Jainism and other religions

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Jainism, Hinduism, and Buddhism

Jainism, Hinduism, and Buddhism share many key concepts derived from the Sanskrit language and dialects that have enabled them to hone their religious debates. For example, all three traditions share a notion of karma as the actions of individuals that determine their future births, yet each has attached unique connotations to the concept. This is also true with terms such as dharma (often translated “duty,” “righteousness,” or “religious path”), yoga (“ascetic discipline”), and yajna (“sacrifice,” or “worship”). This Sanskritic discourse has shaped the religious and philosophical speculations, as well as the polemics, of each of these traditions.

The same circumstance occurs in the ritual and literature of each religion. In the ritual sphere, for example, the abhiseka, or head-anointing ritual, has had great significance in all three religions. The best-known example of this ritual is the one performed every 12 to 14 years on the statue of Bahubali at the Jain pilgrimage site at Shravanabelagola. The structure of this ritual is similar in each religious context, but it has a unique meaning in each tradition. In the literary sphere, each tradition developed an extensive corpus of canonical and commentarial literature, and each has developed a body of narrative literature. For example, so great was the influence of the story of Rama in the classical Hindu Ramayana that the Buddhists and Jains felt obliged to retell the story in their own terms. Jain literature includes 16 different versions of this story in Sanskrit and Prakrit.

Jainism and Islam

Muslim influence on Jainism can be seen in a number of areas. It has been suggested that the concept of ashatanas—activities that are unsuitable or indecent in a temple—reveals a notion of the sanctity of the temple that recalls Muslim barakah (“holiness”) more than any traditional Jain attitude. The most obvious Islamic influence is in the repudiation of image worship by the Shvetambara Lonkasaha sect.

Jain influence at the Mughal court of Akbar is a bright chapter in Jain history. Akbar honoured Hiravijaya Suri, then the leader of the Shvetambara Tapa Gaccha. His disciples and other monks gained the respect of the Mughal emperors Jahāngīr and Shah Jahān and even the Muslim chauvinist Aurangzeb. Moreover, Akbar prohibited animal slaughter near important Jain sites during the Paryushana festival. Jahāngīr also issued decrees for the protection of Shatrunjaya, and Aurangzeb recognized Jain proprietary rights over Mount Shatrunjaya. Mughal painting, influential in different schools of Indian painting, also influenced Jain miniature painting. In this way these ancient religions demonstrated respect for other traditions, which is one of the great strengths of Indian civilization.

Umakant Premanand Shah G. Ralph Strohl Paul Dundas