JAINA CODE OF CONDUCT
FOR HOUSEHOLDERS |
DR.B.K.KHADABADI |
Introduction
Religion is as old as humanity and it
has played a dominant role along the course of the history of human life
and thought. It has, in its primitive days, tried to explain to man some
of the mysteries of the Universe,1 to reconcile him with the
insecurity of his future, to unfold and interpret the relationship between
his body and soul, and to guide him constantly in the redress of misery
and suffering, and in the search for real happiness. It has also tried to
answer outstanding questions regarding the relation of man and the
Universe; man and his many sided duties, his goal of life, and a
compatible path leading to the same, etc. Great seers and sages, in
different periods and in different parts of the world, have answered, in
their own ways, these and such other questions; and their words, in due
course of time, have saturated as the doctrines and creeds of their
respective religions. Ethical precepts, conceived and laid down for the
attainment of man's goal of life, though varying in number, nature and
vigor, they happen to be more or less the common constituent factors of
almost all the religions of the world. However, some religions differ as
regards the existence of God, his attributes and his reign or control over
the Universe, and its contents at large.
Jainism, the real contribution of which
to human thought is being recognized, since the time of its being brought,
within the purview of western critical scholarship and research (i.e, from
about the latter part of the 19th century), is a significant religion,
among those born and cradled in India (and outside too), for its
antiquity, as well as, its lofty philosophical and ethical doctrines,
though it has today just 3.9 million followers, numerically, forming a
very small segment of the total Indian population, i.e., mere 0.48 per
cent of it and, thus, ranking the 6th and the last religious group after
the Hindus, the Muslims, the Christians, the Sikhs and the Buddhists.2
According to Jain tradition, twenty-four
Tirthankaras (Ford-makers i. e., Layers of Path leading to Perfection) or
Jinas (Winners of Victory over the senses) preached the Sacred Law in the
present Cycle of Time. Rsabha was the first to reveal the Ahimsa - dharma
and higher values of life, to bring a good order in the society, and to
lay an ideal path to perfection. Mahavira was the last to elucidate and
promulgate the Law in historical times; and it is known as Jina-dharma,
Jinism in its correct form, but called, and used as Jainism in practice.
In the early days of Jainological Studies, different views, some based on
inadequate material, were held on some part of the history and antiquity
of Jainism. But on the strength of modern researches, we can say now that
Jainism is not an off-shoot of the Vedic line of thought, as developed in
the reformist school of the later Upanisadic tradition, is far older than
Buddhism, and had its origin in the Pre-Aryan period of primitive currents
of religious and metaphysical speculation, as prevailing in the early
Sramanic culture of North East India. The stream, of which, could be
traced back to the days of the Indus Civilization3 itself. Dr.
Jyoti Prasad Jain has recently put forth his thesis, that Jainism is the
oldest living religion.4
Coming to the philosophical side of
Jainism, the doctrine of Anekantavada (non-absolutism), being upheld by
the peculiar dialectical method of Syadvada as supplemented by Nayavada,5
the conception of Reality as divided into six fundamental substances
(dravyas),6 and the theory of karma are the unique aspects of
Jaina philosophy with their comprehensive nature and realistic approach,
etc.7 It makes the individual self-reliant who is the architect
of his own fortune or misfortune. There is no place here for the priestly
agency or divine intervention for seeking one's mundane welfare or final
salvation. God as creator, and controller of the Universe, and distributor
of favors, and punishments for worldly beings is not admitted here. At
this context, Dr. G. C. Pande's observations are worth noting: "Sramanic
atheism is not a variety of irreligion but of religion. It faces the evil
and suffering of life squarely, and attributes it to human failing rather
than to the mysterious design of an unknown being. It stresses the
inexorableness of the moral law. No prayers and worship are of any avail
against the force of karman. It emphasises self-reliance for the quest of
salvation. Man needs to improve himself by a patient training of the will,
and the purification of the fee1ings. Such purification leads to an inward
illumination, of which the power is innate in the Soul or mind. This is
quite different from the Vedic view where illumination comes from outside,
either from the eternally revealed word or from the grace of God."8
Jaina ethical doctrines, too are of
immense significance. Hence, some scholars and thinkers have envisaged
Jainism as Ethical Realism.9 Jaina ethics, having its root in
metaphysics, permeated with practical features and having nirvana or moksa
(emancipation or liberation) as its goal, trains one to attain it, through
the systematized cultivation and assimilation morality, which are known as
rules of conduct. All this amounts to the Right Conduct (Samyak-caritra),
which is based on the Right Belief (Samyag-drsti) in, and the Right
Knowledge (Samyag-jnana) of the Seven Principles (tattvas), leading to
liberation (nirvana or moksa). The corpus of rules of Right Conduct are
also termed as Ethical Discipline (acara-dharma) prescribed for the
Community (Jaina-sangha) as a whole, which is a four fold social
organization consisting of sadhu (monk), sadhvi (nun), sravaka (layman)
and sravaki (layman) ad sravaki (laywoman). It has two-fold objective:
-
It accomplishes spiritual purification
and emancipation by liberating the soul from the clutches of karma.
