Jain Veganism: Ancient Wisdom, New Opportunities
Abstract
:Veganism is embraced by some, misunderstood by many, and resisted by others in the Jain community. And yet, the primary tenet of Jainism is ahimsa. Bhagwan Mahavir’s message in the Acharanga Sutra is clear, “all breathing, existing, living, sentient, creatures should not be slain, nor treated with violence, nor abused, nor tormented, nor driven away. The central philosophy of Jainism and veganism are not only similar, but also complimentary” (Jain 2016, p. 116)Dr. Sulekh Jain, An Ahimsa Crisis? You Decide
1. Introduction
2. Methodological Considerations
3. Jain Veganism in Transnational Veganism
Transnational veganism is a global practice movement composed of innumerable, often uncoordinated groups and individuals abstaining from animal-derived products. Worldviews and motivations undergirding the practice vary widely, but the effect remains the same—an abstention on the personal level and a boycott on the structural level.
4. Ahiṃsā, Karma, and Liberation in the Jain Tradition
Thoroughly knowing the earth-bodies and water-bodies and fire-bodies and wind-bodies, the lichens, seeds, and sprouts, [Mahavira] comprehended that they are, if narrowly inspected, imbued with life, and avoided to injure them … Mahâvirâ meditated (persevering) in some posture, without the smallest motion; he meditated in mental concentration on (the things) above, below, beside, free from desires…
- (1)
“jīva” or “Self”- (2)
“ajīva” or “not Self”- (3)
“āsrava” or “the inflow of karmic particles to the soul”- (4)
“bandha” or “binding of the karmic particles to the soul”- (5)
“saṃvara” or “stopping the inflow of karmic particles”- (6)
“nirjarā” or “the falling away of the karmic particles”- (7)
“mokṣa” or “liberation from worldly (karmic) bondage”(adapted from Tatia 2011, p. 6)13
- (1)
fasting- (2)
semi-fasting or reduced diet- (3)
voluntarily limiting the variety and the manner of seeking food- (4)
giving up delicacies or a stimulating diet- (5)
lonely habitation- (6)
mortification of the body(adapted from Tatia 2011, p. 232)
Activity being the source of all unhappiness, the attempt is made to put a stop to it. This is done in a most radical way. The monk abstains from food and prepares for death in a position which is as motionless as possible.(p. 18)
5. Contemporary Jain Veganism: Jain Vegans and Vegan Jains
5.1. Jain Vegans (United Kingdom)
5.2. A Note on Dairy and the Abhakṣyas
5.3. Back to Jain Vegans
“Related to Ahimsa, non-vegan diet brings a plethora of bad karma.”—19, UK, Male“Karma and nonviolence are inherently linked.”—30, UK, Female“We have learned that if you are violent you are attracting papa karma. If you are vegan you are far less violent to animals and the environment than a vegetarian and attract far less papa karma. I became vegan for this reason.”—39, UK, Female“One of the best ways to reduce existing karma and control influx of new karma is by living a life that causes least harm to all 6 types of living being (bodies). (Prthvikaya—earth, JalaKaya—water, Agnikaya—fire/electricity, Vayukaya—air, Vanaspatikaya—vegetation, Trasakaya—insects, animals, human).”—44, CH, Male“Being good reduces buildup of bad karma.”—68, UK, Male“Himsa causes asrava and bandha (bondage) of Papa (bad, harmful) karmas. Animal derived food is the cause of many epidemics and also since earth, water and air resources are limited, animal-based diets lead to wars and starvation too.”—84, USA, Male
“Not for me personally. I try to focus on the process rather than the result.”—39, UAE, Female“Not at all. I consider myself to be a secular Jain. The soul, reincarnation, and karma are beautiful concepts and offer great insights into how to think about what to do in certain situations. But I do not believe in them literally, and so do not see a karmic benefit (or avoidance of pap) through going vegan.”—34, UK, Male“No in this case it did not. I can tell you that they are linked according to Jainism.”—49, UK, Female“This wasn’t something I’d considered when I became vegan, and I’m unsure right now.”—49, UK, Male“That is a tough one. I didn’t think about karma until now. But it is my good karma that my husband opened my eyes to the killing and separation of mother and her baby.”—49, UK, Female
5.4. Vegan Jains and Ahimsak Eco-Vegan Committee (United States of America)
… as an expression of ahimsa, supports veganism which we understand to mean not eating, wearing, or using animal products because we object to both animal suffering and animal killing. We do not support animal use that is supposedly “humane” and we do not support the marketing of animal products labeled as “humane”. We support the reduction and elimination of activities such as material and energy overconsumption contributing to harm of all life, global climate change, and destruction of the planet.
