेजने से पहले ईमेल में अपना नाम और शहर का नाम भी लिख दे ताकि उन्हें पता चले कि जैन हर जगह है और जागरूक भी है |
You can also sign online petition here- just click here login with FB id and it is done.

Fwd this email to everyone.
Draft of email:

Sir,It was really sad to hear/read the news of desecration of the 1000 years idol of Lord Adinatha (July 25, 2012 – on the holy day of Lord Parshwanath’s nirvan day) in front of the Jain Temple in Allur village of Chitapur taluk of Gulbarga district. We all are shocked-not only Jains but all who read it. After all it was a 1000 years old and very important heritage and also a remembrance of the great past of Rashtrakutas and Jainism.It is really shame on those miscreants who blasted the idol using dynamite. We request you personally and to the state government to arrest the miscreants and punish them and provide security to all Jain centers in the state, especially on such places like Allur where no or very less Jains reside.Please sir – do the needful as soon as possible- we are already belongs to minority religion- govt must secure our heritage and our minority rights.
Thanks,
YOUR Name and Address
इन पतों पर भेजना है –पुलिस अधीक्षक – गुलबर्गा- इ-मेल: sp-gulbarga@karnataka.gov.in Ph: 08472- 263602 / 263604 जिनके पास ईमेल नहीं है वो कृपया फ़ोन करे और अपना विरोध दर्ज कराये |
मुख्यमंत्री कर्नाटक- इ-मेल chiefminister@karnataka.gov.in
गृह मंत्री कर्नाटक – इ-मेल: min-home@karnataka.gov.in
कानून मंत्री – कर्नाटक इ-मेल: min-lawjushr@karnataka.gov.in
अल्पसंख्यक मंत्री- कर्नाटक इ-मेल: min-minortywelf@karnataka.gov.inआपका धन्यवाद् | 

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Vandalism of #JainIdols: Mega Protest Rally by Jains in Mumbai on Sunday 2nd Sept 2012


Entire Jain Samaj of Greater Mumbai is organising a Mega Protest Bike Rally on Sunday, 2nd Septmeber 2012 to protest against vandalism of idols of Lord Adinath and Lord Mahavira in Allur (Gulbarg-Karnataka) and Lucknow (U.P.).
This Bike rally will start at 8:30 am from SVP Ground, Pancholiya College, opp. Shri Munisuvrat Swami Jain Derasar, Bhulabhai Desai Marg, Kandiwali (West), Mumbai and will march from there to Malad, Goregaon, Jogeshwari, Andheri and will end at Mahatma Gandhi Smaarak, Juhu Chaupati, Mumbai. Thereafter Prominent Jainacharayas & Jain Munis including Ganivarya Acharya Shri Labdhichandrasagarji Maharaj, Muni Shri Devprabhsagarji Maharaj, Munishri Viragsagarji Maharaj, Munishri Vinamra Sagarji Maharaj will address the gathering at 11:30 am at Juhu Chaupati.
Organizers have informed to Ahimsa Sangh that this is historical rally in various ways because it is a coordinated effort of all the four sects of Jainism i.e. Digambar, Shwetambar, Terapanthi & Sthankavasi. 10000 Jains are expected to join this rally and 5000 vehicles will Chakkajam on SV Road.
Those who wants to join this movement can bring in their Cycle, Bike, Scooter or Car etc.
Ahimsa Sangh Requests all Jain Sanghs & Jain Trusts in Mumbai to publicize this event on grand level and ensure their Mandir’s/Trust’s representation in the rally.
Pl fwd this msg via sms/email or Facebook wall and occupy social media by talking on topic #JainIdols and #JainProtests and make it top trending subject.
Regards,
Editor, Ahimsa Sangh
Link to this news item pl click

