________________
Non-Violence : A Way of Life anger, for in anger he may tell a lie. He will abandon greed, for untruth may be spoken out of greed. He will abandon fear, for untruth may be spoken out of fear. He will abandon joking and mocking, for untruth may be spoken for fun."
Think of him who is so much concerned about truth. Neither fire can burn him nor water can drown him who speaks the truth. Jain philosophy has thought comprehensively about truth. To insist that what you speak is the only truth is a sort mental himsa. The generous view that there can be a grain of truth in what the other persons say, is anekantadrishti, for truth is relative. As you have full faith in what is truth from your viewpoint, so the other person has faith in what is truth from his point-of-view. Thus anekantavada equally tolerates and coordinates all viewpoints of life, in a spirit of co-operation. This is the true method involving ceaseless endeavour to search out truth. To regard everything from a relative point-of-view and to see an element of truth in everything - this is anekantavada. Not 'mine is truth' but truth is mine' should be our motto.
Bhagwan Mahavira's life is full of incidents showing that 'truth is mine'. It was he, who sent his chief disciple, the enlightened Gautama, to Shravaka Ananda to ask for his pardon. In those days numerous disputes had arisen. In order to prove his contention to be true, everyone was trying to refute the contentions of others. Bhagwan Mahavira taught us to support rather than refute the views of others.
He said, "Only if you make your unilateral view multilateral, the veil covering your vision will be removed and you will have a clear and unmistakable view of pure truth."
Thus Bhagwan Mahavira tried to quench the fire of
133
Jain Education International
For Private & Personal Use Only
www.jainelibrary.org