You need to bring such foods in the house that are healthy, nutritious, help you think clearly and help you reap the benefits of tapas. Until now, you have heard of non-veg foods, root vegetables but today I want to talk about milk, curd/yogurt and ghee that you buy. I want to tell you about how bad or harmful these milk products are.
Jains in the diaspora… have found that publicly being vegetarian fits into public discourses on diet, environment, and health. These discourses have increasingly advocated a vegan diet that eschews all dairy products. This is not a diet with which Jains in India have been familiar, but as more politically minded Jain vegetarians in the diaspora have adopted a vegan diet, there is a small but growing interest in veganism in India.(p. 264)
6. Conclusion: Revisiting the Jain Diaspora
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Jain Veganism Anonymous Questionnaire
- Do you self-identify as Jain? Y/N
- Were you born Jain, or did you “convert” to Jainism? Y/N
- What is your age?
- What is your gender identity?
- What is your geographical location (city, state/province, and country)?
- What is your nationality?
- Do you self-identify as vegan? Y/N
- How do you define veganism?
- What are your primary motivations for being vegan?
- Does the concept of ahimsa inform your decision to be vegan? If so, how?
- Does the Jain concept of karma relate to your decision to be vegan? If so, how?
- Do you have any other Jain-specific motivations for being vegan not already mentioned?
- Do you have any other non-Jain specific motivations for being vegan not already mentioned?
- Is there anything else you would like us to know about Jain veganism?
1 | On the literal definition of “ahiṃsā” as “non-harming” or “non-violence” rather than “the wish/desire not to harm”, we side with Bodewitz’s (1999) conclusion: “Some scholars have misinterpreted ahiṃsā as ‘the wish not to kill’ or ‘the absence of the wish to kill’, i.e. they take it as the negation of a desiderative derived from the root han ‘to kill’. This is obviously untenable since the real desiderative of that root is jighāṁsati and a corresponding adjective *hiṁsu (or *ahiṁsu) is missing. The verb originally was hinasti rather than hiṁsati. Moreover ahiṁsā in pre-Upaniṣadic texts means ‘security, safeness’, which cannot be connected with the desiderative. For the formation (a)-hiṁs-ā see Wackernagel-Debrunner II, 2 1954: 246; 248” (pp. 17–18). In addition, throughout the article we opt for “non-harming” over “non-violence” as the least confusing translation for ahiṃsā, following Houben and van Kooij (1999). |
2 | While it is true that veganism typically promotes the abstention from all animal products and not only those traceable to factory farms, factory farms overwhelmingly dominate the industry. The EPA defines an Animal Feeding Operation (AFO) as an “agricultural operation where animals are kept and raised in confined situations … a lot or facility (other than an aquatic animal production facility) where the following conditions are met: animals have been, are, or will be stabled or confined and fed or maintained for a total of 45 days or more in any 12-month period, and, crops, vegetation, forage growth, or post-harvest residues are not sustained in the normal growing season over any portion of the lot or facility” (EPA 2020). A “factory farm,” or Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation (CAFO), is an AFO that is “concentrated” owing to the number of animals present and/or existing methods of discharge for manure or wastewater. According to The Sentience Institute, in the United States, for example, factory farms CAFOs (of various sizes) account for over 99% of all farmed animals (excluding sea animals; Reese 2017, note 4). Therefore, regardless of whether or not “humane” animal products exist outside of factory farms and are accessible, some argue that it is simply more prudent and pragmatic to forego animal products altogether. As Peter Singer (2016) suggests: “Going vegan is a simpler choice that sets a clear cut example for others to follow.” (p. 54) |
3 | Dating and authorship questions aside, the composer of the Tirukkuṟaḷ summarizes the dynamic well: “We eat the slain, you say, by us no living creatures die; Who’d kill and sell, I pray, if none came there the flesh to buy?” (Pope 1886, p. 256). As Dundas (2000) also notes, distinct from concerns for the animal killed for their flesh, and for oneself owing to the flaws intrinsic to meat itself as a comestible, there is an additional concern for the microscopic organisms present in flesh who arise and die when it is cooked (p. 102). |