Saturday, August 25, 2012

प्रतिमा का खंडन: दिल्ली में तीव्र विरोध प्रदर्शन



२३ अगस्त २०१२
नईदिल्ली। आज विश्व जैन संगठन के जुझारू और धर्मपरायण अध्यक्ष श्री संजय जैन की अगुवाई में दिल्ली स्थित जंतर-मंतर पे लखनऊ में १७ अगस्त २०१२ को भगवान महावीर स्वामी की प्रतिमा तोड़े जाने के  विरोध में आयोजित विशाल धरना प्रदर्शन में हजारों की संख्या में जैन धर्मालंबियों ने उपस्थित होकर अपना तीव्र विरोध दर्ज करवाया। जंतर मंतर पर 7000 लोगों की उपस्थिति के बीच हमारी जैनशक्ति का विशाल स्वरुप देखने को मिला। इस विरोध सभा में दिगम्बर, श्वेताम्बर, तेरापंथी, स्थानकवासी जैन समाज ने एक साथ जैन एकता का परिचय दिया। इस धरने के साथ पूरे देश में लगभग 170 जगहों पर जैन समाज ने धरना दिया।
धरना प्रदर्शन के लिए सुबह से ही हजारों जैनों का हुजूम जंतर मंतर की तरफ बढ़ रहा था। लोगो के चेहररों पर उक्त घटना के प्रति आक्रोश साफ़ देखा जा सकता था। हजारो की संख्या एकत्र हुए लोगों में बच्चे, बूढ़े और महिलाएँ भी सम्मिलित थी। युवा जैन हाथों में धर्मध्वजा थामे थे और जैन धर्म की जय’ ‘भगवान महावीर की जयकार’ ‘उत्तरप्रदेश सरकार हाय हाय’ के नारे लगा रहे थे।
धरने से पहले रोहणी के सेक्टर पांच में आयोजित धर्मसभा में श्रावकों को विश्वमैत्री दिवस के अवसर पर संबोधित करते मुनि श्री पुलक सागर जि महाराज ने कहा “जो धर्म के मार्ग पर चलता है वह तोड़ने में नहीं जोड़ने पर विश्वास रखता है। हमारे अंदर किसी धर्म विशेष से द्वेष की भावना नहीं है, पर हमारे धर्मायतनों पर हमला हमें असहनीय है, हमें तो सरकार की चुप्पी कचोटती है और ऐसा लगता है कि इस घटना के पीछे कोई राजनैतिक साजिश है जो देश की एकता को अखंडता को नष्ट करना चाहते है।
उन्होंने कहा कि मैं उत्तरप्रदेश के मुख्यमंत्री अखिलेश यादव से पूछना चाहता हूँ कि अगर तुम्हारे पिता का हाथ टूटा होता तो क्या तुम चुप बैठते? नहीं ना!
लखनऊ में केवल पत्थर की मूर्ति नहीं अपितु हमारे पिता, हमारे जनक भगवान महावीर स्वामी जिनकी हम पूजा करते है उनकी मूर्ति को तोड़ने का दुस्साहस जालिमों ने किया है। उन्होंने कहा कि खंडित मूर्ति की जगह सरकार द्वारा दूसरी मूर्ति लगा देने की मांग नहीं करता, जैन समाज स्वयं इतना सक्षम है कि वह कई मूर्तियां स्थापित कर सकता है।
हमारी माँग है कि हमारे तीर्थो की, हमारी मूर्तियों की रक्षा होनी चाहिए। भविष्य मे इस प्रकार की घटनाएं दोबारा ना हो इस बात का आश्वासन हमें चाहिए। सरकार को कठोर कदम उठाकर दोषियों को गिरफ्तार कर दंड देना चाहिए।
उन्होंने कहा कि हम कोई अशांति नहीं फैलाएँगे, हम कोई हिंसा करने वाले नहीं, हम तो वो लोग हैं जब उठती है तो तलवार नहीं, करूणा की मयूर पिच्छी उठती है। लेकिन याद रखना कभी हमारे धर्मायतन पर आंच आती है तो हमारा समाज किसी के शीश नहीं काटता है अपितु अकलंक- निकलंक बनकर शीश कटाकर धर्म की रक्षा करता है। हमारी अहिंसा को कायरता ना समझा जाये। हमारी अहिंसा वीरो की अहिंसा होती है। उन्होंने कहा कि हमारा आंदोलन तब तक रहेगा जब तक सरकार कोई ना कोई आधिकारिक वक्तव्य जारी ना कर दे। पूरे हिन्दुस्तान की भावनाएं आहत हुई है।
उन्होंने कहा कि इस अवसर पर हम ऐसा कोई कार्य ना करे जिससे जैन समाज पर प्रश्न चिन्ह लग जाये लेकिन ऐसा कार्य भी ना करे कि मंदिर मूर्तियां लुटती रहे और हम घर मे बैठे रहे।  इस धरने का रूप बढ़ेगा और सरकार स्वयं आकर सम्पूर्ण जैन समाज से माफी मांगेगी। यह आवाज इस हाल में ही नहीं अपितु संसद व विधानसभा में  भी गूंजना चाहिए। आप सब अपने-२ राज्य के मुख्यमंत्री और राज्यपाल से मिलकर अपनी आवाज़ उठाइये, हर राज्य के अल्पसंख्यक आयोग में शिकायत दर्ज करवाइए फिर देखिये कैसे परिणाम नहीं निकलता।
इसमें पधारने वाले कुछ अतिविशेष लोगों में केन्द्रीय राज्य मंत्री श्री प्रदीप जैन ‘आदित्य’, इस्लाम समाज के इमाम उमर अहमद इलियासी, अध्यक्ष-आल इंडिया इमाम ऑर्गेनाइजेशन, ईसाई समाज के फादर डोमनिकजी, हिन्दू समाज के प्रज्ञानंद जी, सिख समाज से परमजीत सिंह जी, मुनि श्री नयपद्मसागर जी महाराज ससंघ एवं श्री लोकेश मुनि जी ससंघ शामिल थे, बहुत सारे गणमान्य व्यक्ति भी उपस्थित हुए।
इमाम उमर अहमद इलियासी ने कहा कि उप्र की राजधानी में दिन दहाड़े ५०० लोग इतना उत्पात मचाते रहे है और पुलिस ने कुछ नहीं किया। सरकार को कठोर कार्यवाही करनी होगी, मैं इस घटना की कड़ी निंदा करता हूँ।
श्री प्रदीप आदित्य ने कहा मेरा झांसी मे एक कार्यक्रम था लेकिन जैसे ही इस धरने के बारे मे पता चला तो मैंने सोचा कि धर्म सबसे पहले है इसके बाद कुछ और। मैं अपनी ओर से पूरा दबाव बनाऊंगा ताकि मामले में शीघ्र कार्यवाही हो।
उप्र के मुख्यमंत्री अखिलेश यादव ने लखनऊ से एक सांसद को भी भेजा, उन्होंने नयी प्रतिमा स्थापित करवाने और दोषियों को पकड़ने की मुहिम चलाने का आश्वासन दिया. 
मुनि श्री नयपद्मसागर जी महाराज - मुझे समझ में नहीं आता कि शांतिप्रिय जैन समाज को इस देश में  निशाना क्यों बनाया जा रहा है। हमारे मंदिरों  व मूर्तियों को नुकसान क्यों पहुंचाया जा रहा है? आज हमें पंथवाद से ऊपर उठकर धर्म की रक्षा के लिए आगे आना होगा।
कार्यक्रम का सीधा प्रसारण पारस चैनल ने पूरे देश में दिखाया।
धरने में भारतवर्षीय श्री दिगम्बर जैन महासभा, अखिल भारतीय दिग. जैन परिषद, भारतीय जैन मिलन, अखिल भारतीय पुलक जन चेतना मंच, जैन महिला जागृति मंच, दिगम्बर जैन महासमिति, जैन मंच, पारस फांउडेशन, संस्कृति संरक्षण संस्थान, जैन युवा क्लब, पारस मंच, जैन शिक्षा समिति, विश्व ज्ञान भारती, रा। गौ रक्षा संगठन, जैन फाउन्डेशन एवं अन्य संस्थाओं का सहयोग प्राप्त हुआ।