-
It trains the members of the community
to cultivate and acquire an attitude of equality towards all the living
beings, and also to nourish sanctity for each individual and his
possessions. Such ethical discipline is properly graded to suit the
capacity, equipment and environment of every individual.
It is prescribed in two forms: one is
the rigorous and prefect for the monk and the other, naturally, less
rigorous and partial for the householder, who has to shoulder numerous
family and other social responsibilities. The first is known as yatyaca or
mundharma (Ethical Discipline for the Monk), and the second, sravakacara
or Sravaka dharma (Ethical Discipline for the Householder). This two-fold
Ethical Discipline can be said to have been mainly represented by a set of
five vows-rules of conduct (which, of course, are followed by a number of
different secondary vows and virtues of protective and regulative nature).
The five vows are ahimsa (non violence),
satya (truthfulness), asteya (non-stealing), brahmacarya (chastity), and
oparigraha (non-acquisition). When prescribed for the house-holder, these
are called anu-vratas -small or parital vows, and maha-vratas - great
vows, to be rigorously and perfectly practiced by the monk. It is so very
important to note at this juncture, that the conception and organization
of the Jaina-Sangha and the nature and arrangement of these vows in two
forms, with their complementary and consistent characteristics, duly serve
both the socioeconomic needs, and religio-spiritual objects of the
community as a whole. Moreover, the first of these vows viz. ahimsa
(non-violence or non-hurting), is the cardinal vow, widely known as the
doctrine of ahimsa, and holds a pivotal position in the entire super
structure of this Ethical Discipline.12 Not only this, but all
the doctrines of Jainism are said to revolve around this doctrine of
ahimsa. Hence, Jainism is often designated as Ahimsa-dharma.
Moreover, it is now an established fact
that no religion of the world has so far given such primacy for the all
pervading moral precept of ahimsa as has been done by Jainism. It is also
a well-known fact that in the whole of this violence-stricken world today,
the Jaina house-holders (Sravakas and Sravakis) are the only people who
give considerable importance to non-violence or non-hurting (ahimsa), and
bring it into practice in their daily life according to their capacity.
This significant phenomenon, it is heartening to note, is drawing now the
attention of even the western world to the extent that recently, in June
1985, 'Jaina Community' came to be taken as an inter- disciplinary subject
for the ' First Inter-national Seminar on Jainas as a Community which was
sponsored by the Department of Social Anthropology at the reputed
University of Cambridge (U.K.), wherein, a number of Social scientists
from different parts of the world participated. 13 I do not, of
course, mean to profess here that every member of the Jaina community
today is sravaka or sravaki in the true or technical sense of the term.13A
But we can actually see that a good many of them, even to this day,
practice sravakacara (Ethical Discipline or Code of Conduct for the
Householder), which could, naturally, be its latest 20th century phase,
proving thereby its long, unbroken, active and purposeful existence from a
hoary antiquity. So, now, it would be interesting, as well as,
enlightening to have a critical view of sravakacara (the lay doctrine)
with reference to the basic texts, and bring out its significance and its
relevance to the present times.
REFERENCES:
1. Of course, this realm later, came to
belong to Science for the discovery of order in the phenomena of nature.
2. (i) These figures are as per the 1981
census. (ii) It may also be noted, that the Jainas have always constituted
a small religious minority of Indian society throughout their historical
existence. (iii) For further details on this point, vide A Demographic
Analysis on Jains in India, by Shri M. K Jain, Jain Journal, Vol. XXI, No.
2. (iv) Some inquisitive persons think that the figures of the 1981 census
are not correct owing to wrong entries made under the 'Dharma' column. On
the ground of some private survey, they estimate that the number of
followers of Jainism is still, far bigger. Vide Shri Ramanlal Sheth,
Conference Sandesa (Bombay), July 1989.
