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## Trivarnika Achar
**177**
There are three types of recipients of Dharma: **Jghanya**, **Madhyama**, and **Uttama**. One should always give donations to those who will bring happiness in the afterlife. || 106 ||
**Characteristics of a Jghanya recipient:**
One who possesses **Samyagdristi**, is virtuous, devoted to the practices of a Shravak, is devoted to their Guru, and is humble is called a **Jghanya** recipient. || 107 ||
**Meaning:** A Shravak who continuously possesses **Samyagdristi** is a **Jghanya** recipient. Being devoted to the practices of a Shravak means following the main principles of a Shravak, such as not eating at night, drinking filtered water, worshipping the Jinas, and abstaining from alcohol, meat, honey, and forbidden foods. || 107 ||
**Characteristics of a Madhyama recipient:**
One who is committed to the vow of **Brahmacharya**, free from worldly attachments, and possesses minimal possessions is called a **Madhyama** recipient. || 108 ||
**Meaning:** Those who have renounced the world from the first to the eleventh **Pratima** are **Madhyama** recipients. || 108 ||
**Characteristics of an Uttama recipient:**
One who possesses the twenty-eight **Mulagunas**, is free from all possessions, is forgiving, is an ocean of good conduct, views friends and enemies with equanimity, is devoted to meditation and study, desires liberation, and is the master of the **Ratnatraya** is known as an **Uttama** recipient. || 109 || 110 ||
**Virtuous individuals should give donations to all three types of recipients, Jghanya, Madhyama, and Uttama. This is for the sake of worldly and otherworldly prosperity, and for the ultimate truth.** || 111 ||