Thursday, August 23, 2012

तीर्थंकर प्रतिमा का ध्वंस करने की कायरतापूर्ण हरकत के विरोध में मुम्बई में विरोध रैलियाँ एवं विराट विरोध सभा


१७ अगस्त २०१२ को लखनऊ के महावीर पार्क में तीर्थंकर
प्रतिमा का ध्वंस करने की कायरतापूर्ण हरकत के विरोध में

राष्ट्रव्यापी विरोध प्रदर्शन
प्रत्येक राज्य के राजभवन के सामने एवं जिला/तहसील स्तर पर जिलाधीश (कलेक्टर)/तहसीलदार कार्यालय के सामने
जागो!आज नहीं तो फिर कभी नहीं
सच्चे जैन धर्मावलंबियो!
हमारे धर्मायतनों पर हर वर्ष हमले हो रहे हैं, कहीं मंदिरों में चोरियाँ, तो कहीं षड्यंत्रपूर्ण सड़क दुर्घटनाओं में मुनियों की अकाल मृत्यु, परधर्म वालों द्वारा हमारे उपेक्षित तीर्थ स्थानों पर जबरन कब्जे की घटनाएँ बढ़ रही हैं, अनूप मण्डल जैसे असामाजिक संगठन जैन मुनियों और जैन समाज के विरुद्ध आम जनता के मन में विद्वेष के बीज बो रहे हैं, देश में कई स्थानों पर जैन मुनियों के विचरण पर गैरकानूनी रोक लगी है, पैदल विहार के समय मुनियों और आर्यिकाओं (साध्वियों) पर हमले होते हैं आदि. ऐसी दुर्घटनाओं की सूची काफी लंबी है पर हम सब चुप हैं. हमने अहिंसा की हमारी अचूक शक्ति को शिथिलता में बदल डाला है. हमारा रक्त ठण्डा पड़ गया है. ताजा घटनाक्रम में शुक्रवार १७ अगस्त २०१२ को अलविदा की नमाज़ के पश्चात् लखनऊ के महावीर पार्क (हाथी पार्क) में तीर्थंकर भगवान महावीर स्वामी की प्रतिमा का ध्वंस करने की कायराना हरकत एक समुदाय विशेष के सिरफिरे लोगों ने खुलेआम की है. ये लोग हिन्दुस्तान को पाकिस्तान बनाने पर तुले हैं और उप्र सरकार इनके तलवे चाट रही है. इसकी जितनी भी निंदा/भर्त्सना की जाए कम है. परन्तु केवल निंदा/भर्त्सना से बात नहीं बनेगी. आज समय पुकार रहा है कि देर नहीं हुई है जागो अहिंसा के अनुयायियो !!! जागो, तुम भी किसी से कम नहीं हो. तुम्हे सरकार और दोषियों को दृढ़ता से ये सन्देश पहुँचाना होगा कि हम अहिंसक हैं पर कायर कतई नहीं हैं और अपने धर्मायतनों की रक्षा करने के लिए अपने प्राणों की आहुति देने से भी पीछे नहीं हटेंगे, जिन्होंने हमारे महावीर भगवान की प्रतिमा को हाथ लगाया है उनको कड़ी से कड़ी सजा मिलनी ही चाहिए. अब हम अपने आराध्य देव-शास्त्र-गुरु पर किसी भी प्रकार के हमले बिल्कुल भी बर्दाश्त नहीं करेंगे, हिन्दुस्तान हिला देंगे.
आज नहीं जागे तो आने वाली पीढ़ियाँ तुम्हारी इस निष्क्रियता के लिए तुम्हें कदापि क्षमा नहीं करेंगी.
 मुनिश्री विरागसागर जी महाराज एवं मुनिश्री विनम्रसागर जी महाराज (श्वेताम्बर संप्रदाय) के पावन सान्निध्य में
मुम्बई में विरोधसभा
रविवार २६ अगस्त २०१२, प्रातः ८ बजे से प्रारंभ
सभास्थल:रामलीला मैदान, मलाड (पूर्व), मुम्बई
रैली श्री मुनिसुव्रतनाथ स्वामी श्वेताम्बर जिनालय, कांदिवली (प.) से  रामलीला मैदान, मलाड (पूर्व ) तक. रामलीला मैदान, मलाड (पूर्व) पहुँचकर ११ बजे महासभा में परिवर्तित हो जाएगी.
जागो ! युवाओ जागो ! क्या अपने धर्म का अपमान देखकर भी तुम्हारे रक्त में उबाल नहीं आता??? बह खून नहीं है पानी है जिसमें जिनेन्द्र भगवान के लिए त्याग नहीं.
संपर्क सूत्र: ९७०२२-६८४०७, ९७६९६-९६२७१, ८९७६३-५८१४४ , ९८१९९-८३७०८ 

Monday, August 20, 2012

Lord Mahavira's idol broken at Lucknow

This is very sad news that Muslims have openly/blatantly broken a tall idol of Jain Dharma's 24th Tirthankara Bhagwan Mahaveer at Mahaveer Park in Lucknow after Alvida Namaz on 17th August 2012. Jains are protesting against this dishonour of their lord's idol and asked for unconditional apology and severe action against goons who were involved in this mischievousness.