4 | See Tattvārtha Sūtra 6.9 in (Tatia 2011). Also see Ratnakaraṇḍaka Śrāvakācāra 53 and 72 in (Bollée 2010) (“mananāt” is used at 53 and “anumodana” at 72). While not a Jain text, cf. “anumoditā” at Pātañjalayogaśāstra 2.34 in (Bryant 2009). |
5 | “In addition, the fear and pain that an animal suffers during slaughter is believed to be, in some way, contained within its flesh and transferred to the one who consumes it, creating a latent and deleterious effect in the mind.” (Vallely 2004, p. 11) |
6 | The history of alms-taking by Jain ascetics is sorted, for in pre-medieval times Jain monks seem to have accepted and consumed flesh as alms, with no blanket prohibition on meat-eating (Dundas 2000, pp. 100–2). Early Indic śramaṇa traditions most likely shared this general sense of indifference to flesh-containing alms provided by the laity. As is well-known, Buddhist monks have traditionally been permitted to consume meat insofar as the meat satisfies three specific conditions that allegedly remove it from the cycle of hiṃsā. An oft-quoted passage from the Jīvaka Sutta (MN 55, Horner [1957] 2002) depicts a follower of the Buddha asking the latter how he (the Buddha) can consume animal meat knowing that it requires—and thus causes—the killing of animals. The Buddha responds by denying that he has caused or approves of causing harm to animals, for accepting meat as alms is permissible insofar as one has not seen, heard, or has had any other reason to suspect that the meat has come from animal killed purposely for the alms. The “threefold purity” guides some Buddhist monastic practice today but has ceased to be permissible in Jain traditions ever since the early medieval period. |
7 | Two contemporary anecdotal examples of diasporic Jain influences on the practice of transnational veganism include the American Vegan Society (est. 1960) founded by Jay Dinshah (Vegan Society 2014) and Luvin Arms Animal Sanctuary (est. 2015) founded by Shaleen and Shilpi Shah in Colorado (Luvin 2021). Both of these organizations significantly contribute to the practice of transnational veganism due to their far-reaching media influence and social impact, and though they were founded by Jains, they are not by self-definition “Jain” institutions. |
8 | |
9 | |
10 | The Jain tradition espouses the existence of 24 tīrthaṅkaras, or “Fordmakers”, who periodically bring the universal teachings of Jain Dharma to the human realm during the moral downturn (avasarpiṇī) of each cosmic time cycle. Mahāvīra (ca. 499–427 BCE) was the 24th and final of these Fordmakers to come to earth and was likely a contemporary of the Buddha. The historical existence of the remaining 23 tīrthaṅkaras cannot be verified, though most Jains believe in their existence according to the Jain cyclical notion of cosmic time. |
11 | Umāsvāti (also referred to as Umāsvāmi) was a renowned scholar of Jain thought who synthesized much of Jain philosophy in his Tattvārtha-Sūtra in the aphoristic writing style typical of other important classical South Asian religious texts. |
12 | Though the Tattvārtha Sūtra has risen to prominence amongst diasporic Śvetāmbara and Digambara Jains as a source for learning karma theory, Digamabaras have in the past more traditionally drawn from Nemicandra’s Gommaṭasāra Karmakāṇḍa, while Śvetāmbaras have drawn from Devendrasūri’s Karma Grantha. Nemicandra’s text is not easily obtainable in English, while Devendrasūri’s text has not been translated into English. Therefore, both texts are therefore largely unknown to Jains in the diaspora. Those wishing to understand how Jains have traditionally studied karma theory in South Asia are encouraged to read Wiley (2020a) and Wiley (2020b). We thank our anonymous peer-reviewer for pointing out these important details regarding textual authority and availability in the diaspora. |
13 | While jīva is rendered as “soul” in Tatia’s translation, ajīva is rendered as “non-sentient entities”. However, because we are translating terms from the South Asian religious landscape, we find it more appropriate to use a non-Christian term to translate jīva that is more aligned with South Asian soteriological traditions and therefore render jīva as “Self”. Furthermore, it is also important to note that the privative “a” suffix in ajīva indicates that the term is everything that the jīva is not. We therefore render the term ajīva as “not-Self”. |
