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The Jain Religion
Jainism is a religious
system of India practiced by about 5,000,000 persons. Jainism,Ajivika, and Buddhism
arose in the 6th cent. B.C. as protests against the overdeveloped
ritualism of Hinduism
, particularly its sacrificial cults, and the authority of the Veda. Jaina
tradition teaches that a succession of 24 tirthankaras (saints) originated the
religion. The last, Vardhamana, called Mahavira [the great hero] and Jina [the
victor], seems to be historical. He preached a rigid asceticism and solicitude
for all life as a means of escaping the cycle of rebirth, or the
transmigration of souls. Thus released from the rule of karma
, the total consequences of past acts, the soul attains nirvana, and hence
salvation. Mahavira organized a brotherhood of monks, who took vows of
celibacy, nudity, self-mortification, and fasting. Since the 1st cent. A.D.;,
when a schism developed over the issue of nudity, there have been two great
divisions of Jains, the Digambaras [space-clothed, i.e., naked] and the
Svetambaras [white-clothed]. Jainists, then as now, accumulate merit through
charity, through good works, and in occasional monastic retreat. Early
Jainism, arising in NE India, quickly spread west, and according to tradition
Chandragupta, the founder of the Maurya empire, was converted to the sect, as
were several kings of Gujarat. The Jaina canon, however, is preserved in an
ancient dialect of NE India. As Jainism grew and prospered, reverence for
Mahavira and for other teachers, historical and legendary, passed into
adoration; many beautiful temples were built and cult images set up. However,
as time passed, the line between Hindu and Jain became more and more unclear.
Soon Hindu gods such as Rama and Krishna were drawn into the Jaina pantheon,
and Hindu Brahmans began to preside at Jaina death and marriage ceremonies and
temple worship. The caste system, which primitive Jainism had rejected, also
became part of later Jaina doctrine. Modern Jainists, eschewing any occupation
that even remotely endangers animal life, are engaged largely in commerce and
finance. Among them are many of India's most prominent industrialists and
bankers as well as several important political leaders. A distinctive form of
charity among Jains is the establishment of asylums for diseased and decrepit
animals.
Adapted
from Questia
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