Category Archives: Jain Philosophy

Vegan Thanksgiving Prayer

This is a prayer that has been used at Vegan Thanksgiving Events.  I hope it is meaningful to you on this day.

Thanksgiving Prayer

Tonight we give thanks for the many lives that have contributed to our lives. We also ask for forgiveness from the living beings that we have harmed, intentionally and unintentionally in our food and in other activities of our life.

We give thanks for this vegan meal and the people who have labored to harvest, process, transport and prepare this meal for us. We thank all of our teachers in ancient and modern times who have taught us lessons beneficial for life.

We are grateful for our health and the opportunity to eat with others on this day. We aspire, with compassionate hearts, to use the energy that we gain from this meal and our friends to contribute to the peace and happiness of all living beings.

We hope that all the people of the world will avoid inflicting harm on animals and practice nonviolence and compassion. We express our sorrow at the suffering of all the turkeys and other animals that have died. May peace grow in ourselves and extend to all around us.

True Spiritual Progress: Compassion at the Heart

There is a contemporary of Mahatma Gandhi named Shrimad Rajchandra who is much revered by many modern day Jains. Extraordinarily gifted as a poet and profilic as a writer, he was a young jeweler in Mumbai who was known to be honest in his business and spent every spare moment in spiritual contemplation and communication. In future posts, I will write about some examples of the communication between him and Gandhi, and perhaps tell more of Shrimad Rajchandra’s story.

This morning, I was reading some of his book in preparation for a dharma book club and I came across a noteworthy section that was translated from original Gujarati. The book is called Atma Siddhi, The Self Realization. The 1923 translation and addition of comentaries was performed by a lawyer, Rai Bahadur Jaini.

 This book takes us through the logical points that 1. Soul-Knowledge is Necessary for Happiness 2. Self Knowledge is Rare and 3. Mere Ritual and Knowledge are both Inadequate and Illusory.  And then this paragraph follows:

“I feel compassion that some are stuck in (mere) lifeless ritual (forms only), others in barren knowledge, believing (it) to be the path of liberation.” Continue reading

Vegan for Das Laxan

For the Digambar Jain festival of Das Laxan, my parents have been going to the temple and listening to lectures on the qualities of forgiveness, humility, straighforwardness, contentment, truth, self-restraint, penance, renunciation, non-attachment and brahmacharya.  How wonderful, that in keeping with the spirit of Das Laxan, my dad has gone vegan! How wonderful to allow the cows some peace of mind and freedom from artifical insemination and how wonderful that he practiced self-restraint, straightforwardness, non-attachment,  and renunciation in keeping away from some of the foods he habitually eats. He had already been avoiding many fatty dairy containing foods such as butter, ghee and buttermilk, and the traditional Gujarati food that my parents enjoy at home is largely vegan. Continue reading

Fasting and veganism

How can people fast for weeks and months without food, and only water?  Jains have a tradition of fasting, from the one day fast that I observed yesterday, to the 8 day fasts that many are doing during paryushan, to the 32 day fast that one high-powered business person is doing in Boston, to the many months that some extraordinary sadhus and sadvhis and exceptional laypersons fast. Since modern medicine doesn’t have an answer to how people can fast for long periods of time,  we are left to conclude that the body must have some adaptive processes of which we are not aware.  Still, at some point, we all need to eat. If we can learn, from fasts or otherwise, to control our cravings and get away from a deficiency mentality, it may be easier to transform our usual diet, avoid dairy productsand eggs, and go vegan to more fully realize our ideal of ahimsa.