१७ अगस्त २०१२ को लखनऊ के महावीर पार्क में तीर्थंकर
प्रतिमा का ध्वंस करने की कायरतापूर्ण हरकत के विरोध में

राष्ट्रव्यापी विरोध प्रदर्शन
प्रत्येक राज्य के राजभवन के सामने एवं जिला/तहसील स्तर पर जिलाधीश (कलेक्टर)/तहसीलदार कार्यालय के सामने
जागो!आज नहीं तो फिर कभी नहीं
सच्चे जैन धर्मावलंबियो!
हमारे धर्मायतनों पर हर वर्ष हमले हो रहे हैं, कहीं मंदिरों में चोरियाँ, तो कहीं षड्यंत्रपूर्ण सड़क दुर्घटनाओं में मुनियों की अकाल मृत्यु, परधर्म वालों द्वारा हमारे उपेक्षित तीर्थ स्थानों पर जबरन कब्जे की घटनाएँ बढ़ रही हैं, अनूप मण्डल जैसे असामाजिक संगठन जैन मुनियों और जैन समाज के विरुद्ध आम जनता के मन में विद्वेष के बीज बो रहे हैं, देश में कई स्थानों पर जैन मुनियों के विचरण पर गैरकानूनी रोक लगी है, पैदल विहार के समय मुनियों और आर्यिकाओं (साध्वियों) पर हमले होते हैं आदि. ऐसी दुर्घटनाओं की सूची काफी लंबी है पर हम सब चुप हैं. हमने अहिंसा की हमारी अचूक शक्ति को शिथिलता में बदल डाला है. हमारा रक्त ठण्डा पड़ गया है. ताजा घटनाक्रम में शुक्रवार १७ अगस्त २०१२ को अलविदा की नमाज़ के पश्चात् लखनऊ के महावीर पार्क (हाथी पार्क) में तीर्थंकर भगवान महावीर स्वामी की प्रतिमा का ध्वंस करने की कायराना हरकत एक समुदाय विशेष के सिरफिरे लोगों ने खुलेआम की है. ये लोग हिन्दुस्तान को पाकिस्तान बनाने पर तुले हैं और उप्र सरकार इनके तलवे चाट रही है. इसकी जितनी भी निंदा/भर्त्सना की जाए कम है. परन्तु केवल निंदा/भर्त्सना से बात नहीं बनेगी. आज समय पुकार रहा है कि देर नहीं हुई है जागो अहिंसा के अनुयायियो !!! जागो, तुम भी किसी से कम नहीं हो. तुम्हे सरकार और दोषियों को दृढ़ता से ये सन्देश पहुँचाना होगा कि हम अहिंसक हैं पर कायर कतई नहीं हैं और अपने धर्मायतनों की रक्षा करने के लिए अपने प्राणों की आहुति देने से भी पीछे नहीं हटेंगे, जिन्होंने हमारे महावीर भगवान की प्रतिमा को हाथ लगाया है उनको कड़ी से कड़ी सजा मिलनी ही चाहिए. अब हम अपने आराध्य देव-शास्त्र-गुरु पर किसी भी प्रकार के हमले बिल्कुल भी बर्दाश्त नहीं करेंगे, हिन्दुस्तान हिला देंगे.
आज नहीं जागे तो आने वाली पीढ़ियाँ तुम्हारी इस निष्क्रियता के लिए तुम्हें कदापि क्षमा नहीं करेंगी.
मुनिश्री विरागसागर जी महाराज एवं मुनिश्री विनम्रसागर जी महाराज (श्वेताम्बर संप्रदाय) के पावन सान्निध्य में
मुम्बई में विरोध सभा
रविवार २६ अगस्त २०१२, प्रातः ८ बजे से प्रारंभ
सभास्थल:रामलीला मैदान, मलाड (पूर्व), मुम्बई
रैली श्री मुनिसुव्रतनाथ स्वामी श्वेताम्बर जिनालय, कांदिवली (प.) से  रामलीला मैदान, मलाड (पूर्व ) तक. रामलीला मैदान, मलाड (पूर्व) पहुँचकर ११ बजे महासभा .
जागो ! युवाओ जागो ! क्या अपने धर्म का अपमान देखकर भी तुम्हारे रक्त में उबाल नहीं आता??? बह खून नहीं है पानी है जिसमें जिनेन्द्र भगवान के लिए त्याग नहीं.
संपर्क सूत्र: ९७०२२-६८४०७, ९७६९६-९६२७१, ८९७६३-५८१४४ , ९८१९९-८३७०८ 

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Jainism and Hinduism

By Amar Salgia

The nineteenth century introduction of the term "Hinduism" is today the source for a variety of confusions and misguided scholarly pursuits among Indians and Westerners alike.  Based upon the sum of all extant historical sources, including those from both traditional histories and living traditions, the right answer to these questions is a categorical *no*. Many works of scholarship have examined the historical, literary and doctrinal evidences demonstrating that Jain tradition began anterior to and independent of the Vedic and later Hindu traditions. 

The reader may be referred to Jyoti Prasad Jain's book entitled **Jainism:  The Oldest Living Religion** (1988:  P.V. Research Institute, Varanasi) for an introduction.  Here, instead, the conceptual basis the views in question shall be examined.  Their sources first need to be studied.

