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Dimapur Jain Temple

Coordinates: 25°55′12″N 93°43′48″E / 25.9200°N 93.7300°E / 25.9200; 93.7300
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Dimapur Jain Temple
Dimapur Jain Temple
Dimapur Jain Temple
Religion
AffiliationJainism
SectDigambar
DeityMahavira
FestivalsMahavir Jayanti, Paryushan
Location
LocationDimapur, Dimapur, Nagaland, India
Dimapur Jain Temple is located in Nagaland
Dimapur Jain Temple
Location within Nagaland
Dimapur Jain Temple is located in India
Dimapur Jain Temple
Dimapur Jain Temple (India)
Geographic coordinates25°55′12″N 93°43′48″E / 25.9200°N 93.7300°E / 25.9200; 93.7300
Architecture
CreatorShri Phulchand Sethi, Shri Jethmal Sethi, Shri Udayram Chabra and Shri Kanhaiyalal Sethi
Date established1947

Dimapur Jain Temple is mainly known for a Jain Temple in Dimapur which is built in 1947. The temple is located on Jain Temple Road and has Lord Mahavira as its Moolnayak. The temple is under the aegis of the SD Jain Samaj Dimapur.

History

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In the pre-independent India, most of the Jain families were settled in Kohima. All these families belonged to the Digambara sect. In 1920, eight Sethi families, who were non-Naga Settlers, built the first Jain temple in Kohima. However, these families moved to Dimapur in 1944 due to the Japanese invasion during World War II. These families then built the Dimapur Jain Temple, SD Jain School, and SD Jain Charitable Hospital. The most prominent among these were Shri Phulchand Sethi, Shri Jethmal Sethi, Shri Kanhaiyalal Sethi, Hardev Sethi, Hiralal Sethi, and Shri Mangilal Chabra. Shri Phulchand Sethi was the first secretary of the SD Jain Samaj, Dimapur, and held this post till 1976. Shri Udayram Ji Chabra was the first president of the SD Jain Samaj followed by Shri Jethmal Sethi.[citation needed]

The Temple Complex

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The Moolnayak of the temple is Lord Mahavira. In the back portion of the temple, the statues of Lord Adinath, Lord Bahubali, and Lord Bharat Swami stand tall. The back of the temple was built later in 1989. The Panch kalyanak of the statues was conducted by Ganini Shri Suparshmati Mataji in 1989. On the first floor is the Samavsaran and the Chaubisi (idols of all the twenty-four Tirthankaras).

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See also

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References

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Sources

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  • Sethi, Raj Kumar (2021), 100 years of Jainism in Nagaland - (A journey from 1885 to 1985), Walnut Publication, ISBN 978-93-91522-04-9