14 | Though the Tattvārtha Sūtra posits seven tattvas, this is a minority position within the broader Jain philosophical landscape. More typically, nine tattvas are espoused (cf. Uttarādhyana Sūtra, an authoritative Śvetāmbara text), where puṇya and pāpa karmas are added to the current list to distinguish between meritorious (puṇya) and unmeritorious (pāpa) karma. The Tattvārtha Sūtra uses the terms puṇya and pāpa to describe the nature of karma but does not include them as tattvas. |
15 | Mahāvīra is a good example of the non-linear nature of rebirth described here. Indeed, before being born as a human fit for pursuing liberation and teaching Jain Dharma, he lived many previous lives including as a lion, a celestial, and a hell-being. For a fuller description of Mahāvīra’s rebirths in wider context, see Dundas (2002, p. 21). |
16 | We say “often” here to indicate that Jain veganism can be construed as a form of austerity (tapas) aimed at the eradication of karma (nirjarā) in some circumstances, though not all. For example, and as we will see in the next section, when Jains adopt vegan practices as an alternative form of fasting or penance during the festival of Paryushan, they have effectively done so in the spirit of eliminating karma. Nonetheless, Vallely (2004) does assert that “Of course, dietary restrictions are not merely symbolic; they are believed to be among the most effective methods for removing karmic ‘debris’ and for attaining a state of mental equanimity” (p. 1), a claim that would support the suggestion of veganism as a method of karma eradication. Special thanks to Steven Vose and Ana Bajzelj for highlighting the limited scope of conceiving of Jain veganism as a form of austerity during the writing of this article. |
17 | It is interesting to consider JV’s “give up dairy for Paryushan” campaign in light of other religious traditions wherein particular foods are given up or avoided. For example, Catholics give up meat on Lent, and Muslims fast during Ramadan. It is also, however, interesting to consider traditions of abstention in more secular transnational vegan movements such as Meatless Mondays and Veganuary, where in the latter case people around the world are encouraged to give up all animal products for the entire month of January. |
18 | See Gillespie (2018) for a recent description of the many harms intrinsic to dairy production. Some assert that milk production that “does not entail any harm to the animals or land” is possible (Ahimsa Dairy Foundation 2016). However, not only is this claim highly contestable (e.g., owing to the brute realities of confinement, manipulation, breeding, and milking, even manual milking), but it is largely moot since virtually all cows live on significant harm-inducing farms, coupled with the practical fact of the inability of the farms like Rutland Ahimsa Eco-Dairy to scale. |
19 | Note that “vegetarianism prohibits the most notable non-vegan low-carbon foods (fish) but permits non-vegan high-carbon foods (cheese)” (Kortetmäki and Oksanen 2020). However, carbon emissions is only one—albeit prominent—aspect of the environmental effects of industry, animal-centered or not. |
20 | While relatively inconsequential for the present discussion, and deriving from an analysis of Hindu Dharmśāstras, Patrick Olivelle (2002) helpfully distinguishes between foods that are abhakṣya and those that are abhojya. Abhakṣyas or “forbidden foods’’ are intrinsically inappropriate and “completely forbidden; they cannot be eaten except under the most dire circumstances” (p. 346). Abhojyas or “unfit foods” are not intrinsically inappropriate, but “refer[s] to food that is normally permitted but due to some supervening circumstances has become unfit to be eaten” (p. 346). Vallely translates abhakṣyas as “foods not fit to be eaten”, but Olivelle’s suggestion of “forbidden foods” seems more appropriate and facilitates a precise distinction from abhojyas. Mahias’s (1985, p. 95) translation as “aliments interdits” (“forbidden foods”) is consistent with Olivelle and is utilized in a Jain context. Notably, while Vallely cites Williams for their own translation, the latter elsewhere translates the term as “prohibited foods” (p. 39). |
21 | Which is not to say that those who use, kill, and consume cows (or other animals) necessarily do not care, even very deeply, about these animals (cf. Govindrajan 2018; Staples 2020). However, these acts and attitudes of care do not erase the facticity of the harms of domestication. |
22 | Data would help support this claim, but it is immediately apparent the moment one enters any major grocery store, at least in the United States and Europe. “Vegan” has largely replaced “vegetarian” on those product labels whose contents also satisfy as vegan, and “vegetarian” restaurants have virtually disappeared, either shifting to fully vegan menus or offering both vegan and non-vegan options. |
