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LIFE OF SHRI PARSHWANATHSWAMI
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Bhagavan
Parshvanath was born about 380 years before the Nirvana of Bhagavan
Mahavir or in the 10th century B.C. |
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Past-Incamation |
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Like
other Tirthankars, important events of earlier incarnations of the being
that became Bhagavan Parshvanath are available in Jain scriptures.
Study of these incidents reveals that amnesty and compassion
played a major part in his life and progress toward purity of soul.
In every incarnation his rival, Kamath, continued to torture him
and he continued to forgive and forget. |
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Kamath and Marubhuti |
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The
soul that was to be Bhagavan Parshvanath was inspired to take the
direction of purity in its birth as Marubhuti.
He was born to the wife of Purohit Vishvabhuti living in Potanpur
City. His elder brother was
Kamath. As Kamath was
cruel, conceited, and a debauch, in spite of being the elder son it was
Marubhuti who succeeded his father on the post of Rajpurohit (the
director of ritual ceremonies of the king and state).
Attracted toward the beautiful wife of Marubhuti, Vasundhara,
Kamath seduced her. When
Kamath's wife came to know about the affair, she tried to dissuade him
in vain and told Marubhuti about it.
Marubhuti made a secret inquiry and conveyed every thing in
detail to the king. The
king exiled Kamath. He
became a mendicant and started doing rigorous penance. After sometime Marubhuti felt that it was because of his report that Kamath was insulted and thrown out of the state; as such he should go and beg forgiveness from his elder brother. Marubhuti went into the jungle near Kamath and bowed before him seeking his pardon. Instead of getting pacified, Kamath was over powered by the desire of vengeance. He picked up a large stone and hit Marubhuti on the head. Marubhuti died on the spot. |
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The King Elephant |
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The soul of Marubhuti was reborn as an elephant in the forests of Vindhyachal. It became the leader of the herd. One day when an ascetic was standing in meditation in the Vindhyachal area, the king elephant came near him. The memory of its past life precipitated and it became a follower of the ascetic and turned mellow and detached. One day the elephant rushed into and stationed itself in the middle of a pond in order to save him from a forest fire. The being that was Kamath had taken birth as a serpent of the Kurkut species. When it saw the elephant, the serpent recognized it as its enemy from the earlier birth. The serpent landed on the head of the elephant and stung it. The elephant equanimously tolerated the pain and died peacefully. |
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Suyambhu Chakravarti |
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In
his third birth the being that was Marubhuti reincarnated as a god in
the Sahasrar dimension. From
there it descended and was born as prince Kiranveg in Mahavideh area.
He furthered his progress towards purity by becoming an ascetic
and was killed once again by the Kamath, now born as a snake.
His next birth was as a god in the Achyut Kalpa dimension.
From there he came to Mahavideh area as king Vajranabh.
Kamath was born as a Bhil aborigin who shot Vajranabh, who had
become an ascetic now, with an arrow.
Reincarnating in the Madhyam Graiveyak dimension of gods, the
being that was to be Parshvanath enjoyed the fruits of his pious Karma. In
his eighth birth this being was born in the royal family of Puranpur in
the Mahavideh area. After
ascending the throne Suvarnbahu conquered six continents and became a
Chakravarti. In later part
of his life he became an ascetic and did purest of meditations to earn
Tirthankar-nam-and-gotra-karma. During
this birth also, its old enemy Kamath who was born as a fierce lion
killed this being. From
here this being went to the Pranat dimension of gods. Descending
from the Pranat dimension of gods, the being that was Marubhuti came
into the womb of Vama Devi, wife of king Ashvasen of Varanasi. On the tenth day of the dark half of the month of Paush Vama
Devi gave birth to a son. At
the time of his naming ceremony king Ashvasen announced that during her
pregnancy Vama Devi one night saw a snake slithering on the bed near his
flank. She woke him up and
saved him from the impending danger.
As such, he was naming the new born as Parshva (flank). Prince
Parshva was very handsome and intelligent.
His fame reached Kushasthalpur and princess Prabhavati, daughter
of king Prasenjit, determined to become his wife.
Before a proposal for marriage could be sent the king of Kalinga
lay a seize of Kushasthalpur and sought the hand of Prabhavati in
marriage. King Prasenjit,
aware of the might of Yavanraj sent a massager to Varanasi for help.
King Ashvasen got irritated at the misconduct of Yavanraj and
ordered his army to march. Prince
Parshva requested his father to let him command the army in this battle.
Ashvasen was well aware of the ability and prowess of prince
Parshwa; he accepted Parshva's proposal without any hesitation. Before
the prince started for the battlefield the king of gods sent a divine
and airworthy chariot for Parshva.