It is important to recognize upfront that neither Jains nor Hindus -- be they scholars, swamis, pundits, monks or the like -- ever treated Jainism as a subsect of Hinduism until the twentieth century:  the era of Hindu proselytization and nationalist politics.  It was not until noted Hindu thinkers, including the famed Swami Vivekananda, Mahatma Gandhi and Paramahansa Yogananda, proclaimed to the Western world that India is a single nation of common spirituality, that many other Hindu thinkers assumed a new posture of sectarian hegemony:  the "offshoot" mentality, which has become a staple of post-independence Hindu thought. 

Contemporary Hindu thinkers credit "Hinduism" for everything positive and acclaimed that ever originated in India, including such things as moral virtues, philosophy, language, science and art.  Beginning in the 1960's, with the importations of popular guru-followings into Europe and North America, Hindu scholars have attempted to define and systematize Hinduism into a more or less united creed, often by assimilating it to the familiar Judeo-Christian faiths, while claiming greater perfection on the basis of its being more ancient, liberal, "open-minded" and all-encompassing:  a belief-system whose lack of definition and consistency is somehow its crowning virtue. 

Hindu religious teachers make attempts to supplant other world religions by conforming them to the terminology of "Jnan yoga" (grace through the intellect), "Karma yoga" (grace through works), and "Bhakti yoga" (grace through devotion), as delineated in the much-revered **Bhagavad Gita**.  Jainism and Buddhism, so it is often suggested, constitute Karma yoga and therefore derive from Hinduism.

When dealing with the question of whether or not Jains are actually Hindus, one must not only define a "Jain" but also define "Hindu". Since the field of comparative religion began its development as a social science in the West, the catchall of "Hinduism" has been applied in common reference to Brahmanism, or the Vedic creed, along with any other religious traditions -- however mutually contradictory -- which came to accept Vedic scriptural authority in some form.  Revisionists are proposing new Hindu self-conceptions such as the following from **Dancing with Siva:
Hinduism's Contemporary Catechism**:

From the rich soil of Hinduism long ago sprang various other traditions.  Among them were Jainism, Buddhism and Sikhism, which rejected the *Vedas* and thus emerged as completely distinct religions, disassociated from Hinduism, while still sharing many philosophical insights and cultural values with their parent faith.[1]

"Hindu" is a term used by modern Indians mainly in a cultural sense (e.g., Hindu vs. Muslim); or alternately, in reference to a national identity (the state of Hindustan); or, when augmented with the suffix '-ism', in a vague sense of religious creed (the "Hindu faith" or Sanatana Dharma).  While each approach might seem unambiguous by itself, the problem arises from the fact that Indians tend to use these definitions interchangeably, even within a single discourse.  Frequently one hears that Hinduism is the whole of Indian culture; that Hinduism is not a religion, but a way of life; or that a Hindu is any inhabitant of India.  Out of those three statements only the last elicits the actual etymology of the word.  *Hindu* is the Avestan (Old Persian) rendering of *Sindhu*, the term used throughout most of the first millennium, B.C. by the Irani-Aryans to differentiate themselves from the Aryans inhabiting the lands east of the Sindhu River (the Indus River in modern Pakistan).[2]  In the fourth century, B.C., the invading Greeks converted the name of their newly conquered land from the Persian "Hind" to "India".  Thus, anyone whose ancestors were among the Aryans that migrated east of the modern Indus River (that is, any person of Indo-Aryan descent) can logically call oneself a "Hindu" (that is, if the individual chooses to accept a foreign ethnic designator).

So what is *Hinduism*? 

As we know it in the modern world, Hinduism is actually made from the historical synthesis of two independent families of religious traditions:  on one hand, the faith, scripture, social structure and ritualism of the *Brahmanic* (or Vedic) tradition; and on the other hand, the introspectiveness, asceticism, philosophies and conservativeness of the *Shramanic* traditions. 

 This synthesis began around 900 B.C. when the Vedic tribes of Indo-Aryans began to migrate from the northern tributaries of the Indus River to the Shramanic homelands surrounding the Ganges River (in the modern Indian states of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh).  The first definitive product of Hinduism's development was the collection of books known as the *Upanishads* (600 - 300 B.C.), within which numerous non-Vedic ideas begin to transform the earlier Vedic theology into the first utterances of Hindu thought.[3] 

 Jainism and other Shramanic systems were among the original sources of these non-Vedic beliefs and soteriological practices which have, up to modern times (and especially since the nineteenth century), become synonymous with a popularized concept of Hinduism. 

Such ideas included the concepts of karma, reincarnation, asceticism, belief in an eternal soul, and a non-anthrocentric view of universe -- all of which are absent from the original corpus of Vedic thought.  Owing to the liberalities of the older Vedic henotheism, and during the same initial stages of Hinduism's evolution, more localized divinity-cults (e.g., those of the Shiva and Krishna precursors), apart from the Shramanic and Vedic traditions, were also assimilated into the Brahmanic belief and social systems.  Through the cultural processes involved in Sanskritizing them, the Brahmanic fold started to reconfigure these regional cults and non-Vedic doctrines, absorb them into its established structures, and therewith extend the geographical limits of its cultural and linguistic influence.[4]  From these interactions, and within a changing Brahmanic society, a hybrid Vedic/non-Vedic culture began to grow in both complexity and, over centuries, in its capacity to socially interface with purely non-Vedic religious traditions (such as Jainism).

Now, in the religious sense of the term, can one distinguish between that which is Hindu and that which is not?  Certainly:  all religions and schools of thought which support the authority of the Veda are *Hindu* religions and *Hindu* schools of thought; and all those which do not are considered non-Vedic, non-Brahmanic, and yes, non-Hindu.

Jainism and Buddhism (in addition to being purely Shramanic philosophies) would thereby fall into the non-Hindu category.  Thus, while the ancient Samkhya philosophy shared numerous similarities with Jainism, and although it originated from the realm of Shramanic thought, the early Samkhya thinkers chose to acknowledge Vedic authority; and hence the Samkhya school has been accepted as an "orthodox" system of *Hindu* philosophy, rather than an independent or non-Vedic school of thought. 

