Book Title: Tulsi Prajna 2002 04
Author(s): Shanta Jain, Jagatram Bhattacharya
Publisher: Jain Vishva Bharati

View full book text
Previous | Next

Page 103
________________ The person not indulging in acts of violence is capable of comprehending and abandoning them. Bhāsyam Sūtras 31, 32 A person, ignorant of the reality of carth-bodied beings and their pain, indulges in injuring them. Such person cannot abandon the habit of indulging in such violence. The person who has made the correct estimate knows the soulhood and the pain of the earth-bodied beings and does not indulge in injury to them. He has indeed given up the attitude of violence towards these beings. As ascetic initiated into the discipline of Lord Mahăvira abstains from violence to the earth-bodied beings. His clear comprehension of the souls and their feelings of pain is the chief reason of abstinence 1.33 lam parinnāya mehāvi neva sayam pudhavi-sattham samarambhejja ncvannchim pudhavi-saltham samārambhåvejjă, nevanne pudhavi-sattham samarambhamle samanujänejjā. Comprehending this, an intelligent ascetic should not indulge in violence to earth-bodied beings, nor should he instigale others to do so, nor should he approve of such violence committed by others. Bhaoya Sutra 33 There may be many aspects of an act of commission. According to the Jaina philosophers, there are three such aspects: to do oneself, to get done by others and to approve of such acts. Here the one is enjoined to desist from killing earth-bodied beings in these three ways. 1.34 jassete pudhavi-kamma-samārambhă parinnālā bhavamti, se hu muni parinnäla-kamme. -- tti bemi. The ascetic who comprehends and abandons these acts of violence to the earth-bodied beings is indeed an ascetic who has fully comprehended and abandoned all acts of violence. Bhajyam Sutra 34 The scriptural dictum 'knowledge first and then practice' is followed in the case of violence to earth-bodied beings, which is to be understood by comprehension-qua-knowledge and given up by comprehension-quaabandonment. The comprehension thus has two aspects, namely, as cause and as effect. Comprehension as cause is the knowledge and comprehension as effect is the abandonment. The monk who knows the act of violence to the earth-bodied beings and abandons such violence is comprehender of the act of violence." 100 - Tüt Y511 310 116-117 Jain Education International For Private & Personal Use Only www.jainelibrary.org

Loading...

Page Navigation
1 ... 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122