3. (i) During the infancy of Jaina
studies, some scholars held Jainism to be a later branch of Vedic
religion, others that of Buddhism, etc. Moreover, in the Cambridge
Lectures of Prof. Max Muller, delivered in 1882 and pub1ished in the book
form, entitled India: What can teach us ? (Indian edition, by K. A.
Nilkantha Shastri, Longmans Green Ltd., i934), there is not a single
reference to Jainism, though it was once to Buddhism. (ii) I need not
discuss here all details on this point, but just refer to some of the
important sources: (a) Prof. Hermann Jacobi, Studies in Jainism, pp. 3-4;
(b) Mrs. Gusheva N. R., Jainism, pp. 20 25; (c) Dr. A. N. Upadhye, Preface
to his Pravacanasara (d) Dr. G. C. Pande, sramana Tradition (Its History
and Contribution to Indian Culture), particularly Lecture I, p. 2.
4. In his booklet, Jainism: The Oldest
Living Religion.
5. (i) Dr. D. S. Kothari points out that
the eminent scientist Neils Bohr's Principle of Complementality, which is
a significant and revolutionary concept of modern physics, is
philosophically very close to the concept of Syadvada. For a fund of
valuable details on this subject, in his paper on Modern Physics and
Syadvada, Jeet Abhinandana Grantha, Part 11, pp. 187- 199. (ii) (a) Dr.
Dayanand Bhargav thinks that Syadvada has almost become a synonym for
Jainism. Jaina Ethics, Preface, p. vii. (b) He also, observes that Jaina
ethics is based on the fundamental doctrine of Anekanta--non-absolutism.
Op. Cit., p. 37. He appears to have considered the doctrine of Anekanta as
the doctrine of Ahimsa or the plane of thought.
6. Dr. M. L. Mehta writes; (i) "None of
the realists tried to divide Reality exactly in the same sense as Jainism
did." It may be noted that Jainism resolves the Whole of the Universe of
being (Reality) into two uncreated, everlasting, co-existing, and
independent categories of ajiva and jiva. Ajiva is further divided into
pudgala (matter), dharma (principle of motion), adharma (principle of
rest), akasa (space) and kala (time). (ii) "The conception of dharma and
adharma as the categories of substance is the unique contribution of Jaina
Philosophy." Outlines of Jaina Philosophy, pp. 29 and 34.
7. Op. cit. p. 74.
8. Sramana Tradition, Lecture IlI, p.
73.
9. Justice T. K. Tukol remarks: "Jaina
ethics is the most glorious part of Jainism and it is simply itself."
Compendium of Jainism, p. 195.
10.(i) This is wonderfully epitomized in
a single Sutra (No. 1) by Umasvami in his Tattvarthsutra:
Samyag-darshan-jnana-charitrani moksamargah. (ii) The seven tattvas
(principles) represent an ethical classification of Reality: jiva, ajiva,
asrava, bandh, samvara, nirjara, and moksha – soul, no-soul, inflow (of
karmic matter into the soul), bondage, stoppage, elimination and
liberation.
11. To elucidate this system at some
length, the monk is enjoined to preserve, preach and perpetuate the Sacred
Law and to guide the house-holder in his religious-spiritual pursuit. The
householder, on the other hand, sticking to enjoined ethical code of
conduct, discharges his family and other socio-economic duties and creates
proper conditions for the monk’s rigorous course of life. Moreover, the
householder, whose pious life is a kind of training in the ascetic life,
later, at a certain stage, enters the monk’s life himself.
12. Dr. K. C. Sogani has recently
endeavoured to show that the entire Jaina ethics tends toward the
translation of the Principle of Ahimsa into practice: vide his Preface,
Ethical Doctrines in Jainism, p. XI.
13. (i ) For details in this regard,
vide Dr. V.A. Sangavi's Presidential Address, Jaina Sangha and Society
Section, First All India Conference of Prakrit and Jaina Studies, Varanasi,
Jan. 1988, Souvenir of P.V.R.I. Golden Jubilee and this Conference-
Smarika, Varanasi, 1988. (ii) The Publication of the Volume containing the
deliberations and findings of this Seminar is awaited.
13A. My close observation, and a little
of field work in my home (Belgaum) District, have shown me that even to
this day, there are found, here and there, such pious house-holders who
follow this code of conduct after accepting the twelve fold vow at the
hands of their teachers. One Shri Dattubhai Kothadia, a land
lord-cum-banker, a svetambara sravaka of Nipani, observed even the vow of
acamla-Vardhamana that spread over the span of l9 years. Shri Annasaheb
Khot, an agriculturist, a Diagmbara sravaka of Shamnevadi, never allowed
pesticides to be used in his farms.