Vegan Kickstart for Paryushan

Today is the first day of an important Jain observance called paryushan.  Sometimes called a festival, I think it resembles a period of retreat more than a party,  with religious discourses, rituals of self-reflection and repentence and various types of fasting, including upvas, eating nothing, eating only once (ayambil) but without the spices, oils and sweets that make food so addictive, and eating once (ekasanu) or twice (besanu), with some restrictions but  including the spices,oils and sweets. Some people give up something that they love during this period. The objective of these observances is to come back to the self, the essential spiritual core  underneath our distracted, consumptive, busy outer-directed lives.  It is a wonderful period of retreat when we enter it with our full intention and with mindfulness ( a word used often by Buddhists, but one that Jains might well appreciate in practice as well).  If you are moved by all the violence that goes on in the world to give us milk products, (as well as the eggs and meat that we traditionally avoid), try going vegan for Paryushan. You will have given the cows your gift of compassion and lessened their suffering for this time. In the process, you might discover other ways to eat.  Coincidentally, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine also has a 21 day Vegan Kickstart program that starts Sept 6, with lots of resources including nutrition webcasts, Indian vegan recipes, conference calls with doctors, and more. Check it out here.

Two  of my cousins ate only one vegan meal a day for Paryushan. Hurrah for them and their vegan ekasanus!

If you have questions, please post them here.

Jivdaya Committee Series: Jain view on Ahimsa

Views on Philosophy

What is the Jain definition of the term “Ahimsa?”

Of course, ‘Ahimsa’ means non-harming to all living beings.  But for Jainism, Ahimsa is as wide as the whole universe.  All living beings are protected under the broad definition of Ahimsa.  May it be a drop of water, grass blade, insects, birds, all of sea life, animals, human beings, or any beings in between, they all are protected under the Jain principle of ‘Ahimsa’.  The wide definition goes far beyond.  ‘Ahimsa’ does not stop at physical actions, it extends to thought and speech, to complete the whole ‘AHIMSA’.

Chandubhai Morbia

The word ‘Ahimsa’ means a harmless way of living, with emphasis on minimizing any possible harm.  Take an example from the Jain scriptures.  Suppose you are hungry, and you see a tree full of oranges.  Hopefully, you would not consider cutting the whole tree for just a few oranges.  That would be a gross himsa.  But what if you cut only a branch from which you are going to eat the fruits?  Naturally, this is better.  However, wouldn’t it be preferable to pluck only the oranges, and leave the branch alone?  But, it’s still better to look on the ground, and pick the oranges which had already ripened, and fallen there.  That is the way of living that Jainism teaches us.  That is ‘Ahimsa’, harmlessness.

Narendra Sheth

Just like a human, all living beings whether animals, fish, birds, bugs or plants, etc., have vitality power in variable degrees.  This vitality is called Pran in Jain Philosophy.  There are altogether ten Prans.  One-sensed living beings have four vitalities while five-sensed living beings like humans, animals, birds, and fish have all ten vitalities.  These vitalities are:

1) Sparsh‑Indriya Pran: The ability to feel the sensation of touch

2) Ras‑Indriya Pran: The ability to taste

3) Ghran‑Indriya Pran: The ability to smell

4) Chakshu‑Indriya Pran: The ability to see

5) Shravan‑Indriya Pran: The ability to hear

6) Mano‑bal Pran: The ability to think

7) Vachan‑bal Pran: The ability to speak

8) Kaya‑bal Pran: The ability to move the body

9) Shwasoshwas Pran: The ability to inhale and exhale

10) Ayushya Pran: The ability to live

If, at anytime, and for any reason, we hurt any of these vitality either in physical, verbal or mental manner, it is called Pranatipat or Himsa.  Opposite of himsa is Ahimsa.  Therefore Ahimsa means not to hurt any vitality even in the slightest form of any living creature no matter how trivial that living beings may seem.  Jainism goes one step further in defining Ahimsa because it not only includes restraining from hurting anyone by our direct actions, but it also includes that we shall not ask or encourage anyone else (directly or indirectly) to carry out any injurious activity.  Therefore, to observe Ahimsa, our individual responsibilities are much more higher and the scope is much more broad than others.  The first and foremost vow in Jainism is the vow of Ahimsa — non‑hurting or nonviolence.

Prem Gada