Title: Jainism%20For%20Future%20generations
1Jainism For Future generations
JAINA Convention, Cincinnati 2003
- Yashwant K. Malaiya
- ymalaiya_at_yahoo.com
2Dharma for Next Generations
- Next one Generation 20 years
- Objective next two centuries 8-10 generations
(typical genealogical chart) - We must consider
- our recent past
- similar cases
- develop a plan for action
- Let us take a long-term critical view.
3Jainism for Next Generations
- Why did Jains survive Buddhists did not.
- Role of Jain Neighborhoods
- Jain population trends
- Case studies
- Patan Jains, Agrawals, Gahois
- Parsis, Jews, Swaminarayans
- Jainism mixed marriages
- Historical Role of Acharyas, Bhattarakas,
Pandits - Prabhavana by preaching osmosis
- Three age groups 0-12, 13-18, 19-25
- Inherent strengths of Jainism
- Plan of action
4Buddhism was well establied
- Indian Buddhists had
- Grandest temples
- Famous universities
- Largest libraries
- Large endowments (villages lands)
- Scholarly monks (Akalanka-Nikalanka story etc)
- They didnt have householder communities.
5Why are WE Jain?
- Buddhism, a popular and powerful force,
disappeared from India. Why did Jainism survive,
in spite of great odds against? - We are Jain because we have lived in Jain
neighborhoods. - Neighborhood community where being a Jain is
"normal", not "odd". - The Jain neighborhoods are disappearing.
6Neighborhood hierarchical model
- A simplified hierarchical model
- Town neighborhoods watch people with shravak
vratas - Jnati or nyat traditional 84 endogamous group
(e.g. Srimal, Agrawal, Pancham, Parwar etc) - Regional nyat clusters (e.g. Nav-nat, 12 1/2
nyat etc) mutual social interaction - Shravak Sangh Network of nyats linked by routes
of monks traders
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884 Shravak Nyats
9Jain Population Trends
- 2 children per couple results in negative
population growth.
10Case Shravakas of Patan
- 746 CE Vanraj settles Anhilvad (Patan), some
shravakas arrive from Shrimal - 1143-75 Kumarpal rules, guided by Hemachandra
Suri, famine at Srimal cause people to move to
Patan. - 1300-15 Old Patan destroyed, new city built,
Jains still flourish. - 1763-66 Marathas take and make Patan capital
- Late 18th/early 19th cent Many Patan Jains move
to Bombay. - Jain population 1901 15, 1971 5.6
- Neighborhoods Shrimal, Patan, Bombay
11Case The Agrawals
- Largest merchant community of India (4 million)
- Legend Raja Agrasen of Agroha gave up vedic
sacrifices accepted Ahimsa. - Agrawal Jain authors 13th century onwards
- Agrawal Jain inscriptions
- Have not seen mentions of non-Jain Agrawals in
ancient times. - texts mention half of them were Jain 200-300
years ago. - about 10 Jain today.
12Case Grahpatis or Gahois
- They were the greatest builders of Jain temples
in Bundelkhand (central India) during Chandella
kings (10-13th century) - Lord Shatinath of Ahar
- All the Jain temples of Khajuraho
- Sahasrakuta temple of Banpur etc.
- Only a few brahmanist (1 of 25 inscriptions)
- Today all vaishnav, (even with name Saraogi)
- A small group were accepted by Taranpanthi Jains.
Maithilisharan Gupt
13Case Grahpatis or Gahois
14Case history The Parsis
- Among most successful in India JTD Tata etc.
- Fled to India to avoid persecution
- Flourished in India, helped their brethren in
Iran to survive - Populations peaked in 1960 at 100,000 about
50,000 now. Reasons - marry late when they are settled in life
- some don't marry
- many marry outside
- Great controversy about outside marriages
- Dastoors oppose, reformists support
bhojakas
15Case Jewish Faith
- Wealthy minority in Europe, Middle East, USA.
Have their own country Israel. National Jewish
Population surveys - Childrens Jewish identification
- Mother Father Jewish 90
- Mother Jewish, not father 40
- Mother not, father Jewish 16
- Raising of children of mixed marriage
- 28 as Jewish, 41 non-Jewish, 31 no religion
- Mixed marriages of children of mixed marriages
about 90 - Jewish identity of mixed marriage grandchildren
about 0 - Jewish conclusion encourage conversion to
Judaism.