After reaching the battle field and prior to giving the orders to
attack, Parshva sent to message to Yavanraj that now Prasenjit was under
the protection of King Ashvasen, and as such he should break his seize
of Kushasthalpur or face the great army of Varanasi and divine powers of
Parshva. Although the youthful Yavanraj and some of his younger
ministers were provoked, a senior minister informed him that the king of
gods himself sided Parshva. He
not only had divine powers but also the flying chariot of Indra.
To fight Parshva was to embrace certain defeat.
Yavanraj accepted the advice of the senior minister and
surrendered before prince Parshva without a fight.
He offered rich gifts to Parshva and became a friend of Prasenjit. Victorious
Parshva Kumar returned to Varanasi.
King Prasenjit also came to Varanasi with his daughter Prabhavati
and requested king Ashvasen to marry Parshva Kumar with Prabhavati.
Parshva was adverse tot he bonds of marriage.
However, his parents persuaded him and he could not hurt their
feelings. He was married to Prabhavati but led a simple and detached
life. One-day
prince Parshva was enjoying a view of the town from the balcony of his
palace. When he saw groups
of men and women, carrying items for worship, passing by, he asked out
of curiosity if it was some day of religious ceremonies. His attendants informed him that some mendicant named Kamath
is doing a harsh penance named Panchagni Tap (Five-fire penance).
The citizens are going to pay homage to him with all these
presents. Prince Parshva
also proceeded to witness this strange scene.
As he was endowed with three levels of knowledge since birth,
Parshva perceived every thing worth knowing about this person at once.
This was the same being that had been nurturing an intense
feeling of vengeance for him for many births.
After completing his age in the hell he was born in a poor
family. Driven by hunger
and poverty he had become a mendicant and was influencing the ignorant
masses with his harsh but ill-conceived penance. When
prince Parshva came near the mendicant he saw that some logs of wood
were burning all around the mendicant.
Inside one of the logs was a pair of serpents, writhing in pain
due to the intense heat of the burning flames.
Moved by a feeling of compassion the prince said to the
mendicant, "Burning a five sensed being in fire, what sort of self
improvement do you strive for?"
The mendicant replied angrily, "Prince!
You are a child; go and enjoy your princely games.
It is mendicants like me who know about religion not you. How can you claim that some being is burning in the fire
around me?" All
the efforts to persuade him that a pair of serpents was burning in the
fire went in vain. Parshva
then ordered his attendants to draw the specific log aside and split it.
As soon as the attendants did that, a pair of serpents, partially
scorched, fell on the ground writhing in pain.
Realizing that they were about to die, prince Parshva said to
them that they should not be annoyed with the ignorant mendicant and
should remain equanimous during the last moments of their lives.
He also recited the Namokar Mantra.
As a result of equanimous thoughts and hearing the Namokar
Mantra, after death the pair was born as the king and queen of the gods
of the Nag Kumar clan (Dharanendra and Padmavati). The
mendicant became angry and kept on adding more fuel to the fire of
vengeance. After death he
reincarnated as the evil god Meghmali. This
incident inspired Parshva Kumar to step on the right path and show the
path to the masses misled by such ignorant hypocrites.
While he was contemplating this, he one day went to a garden and
changed to see some forces about the incidents of life of Bhagavan
Arishtanemi. These vivid
paintings pushed him to the decision of becoming an ascetic.
He sought permission of his father and started the yearlong
charity. On the eleventh
day of the dark half of the month of Paush he became an ascetic under an
Ashok tree. One
day Parshva-muni was standing in meditation in Saushamb jungle.
God Dharanendra arrived there to pay homage.
When he saw scorching sunrays falling on the meditating ascetic,
he covered Parshva-muni with a canopy of snake hoods.
It is said that this area later became famous as Ahichhatra. One
day Parshva-muni was standing in meditation under a banyan tree in an
Ashram outside a village. The
evil god Meghmali, the Kamath of earlier birth, through his evil powers
became aware of this. Driven
by the animosity of earlier births, Meghmali arrived at this pot where
Parshva-muni was standing in meditation.
He took the form of a ghost and tried to disturb Parshva-muni
with his extremely loud and fearsome laughter.
When Parshva-muni remained unmoved, Meghmali inflicted pain on
him by attacking in the form of various animals.
Parshva-muni tolerated all these afflictions with equanimity.
Meghmali's anger reached its peak. Now
he created dark and dense clouds in the skys.
The sky was completely covered by dark rain-bearing clouds.
With fearsome rumbling and thunder and lightening it started
raining heavily. Meghmali
caused so much rain that it flooded the whole area.
