
The Vow of Non-Violence
Ahimsa is not silence in the face of harm — it is the courage to refuse harm at the root, in every motive of the mind.
Read more ›A serene archive of divine life, sacred wisdom and timeless Jain values — honouring the soul who walked beyond karma and attained the eternal state of Siddha.
Step softly. Within these pages rests the eternal story of Shreyansanath Bhagwan — the Eleventh Tirthankara of the current Avasarpini, born of King Vishnu and Queen Vishna in the radiant city of Simhapuri, of the noble Ikshvaku dynasty.
From a royal cradle to the silence of supreme renunciation, His path illumines a way of ahimsa, truth and inner liberation. This sanctuary is offered to seekers, students and devotees — a refined digital tirth where memory, meaning and meditation converge.
Five luminous pillars rise from His teachings — each a doorway from the noise of the world to the stillness of the Self.
Reverence for all life — the silent vow that protects every breathing being from harm in thought, word and deed.
Truth as the soul's natural fragrance — speech tempered by compassion, memory tempered by clarity.
The art of holding lightly — releasing possession, position and pride to discover an unburdened spirit.
Inner discipline that polishes the soul — fasting of senses, contemplation of essence, devotion of moments.
“Where the soul stands still, karma falls away — and the seeker becomes the seen.”— In the spirit of Shreyansanath Bhagwan
Brief reflections drawn from the eternal counsel of the Eleventh Tirthankara — gentle invitations into a quieter way of living.

Ahimsa is not silence in the face of harm — it is the courage to refuse harm at the root, in every motive of the mind.
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The flame that does not cling to its wick burns clearer. Aparigraha is the lightness through which the soul finds itself.
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Liberation is not an arrival but an alignment — when right faith, right knowledge and right conduct meet at the centre of the soul.
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The radiant city of Simhapuri, near present-day Sarnath, marks the holy birth of Shreyansanath Bhagwan — to King Vishnu and Queen Vishna of the Ikshvaku dynasty. The site stands today as a living tirth, where centuries of devotion have woven memory and stillness into stone.
Across temples, manuscripts and pilgrim hearts, His presence endures — a reminder that the inward path is older than empires and quieter than time.
Discover HeritageFrom the verses of Jain scripture to the silence of meditation — let the wisdom of Shreyansanath Bhagwan guide a more luminous way of being.