16Case Swaminarayan Faith
- Pushtimarg founded by Vallabhacharya.
- Sahajananda Swami founded Swaminarayan sect as
Pustimargi Vaishnav Sampraday. - Bochasan (BAPS) groups breaks away with
non-hereditary, non-brahmin leadership. - BAPS reaches Gujaratis worldwide in past few
decades. - Emerging as most visible Hindu sect.
17Jainism and Mixed Marriages
- Some communities were once almost entirely Jain,
even when they become brahmanical, their personal
values were Jain-like. - Intermarriage was sometimes permitted within a
few nyats (Agrawal, Shrimal etc) - girls got married at a very early age
- they absorbed, learned and followed husband's
religion (Ex. Br. Pandita Chandabai of Arrah) - statistically drifted into Brahmanism
- There are people with names "Sanghavi", "Saraogi"
even "Jain" who are no longer Jain.
18Jainism and Mixed Marriages
- Things are different today
- Girls are fully intellectually mature when the
are married. - Wife has great influence over the religious
choice for children. - Children of mixed marriage will consider non-Jain
matches equally. - Brahmanical choices are 80/0.4 200 times.
- Social circle will have an impact
19Acharyas, Bhattarakas, Pandits
- Founder
- Ratnaprabh Suri Osia, Raj. Oswal
- Jinasena Acharya Khandela Raj. Khandelwal
- Lohacharya Agroha, Haryana Agrawal
- ?Untouchables of Udaypur
- Acharya Vijay Indra Dinna SuriTribals of
Vadodara/Panchamahals
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21Acharyas, Bhattarakas, Yatis
- Preserver
- Parwar Bhattarakas of Chanderi MP
- Pancham Bhattarka Lakshmisen of Kolhapur
- Nainar Bhattarak Lakshmisen of Melsittamur, TN
- Bundelkhand Pandit Mohanlal Kavyatirth, compiler
of Jain text books - Organizer
- USA Acharya Sushil Kumar Guru Chitrabanu
- Oswal Acharyas of Upakesha other Gachchas
22Prabhavana by Preaching Osmosis
- Preaching formal lectures and leading
- Osmosis slow, effortless absorption
- Lectures (pravachan)
- essential part of being a Sharavak ("one who
listens") - powerful force that can trigger transitions
- limitation
- impacts mostly those who are receptive
- impact may be temporary
- vitarag-oriented pustimargis have advantage
23Prabhavana by Osmosis
- Osmosis
- learn without effort
- learned through parents' actions (not preaching)
- reinforced through social interactions
- food (roti)
- marriage (beti)
- leisure (hukka-pani)
- spiritual activities (sat-sang)
- forms very strong bonds
24Dharma for Formative age (1-12 age of innocence)
- This is when they form their personality value
system, tastes - They accept parental wisdom without questioning
- is it teaching "brain-washing"?
- if you don't teach values, they will learn from
elsewhere - TV, friends, school teachers
- McDonald plan Make Japanese kids acquire taste
of their food, by age 12, they will be hooked. - What should parents do?
25Dharma for Exploration Age (13-18 age of change)
- They discover the rest of the world. Their bodies
are changing. - they seek same-age companionship (skt vayasya
same age, friend) - they start accepting peer values.
- they are still learning to learn.
- What should the parents and the community do?
- Need for a virtual Jain neighborhood
Prapte tu shodashe varshe
26Dharma for beginning maturity (19-25)
- Starting working to acquire a living
wife/husband. - College friendships lasts a lifetime
- Most memorable period of life
- They seek attention of potential suitors
- They are very open to religious beliefs of
someone they will fall in love with - "Shahide-mohabbat" Buta Singh became Muslim.
- Many Hindu girls in India and UK become Muslim.
- What can community do?
- Provide opportunity to meet Jain suitors
Recent movie ghadar
27Jainism Inherent Strengths
- Jain principles are very simple, intuitive,
time-invariant, and appealing. - Karma siddhant You get what you do.
- Compassion
- Acceptance of multiple views
- Of great antiquity, but capable of renewal.
28Plan of Action
- Careful study of long-term trends
- Learn from others
- Christian, Jewish and BAPS organizations.
- They have studied, experimented and perfected
approaches. - Reach Jains at the fringes.
- Reach others interested.