Parshva-muni tolerated the torment of this torrential rain
Parshvanath's nose. He was
still unmoved in his meditation. At
this peak of the affliction, the throne of god Dharanendra trembled.
He came to know about the incident through his divine powers and
reached the spot with Padmavati. One
of these snake-gods created a platform under the feet of Parshva-muni
and the other a canopy of its multiple hoods over his head.
Dharanendra admonished Meghmali whom then fell at the feet of
Parshva-muni and sought his forgiveness. After
eighty-three days of penance and spiritual practices Parshva-muni came
to Ashrampad garden in Varanasi and stood in meditation under a Dhataki
tree. With fast increasing
purity he attained omniscience on the forth day of the dark half of the
month of Chaitra. The gods
created the divine pavilion. Bhagavan
Parshvanath gave his first discourse on the form of religion.
He propagated the four dimensional religion (Ahimsa, truth,
non-stealing and non-possession) for upliftment of the soul. Inspired
by the discourse of Bhagavan Parshvanath, many members of his family
including his father Ashvasen, mother Vama Devi, and wife Prabhavati
took Diksha from him. Many
other princes and scholars including the famous Vedic scholar Shubhdatta
also took Diksha after hearing to his discourse.
Bhagavan Parshvanath established the four pronged religious
organization. He had eight chief disciples with Shubhdatta being the first
and most seniors. Although
no detailed mention is available about the areas visited by Bhagavan
Parshvanath, it can be surmised from various incidents and related
stories that he covered a considerably wide area of the subcontinent.
It appears that he visited Kashi-kaushal (Uttar Pradesh), Nepal,
Bang (Bengal), Kalinga (Orissa), Anga (Magadh), Vidarbh, Konkan,
Saurashtra etc. Among his
followers were Shakya kings, rulers of Magadh (grandfather and father of
king Shrenik) and many others. |
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206 Spinsters |
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In
Jain scriptures there is a mention of an incident of Bhagavan
Parshvanath's period that has not been much talked about.
It is the initiation of 206 old spinsters in his ascetic
organization. At different
times many old spinsters from merchant families from a number of towns
took Diksha into Bhagavan Parshvanath's organization and indulged in
spiritual practices. But
due to some faults in minor codes of discipline and death before doing
required corrective self-analysis they reincarnated as queens of lesser
gods like Chamarendra, Balindra, Vyantarendra etc.
At the time of Bhagavan Mahavir's divine pavilion creation they
came for the Darshan (paying homage in person) and displayed their
divine glamour and grander just like the sun god.
What to talk of the common audience when even Ganadhar Gautam
became spellbound at this heavenly display.
When Gautam asked Bhagavan Mahavir about these goddesses he
explained that these goddesses acquired these unique divine powers as a
result of their practices of penance and discipline when they were the
old-spinster ascetics in Bhagavan Parshvanath's order. All
these references indicate that even during the period of Bhagavan
Mahavir the faith and devotion for Bhagavan Parshvanath was wide spread.
The masses strongly believed that remembering the name of
Bhagavan Parshvanath was the panacea for all trouble as well as the
means of success. This was
the reason that in Bhagavan Mahavir's time Bhagavan Parshvanath was
popularly known as "Purushadaniya". Many
scholars are of the opinion that the Chaturyam Dharm (the four
dimensional religion) was the leading and prominent religion in whole of
India during that period. The
Buddha also got initiated into this school in the early part of his
spiritual life. Later he
evolved and propagated his eight pronged religions out of this only. Bhagavan
Parshvanath was a householder for thirty years and then an ascetic for
seventy years. When he was
100 years old he got liberated on the fifth day of the bright half of
the month of Shravan at Sammetshikhar. It
is believed that the time span between the Nirvana of Bhagavan
Parshvanath and Bhagavan Parshvanath and Bhagavan Mahavir's launching of
his own school was about 250 years.
There is a mention of four prominent leaders of Bhagavan
Parshvanath school- 1.
Ganadhar Shubhdatta (Shumbh) 2.
Arya Haridatta 3.
Acharya Samudra Suri 4.
Arya Keshi Shraman The
last one is believed to have existed between 166 to 250 years after the
Nirvana of Bhagavan Parshvanath. Arya
Keshi Shraman was a forceful Acharya.
The staunch non-believer king Pradeshi became a highly devoted
Jain Shravak under his influence only there were nine groups of five
hundred ascetics each, in the large religious organization headed by
Keshi-muni. These groups worked in far fling areas like Tailang (Andhra),
Konkan and Maharashtra. He
himself wandered in the Magadh area with one thousand ascetics. |