Jainism on the other hand, along with Buddhism and the ancient Ajivikas, have been labeled "heterodox" by religious scholars as though they each developed from Hinduism (that is, from a conflux of Vedic and non-Vedic beliefs) only to break from it in reaction to an unsatisfying Hindu orthodoxy.

It is a fact that Jainism originated on the Indian subcontinent.  Its active adherents now number but a few millions, whose mostly Indian members bear racial and cultural constitutions that differ not outstandingly with surrounding populations.  Over the course of centuries, Indian lay Jains have, as part of a social survival mechanism, adopted a number of rites and customs bearing outward similarities with popular Hindu rites and customs.  In fact, it has been well-documented that for the very purpose of reducing their cultural conspicuousness (primarily to avoid religious persecution) the Jain laity, under monastic guidance, appropriated a variety of devotional rituals (in addition to those pertaining to marriage) which were deliberate modelings of established Brahmanic rituals.[5] 

And since the Jain, Hindu and Buddhist traditions have employed a generic Sanskritic vocabulary that includes "karma", "dharma", "samsara", "yoga" and "moksha" -- despite the fact that each system defines them in terms of fundamentally disparate worldviews --  a reductionistic stance has propagated among Indians whereby each tradition has come to be viewed as part of a monolithic, pan-Indian, "Hindu" phenomenon.

Nationalists thus argue that to draw distinctions in the spectrum of Indian thought is to distort Indian culture and promote divisions in the Indian republic. 

On a polemic front they allege that Hinduism, Jainism, Buddhism and all other religions of Indian origin began from a single, primordially unified Hindu people (usually imagined as a "Vedic spiritual society"); and further that any distinctions between the religions are merely differences in emphasis and preference, rather than purport. 

Some state that while the Brahmanic traditions adopted many features of Shramanic, Buddhist or Jain ideology, the Jain and Buddhist traditions, on the other hand, began to modify and incorporate Hindu deities into their histories and rituals -- the ready conclusion being that all traditions of Indian origin are completely interdependent, and thus unapproachable without a contrived ideological context linking each to all of the others. 

Perceptions of certain types of similarities between traditions, such as those of terminology, ethics or ritual, are typically presented as proof for one tradition being a derivative of another (usually the one with more professed adherents).  In attempting to foster for Jains a greater sense of belonging to an independent Indian nation, in the 1990's even Jain commentators have begun harboring a view of their tradition wherein the last  Tirthankara, Mahavira, is described not in the traditional sense but as a champion of an imagined Hindu reformation. 

Due to similar approaches it has become common for world philosophy and comparative religion texts to classify Jainism as a "Hindu tradition", while attempting little more discussion of its teachings beyond general associations with Hinduism or Buddhism.

What the proponents of this view do not recognize, however, are the mostly unilateral directions which these influences between Brahmanic and Shramanic traditions have historically taken.  While ideologies from the Shramanic traditions, in the forms of metaphysics and soteriology, took  hold and germinated within the mainstreams of Brahmanic thought, the latter has had insignificant if any impact on the Shramanic philosophies; and while a worshipful attitude toward selections from the Hindu pantheon became gradually accepted, though in modified form, by the popular sectors of the Buddhist and Jain traditions, none of the major Hindu traditions have ever promoted an analogous recognition for the Buddhas or  Tirthankaras. 

(Although the Vaishnava Hindu tradition did turn Buddha and the Tirthankara Rishabha into "Vishnu-avataras", like the other minor incarnations they are neither deified nor worshipped in any form.)

Disregarding pre-formed conclusions, the literary and doctrinal evidences most clearly relate that as religious ideology has diffused to Brahmanism from the Shramanic realm, a *hybrid* culture formed from these interactions has come to dominate many of the empirical aspects of Indian life.  And it has been due to this manifested social dynamic that we might perceive overt similarities between the Jain tradition and modern Hinduism:  similarities of ritual and terminology which arise from (1) the natural commonalties that any hybrid culture would facilitate; and (2) the wide diversity of non-Vedic philosophical ideas which (as exemplified by texts including the Upanishads and Bhagavad Gita) merged into the amorphous socio-religious system that we have only recently given the label of Hinduism. 

The resemblances between Jainism and Hinduism, then, do not evince common origins but are traceable to actual time periods and discrete events in history wherein interactions were occurring between previously self-isolating traditions.  The historical independence of Jain philosophy, as a unique hallmark of the non-Vedic tradition known as Jainism, thus remains unchallenged.

In summary, common claims such as "Jainism is an offshoot of Hinduism" and "Buddha was a Hindu" are not supported by historical facts or sound doctrinal comparisons. 

They are matters of perception (and largely superficial perceptions at that) which typically draw upon observations of shared social customs and the aforementioned ritualistic similarities.  They are fueled by inaccurate conceptions of *both* Jainism and Hinduism; and, when professed in the guise of religious scholarship, such claims constitute little more than religious chauvinism:  the same chauvinism that modern Hindu thinkers claim that Hinduism lacks.  Were Mahavira and Buddha charismatic populists?  Were they the reformers of an already established Hindu belief system?  Are Jainism and Buddhism offshoots of Hinduism?  Were they each products of a "Hindu" socio-religious system?  Many Hindu thinkers allege just that and, interestingly enough do so in the face of powerful evidence to the contrary from within the Brahmanic tradition itself.  That evidence, when coupled with the apparent need to supplant Jainism (along with the other religions of Indian origin), continues to generate insupportable and self-contradicting portrayals of the tradition. 

