Book Title: Some Early Jaina Temples in Western India
Author(s): M A Dhaky
Publisher: Z_Mahavir_Jain_Vidyalay_Suvarna_Mahotsav_Granth_Part_1_012002.pdf and Mahavir_Jain_Vidyalay_Suvarna_

Previous | Next

Page 11
________________ 300 SHRI MAHAVIRA JAINA VIDYALAYA GOLDEN JUBILEE VOLUME territorial or racial outlook. They were concerned more with the Faith and the Following, not so much with the linguistic, regnal and regional criteria. They treated Western India as a single unit. They moved freely from kingdom to kingdom and received the same honour from each quarter, although the political relations among the different Western Indian states were oftener very tense. Much do we owe to these travelling Jaina monks of the mediaeval period who fostered and forged the overall cultural unity of Western India. From the paṭṭāvalis21, prabandhas and epigraphic sources, we obtain detailed information on the various sub-orders, their internal organization and their inter-relationships, and, the pious deeds of the monks themselves. The number of followers initiated to the order of the monks was staggering. Spiritual quest apart, and the zeal for the propagation of the Faith apart, many among them had achieved distinction in the field of learning their literary pursuits have contributed substantially to the enrichment and preservation of the cultural heritage of Western India, and, established a tradition whose impact continues to be felt to this day. The great stalwarts of Jainism were important not only to the Sect; some of them were among the great sons of India, and worthy of her humanitarian, magnanimous civilization. To earlier ones including great Haribhadrasûri of Vidyadhara Kula, we made a brief reference in the foregoing pages. There were Silanka and Siddharși of Nivṛtti Kula, Nannasûri, Pradyumnasûri, Abhayadevasüri, Dhanesvarasuri and Dharmaghosasüri of Rajagachha23, Yaśobhadrasuri of Sanderaka Gaccha, Abhayadevasūri and Vadidevasüri of Vada Gaccha, Jinesvarasūri, Jinavallabha and Jinadattasuri of Kharatara Gachha,25 and, towering above all, Hemacandra. of Purnatalla Gaccha whose names will be remembered in the annals of the religion and culture of India. The Svetämbara Jainism possessed some inherent qualities, special features, which were equally instrumental in its luxuriant flowering as well as survival in Western India. Its philosophy, but also its high ethics, its peaceable disposition, but also its stoicism, its persuasive power, but above all its faculty of accommodation com 21 See Paṭṭāvali Samuccaya by Darśanavijaya. 22 Prabandha works mentioned under foot-note No. 6. 23 See Jaina parampara-no Itihasa by TRIPUTI MAHARAJA. 24 Ibid. 25 Ibid. Jain Education International For Private & Personal Use Only www.jainelibrary.org

Loading...

Page Navigation
1 ... 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58