Jainism in India |
Jainism is prohibits killing, violence, or injury to any living thing.
Orthodox Jain monks and nuns demonstrate this reverence for all life by wearing
cloth masks over their faces to prevent them from accidentally inhaling
tiny flying insects and sweeping the ground in front of them to avoid
crushing any living organism under their feet.
Tranquility is the prevailing sentiment in Jain art and iconography. An image of a Jina does not represent a god but is instead a reminder of an ideal. Jina are always portrayed as beggars or ascetics and are always shown in one of two positions: either seated in the classic lotus position of meditation or standing as solid or erect as a stone column, a position that signifies "non-movement" or total abandonment of the world. A diamond-shaped emblem called a srivatsa is seen on the chest of all Jina figures. It means "Beloved of Fortune" and is one of the few ways to identify a Jina from other figures. Of the three to four million Jains in India, about six to seven thousand are ascetics or renouncers, usually referred to as sadhus or munis (monks), and sadhvis (nuns). Nuns outnumber monks by four to one, and this has been true throughout their Jain history. Visit a large historically-important pilgrimage Jain temple and a small Jain temple in a village, both in Udaipur, West India. |
| Map source: Holt, Rinehart and Winston. |