23 | On a technical note, Christopher Framarin (2014) presents a very convincing argument that the basic pan-Indic logic of ahiṃsā requires an acceptance of the “direct moral standing” of animals due to their sentience. For the present inquiry, the importance of this claim is twofold: first, somewhat contrary to Vallely’s contention that “Jains believe that all living beings humans, animals, plants, and single-sensed beings—have a soul worthy of respect, and deserving of compassion” (p. 9, emphasis added), it is not the Self (i.e. “soul”) that is the logical object of compassion but rather the sentient being’s mind/body complex owing to its capacity (and not the Self’s) to experience pain and suffering; second, even if one is not intentionally concerned with others’ well-being in their practice of ahiṃsā but is narrowly focused on self-control and their personal “karma account”, their intention does not change the fact that the karmic logic of ahiṃsā assumes moral consideration, or compassion, toward all sentient beings for its very functioning. |
24 | http://faunapolice.blogspot.com/ (accessed 1 June 2021). |
25 | Because dairy is not generally prohibited in Jain dietary textual traditions, the Uttarādhyayana Sūtra makes a break from orthopraxis that is often overlooked. |
26 | Regarding the “pizza effect”, Bharati writes, “Officially, Western things are not desirable in the Indian cultural universe; but neither are the themes and the works of the tradition which is thought reactionary and obsolete. Yet, one and all, they gather momentum and respect through a process of re-enculturation. I have coined the facetious-sounding term ‘pizza-effect’ for this pervasive pattern.” (Bharati 1970, p. 273). |
27 | We acknowledge that the notion of a traditional or “orthodox” Jainism is problematic and only use the term “orthodox” here in a heuristic sense to acknowledge that there are key, inevitable transformations that occur when South Asian forms of Jain praxis enter into new cultural, diasporic settings (cf. Vallely 2002). As Dundas writes, “It is impossible to demonstrate the existence of some original, pristine form of Jainism, but the oldest sources available, the first books of the Ācārāṅga and Sūtrakṛtāṅga, do suggest what was most significant in Mahāvīra’s teaching and how, as a path to deliverance, it linked up with the broader Indian thought world.” (Dundas 2002, p. 41). The current article looked at how the “broader Indian thought world” influences and is influenced by particular diasporic settings. |
28 | We would like to thank our anonymous peer-reviewer for suggesting that we consider how Banks’s three-part model might be problematized in light of what we have revealed regarding Jain veganism. We could have also considered how the practice of Jain veganism might problematize Flügel’s (2000) four distinct and primary types of Jainism: canonical (kanonischer), traditional (traditioneller), Protestant (protestantischer), and post-Prostestant (post-protestantischer). Canonical, traditional, and Protestant forms of Jainism tend to relate to the development and current practice of the Jain tradition in India and the development of lay autonomy therein. The forms of global diasporic Jain veganism we have considered in this article would thus seem to fit squarely into the category of “post-protestantantischer Jainismus” (post-Protestant Jainism) (Flügel 2000, p. 37) where diasporic lay autonomy is paramount in the absence of ascetic authority. Nevertheless, as we have seen, the boundaries between the more traditional ascetic path to liberation, karma theory, ascetic authority, and diasporic lay practice are fluid in Jain veganism. |
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Miller, C.J.; Dickstein, J. Jain Veganism: Ancient Wisdom, New Opportunities. Religions 2021, 12, 512. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12070512
Miller CJ, Dickstein J. Jain Veganism: Ancient Wisdom, New Opportunities. Religions. 2021; 12(7):512. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12070512
Chicago/Turabian StyleMiller, Christopher Jain, and Jonathan Dickstein. 2021. "Jain Veganism: Ancient Wisdom, New Opportunities" Religions 12, no. 7: 512. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12070512
APA StyleMiller, C. J., & Dickstein, J. (2021). Jain Veganism: Ancient Wisdom, New Opportunities. Religions, 12(7), 512. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12070512