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$6 MILLION JAIN
CENTER OPENS IN NEW YORK
When the Jain community in New York was
planning to move from Queens to Lake Success on Long Island to build a bigger
temple to accommodate an increasing number of worshippers, a devotee came
forward with a donation of $2 million. His only condition was that the temple
remained on
The wish of the
anonymous donor as well as the more than 800 families who are members of the
only Jain temple in
The sects such as
digamabaras and shwetambaras, believe in the same core principles, but with
certain differences in practice. In the Elmhurst temple, each sect will have
facilities to conduct worship, the way its members wants. The Adinath temple is
in Digambar tradition. The Dhyan Mandir (meditation hall) is in Shrimad
Rajchandra tradition. And the Mahavir swami temple is in swetambar
tradition. The four-floor, 66-foot high temple is breath-takingly
beautiful as it is constructed in white marble.
It was under the
guidance of spiritual leaders, Gurudev Shri Chitrabanuji and Gurudev Shri
Sushilkumarji that the Jain community in New York began to unite and come
together for peace and prayer, in late 1970's. In 1981, a two-family home was
purchased and converted into a temple at the lower level and upper apartment
housed the caretaker and priests. With a handful of families as its members in
the early years, the 'Jain Center of New York' has grown tremendously over the
years.
A place of prayer that
was once operated as a 'house temple' out of Ithaca Street, and held religious
school, lectures, and puja in a 30 foot by 40 foot living room has now been
morphed with the help of a dream, and the overwhelming support of the Jain
community in New York.
The one room shrine has
been transformed into an architectural marvel. Apart from the temple, the
complex has a