In a terse synopsis of Jainism the author of **The Hindu Mind** provides an excellent example of this:

Jainism, an offshoot of Hinduism, is believed to be as ancient as the Vedic religion, since references to two of its twenty-four saints (Tirthankaras), Rishabha and Arishtanemi, are found in the Rigvedic Mantras.  Rishabha, the first of the twenty-four Tirthankaras, is the founder of the original Jain Dharma.... Jainism is one of the theological traditions (sampradayas) of Hinduism and is classified as one of the heterodox schools of Hindu philosophy....Jainism rejects the ritualistic content of the Vedas but does not necessarily deny their higher teachings.[6]
-----

How the Jain religion, having been founded by Rishabha, can be "as ancient" as the Vedas and yet still be an "offshoot" of Hinduism is among the revisionists' standard paradoxes.  Unsubstantiated by ancient traditions or actual texts which might lend support to the notion, the author's appropriation of Jainism as a Hindu "sampradaya" is also a recent
innovation. 

(As a point of information, no final authority is recognized in Jainism beyond the *Kevalin*, or omniscient soul.  Jainism accepts nothing from the Vedic, Vedantic or later Hindu scriptures and recognizes none of the beliefs contained in them as authoritative.  For well over 2500 years Jain tradition has been consistently clear on that point.)

The claim that Jainism began from Hinduism is therefore little more than a claim.  Bearing semantic difficulties which alone preclude its defense, it is an assertion best-suited for furthering social and political agendas; and a belief relying, for its general acceptance, upon ignorance of the historical, literary and doctrinal evidences to the contrary (along with the passivity of the Jain community in affirming otherwise). 

In recent decades some proponents of the "Jains are Hindus" view have assumed patronizing, even antagonistic dispositions towards any notion of Jainism's uniqueness or historical independence.  One could begin a more public process of debunking the offshoot-paradigm by addressing the antagonists with a simple line of questions:

*   First, define "Hindu" and "Hinduism".

*   Based on those definitions, and using both historical and doctrinal evidence, explain *how* Jain philosophy was  derived from the Brahmanic  faith; and, based on that evidence, *how* you deduce that Jains are  and have always been a sub-sect of Hindus, despite the fact that the very notion is almost exclusively a twentieth century phenomenon.

*   In what ways do rituals and social customs have anything to do with being a Jain and following the philosophy and code of conduct taught by Lord Mahavira?  Explicate the respective roles that rituals and social customs assume within Jain cosmology and the philosophy of *Seven Tattvas*, both of which constitute the sum of all that Jainism rests upon.

*   Why is it important for Jains to be convinced that their own religion is neither independent nor unique, but that it is somehow a child of another religion? 
For what reasons must Jains deny and discard their thousands of years of meticulously recorded pre-Mahaviran history, and replace it with this twentieth century claim that "Jains are Hindus"?  Do Jains who identify themselves as  "Hindu" rather than "Jain" gain any special benefits from doing so?

*   Do the Hindu deities symbolize the same ideals of passionlessness, detachment and omniscience which are exemplified by the *Jina*?
Should Jains contradict their own intellectual and spiritual tradition and start praising the Vedas, Upanishads, Bhagavad Gita and other major Hindu scriptures, despite the set reasoning against doing so articulated by Lord Mahavira and other Jain leaders throughout every subsequent age?

*   If Jains and Hindus are now, and have always been the same, then why do Hindus thinkers not preach Jain philosophy; or teach from any of the Jain scriptures; or endorse the Jain code of conduct; or worship the ideals embodied as the Lord Jina? 
Why have Jain and Hindu thinkers been engaged in vigorous ideological debates for well over twenty-five centuries?  Why did purist Brahmanic revivals, such as the  Advaita and Bhakti movements, condemn Jainism as a heretical creed?


________________________
1.      Satguru Sivaya Subrahmuniyaswami.  1993:  Himalayan Academy, Concord, CA.  p. 731.  Note the author's reference to Hinduism as a singular "parent faith".

2.      Historical  note:  The Sanskrit word "Aryan" or "Arya" is a proper       linguistic designation, and refers strictly to those peoples who       speak or spoke any of the Indo-Iranian languages which include

        Sanskrit, Prakrit, Persian, Hindi, Gujarati, Panjabi, Sindhi,        Pashto, and many others.  "Aryan" therefore supports no more of        racial connotation than the term "Semite" (as the latter denotes  the native-born speaker of any Semitic language).
3.      Gavin Flood.  **An Introduction to Hinduism**.  1996:  Cambridge        University Press.  p. 40.

4.      Ibid.  p. 148.
5.      Historical note:  The beginnings of this persecution came with theBrahmanical ministry of Shankara, the ninth century founder of the"Advaita", or Non-dualism movement which condemned non-Vedic systems for being heretical creeds.
6.      Bansi Pandit.  1996:  B&V Enterprises, Glen Ellyn (IL).  pp. 87-90.

Ahimsa, Jains, and the 1947 Partition of India and Pakistan


1325 North College Avenue
Claremont, CA 91711
(909) 962-6800
www.ClaremontLincoln.org

Office of the Provost
May 29, 2012

RE: Ahimsa, Jains, and the 1947 Partition of India and Pakistan

Jai Jinendra to our Jain Friends and Colleagues,

In 2011, Claremont Lincoln University inaugurated its Jain Studies program, partnering with the International School for Jain Studies (ISJS), the Federation of Jain Associations in North America (JAINA), and the Jain Center of Southern California (JCSC).

In our first quarter, we have made remarkable strides together. Seven students from Claremont departed for India this week to take part in the ISJS summer education program. Prior to their departure, these students, along with six others, visited the Jain Center of Southern Californis to participate in puja and an aarti.

