Book Title: Doctrines of Jainism
Author(s): Vallabhsuri Smarak Nidhi
Publisher: Vallabhsuri Smarak Nidhi Godiji Jain Derasar Mumbai

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Page 97
________________ GLORY OF JAINISM Shri CHIMANLAL J. SHAH, M.A. Of all Indological studies, Jainism has been particularly unfortunate in that the little that is done for it stands in vivid contrast with the vast undone. We shall not attempt to relate here, neither shall we venture to sketch in outline, the mighty developments of the dogmas, the institutions and the doctrines of this great religion. Ours will be an attempt to follow the fortunes of a people, stout and sturdy, great and glorious, both in making a history for themselves and for their religion, and to estimate, in however tentative and fragmentary a fashion, the intrinsic worth of their contribution, particularly to the rich and fruitful cultural stream of India. “The history of ancient India,” says a modern historian, “is a history of thirty centuries of human culture and progress. It divides itself into several distinct periods each of which, for a length of several centuries, will compare with the entire history of many a modern people.”I In these "thirty centuries of human culture and progress," the Jaina contribution is a solid synthesis of many-sided developments in art, architecture, religion, morals and the sciences; but the most important achievement of the Jaina thought is its ideal of Ahimsa-nonviolence—towards which, as the Jainas believe, the present world is slowly, though imperceptibly, moving. It was 1. Dutt, Ancient India, p.1. 81 Jain Education International For Private & Personal Use Only www.jainelibrary.org

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