What We Hold Sacred
Ahimsa — Non-harm as the highest law
Jains hold sacred ahimsa—non-violence toward every being. Not only humans but animals, insects, and the smallest life. The Agamas—the teachings of the Tirthankaras, the ford-makers—and the lives of the 24 Jinas who showed the path to liberation. The transcendent secret of Jainism is that every soul is eternal, capable of infinite knowledge and bliss, but bound by karma until it chooses the path of non-harm. Monks and nuns sweep the ground before walking; they filter water; they speak with care—because harm, even unintentional, obscures the soul. Sacred are the five vows: non-violence, truth, non-stealing, chastity, non-possession. What Jains hold most sacred is the possibility of moksha—liberation from the cycle of rebirth—through the purification of the soul. The cosmos is beginningless; the path is ancient. Ahimsa is not merely ethics but the very fabric of reality—the recognition that all life is interconnected, all souls worthy of reverence.