Today we step into the dust and sunlight of the Gangetic plain, into a world where wandering renunciants moved from village to village with bowls in their hands and fire in their questions. Our guide is Mahavira, remembered by the Jain tradition as the twenty‑fourth Tirthankara, a “ford‑maker” who showed a crossing from the fast current of suffering to the far bank of liberation. If the Buddha traced a middle way between indulgence and self‑mortification, Mahavira proved how far human resolve can go in the name of harmlessness. He lived a life that to most of us seems impossibly strict—bare feet in the hot season and the cold, careful steps to avoid crushing an ant, a mouth covered to spare the gnat—and yet his vision was radiant with care. He taught that every living being, from the elephant to the unseen micro‑organism, is a center of experience; that harm echoes back on the one who harms; that freedom is not an idea but a discipline; and that truth itself has many sides. To understand him is to encounter an ethics that refuses to compromise with cruelty and a philosophy that trains the mind in humility.
Produced by Selenius Media Inc & Niklas S Osterman, MA