A group of students began digitally recording existing Jain lectures to create an online resource for Jains and scholars of Jainism around the world. Over 100 books were generously donated to the university library to increase our Jain holdings. The first International Jain Conference on Bioethics will be held at Claremont in August 2012, and the first course, “Applied Jainism: Bioethics Among the Dharma Traditions,” will be taught in Fall 2012. Many of these actions were made possible by a grant that we were awarded by the
prestigious Uberoi Foundation in order to grow the Jain Studies Program and a generous gift from Gurudev and Pramoda Chitrabahnu of Jain Meditation International Center. You can see a full report of the first quarter achievements on the “News and Events” section of our Jain Studies homepage:
http://jain.claremontlincoln.org/. 

We are looking toward the future in which we continue to collaborate with our partners to bring Jainism to Claremont Lincoln classrooms and campus life. Among the upcoming goals are the Oct. 2 celebration of Ahimsa, developing a fully online course, and bringing a Jain temple to campus. It is our goal that
Claremont Lincoln will become one of the primary centers for Jain Studies in North America and around the world.

To that end, Claremont Lincoln is seeking support for a full analysis of Jain nonviolent action during the violent Partition of India and Pakistan in 1947. Working closely with Dr. Sulekh Jain and Mr. Dilip Shah, chairmen of the Claremont Lincoln Jain Advisory Council, we have put together the following proposal.

The four of us would be grateful if you could share this letter broadly with friends and colleagues. Only with the support of the Jain community can we research and publicize the courage of Jains during Partition.

Many of the witnesses in India are now quite old. It is urgent that we find and videotape them while they can still describe what they did and saw. Otherwise their stories will never come to light.

Why Study Jains during Partition?
Numerous international conflicts are characterized by recourse to violent solutions, represented most painfully in U.S. foreign policy of the last twenty years. Religious practitioners look for alternative solutions, the oldest of these being the practice of Jain ahimsa, or non-interference. Ahimsa was a core
principle for Gandhi, and later for Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. How could the ancient principle of ahimsa be brought to bear on contemporary conflicts? One of the most important test cases for ahimsa is the Partition of India and Pakistan.
The project has four facets. 

The first answers the question, “What is Ahimsa?” 

We will summarize the philosophical, metaphysical, and logical foundations of ahimsa from Jainism, comparing and contrasting Jain theory and practice with the other three Dharma traditions.

The second facet examines case studies of ahimsa in practice, with a special focus on the event of Partition between India and Pakistan, and the actions of Jain practitioners of ahimsa caught at the border. We conduct in-depth research into the behaviors of Jains during this time of crisis. Specifically, through the
Jain community we have the connections that will allow us to locate and make video recordings of Jains who were caught in this crisis of partition. Many of these individuals are at their end of their life now. If the recordings of their experiences are not made within a few years, they will be lost forever.
The third facet of the project is to analyze the video recordings and other raw data to detect patterns in the narratives, self-descriptions, and behaviors. Are there similar ways in which Jains interpreted the dilemmas of partition? Are there recurring patterns in the decisions they made and the actions they took?

The final facet offers applications of ahimsa: personal, within religious communities (including monasteries), non-governmental organizations (including the U.N.), economics, and government. In particular, if patterns emerge in the non-violent responses of Jains during Partition, how could these responses be held up as models for men and women as they face difficult decisions about violence today? It is often said that humans in these situations have “no choice” but to respond to violence with violence. It is our hypothesis that this claim is false, and that creative non-violence remains a live option even in the most
desperate of situations. Our hope is that the results from this Partition Project will offer new data that help to substantiate this hypothesis.

Why Now?
This project is extensive and multi-disciplinary. Given the fact that many of the individuals who experienced Partition are at the end of their life, It is urgent that we find and videotape them in their own voice. we feel that best way forward is to just begin, realizing that the work may progress in strategic phases.

Timeline and Deliverable Outcomes After securing initial funding of $15-25,000, Claremont Lincoln will send 1-3 doctoral students and/or faculty to India in Summer 2013 to begin gathering data, including video interviews. We plan to
collaborate with the 1947 Partition Archive and to use their existing  ethodologies and training for ethnographic research.

From this first phase, we hope to produce:
• a detailed project report, complete with video archive
• several academic papers
• seminars and/or lectures on this topic
• doctoral dissertations
• a semester-long comparative study course on ahimsa across traditions
• a popular book on the subject, describing the courageous acts of Jains during Partition Not only will this research showcase Jain teachings, but it will open the door for concrete dialog with other ahimsa traditions, such as the Quakers and Mennonites. Additionally, a project of this magnitude and scope will require the involvement of Jain scholars and institutions in India as equal collaborators and
researchers. The possibility of turning this research into a book or film remains a lively possibility.

How can you help?
We are seeking donors at the level of $5,000, but any amount will help. Donors will be acknowledged on the Claremont Lincoln Website and in all media publications. We are very happy to announce that we have already received the first gift of $5,000. We hope you will help us achieve the balance. Please make
out your tax-deductible gift in the name of Claremont Lincoln University and send your gifts by July 15, 2012 to:

Claremont Lincoln University
Jain Studies Partition Project
Office of the Provost
1235 N. College Ave.
Claremont CA 91711

We welcome your support on this undertaking. The faculty and students of Clarmont Lincoln are deeply inspired by the depth and uniqueness of Jain belief. The Jain Way of Life is urgently needed in this time of ecological destruction, impersonal globalization, and technological estrangement. This comprehensive
study of Jains living during the violence of Partition may help the world find alternatives to the violent politics of our day.

We hope you will join us in this important and timely project.
In partnership,
Philip Clayton, Provost Brianne Donaldson, Coordinator of Dharma Traditions