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Five Samitis and Three Guptis

Besides the five great vows for ascetics
and twelve vows for laypeople, Jainism lays great emphasis on observance
of five rules of conducts (Samitis) and three rules of avoidance of
misconducts (Guptis).
A person must be careful in walking,
sitting, standing, and lying down. He must speak only gentle, sweet, and
righteous speech. He must be careful in placing and removing articles of
his use. He must be clean and should not make himself instrumental in the
growth or death of germs and insects.
Five Samitis
- Iriya Samiti - regulation of walking
- Bhasa Samiti - regulation of speaking
- Esnna Samiti - regulation of begging
- Adana Nikshepana Samiti - regulation
of taking or keeping
- Utsarga Samiti - regulation of
disposal
Three Guptis
- Mana Gupti - regulation of mind
- Vachana Gupti - regulation of speech
- Kaya Gupti - regulation of bodily
activity
Five Samitis:
- Iriya Samiti - regulation of walking.
One should walk carefully looking forward about six feet distance so as
not to cause the pain or death of any living being.
- Bhasa Samiti - regulation of speaking.
One should avoid the eight faults of speech during conversation. The
eight faults are anger, pride, deceit, greed, laughter, fear, gossip,
and slander. Always use sinless and concise speech.
- Esnna Samiti - regulation of begging.
Monks should search and obtain pure foods and other articles necessary
for use, and to use the same in a faultless manner.
- Adana Nikshepana Samiti - regulation
of taking or keeping. One should lay down or take up an article of use
very carefully so as not to endanger the life of small creatures and
insects.
- Utsarga Samiti - regulation of
disposal. One should dispose of waste things, such as mucus, urine,
stools, etc. in a solitary and out of the way place in a proper manner
so as not to cause any inconvenience to anybody by becoming a source of
nuisance, unsanitation, or contamination. This waste helps the growth of
germs, and is also the indirect cause of their death.
Three Guptis:
- Mana Gupti - regulation of mind. One
should guard one's mind from impure thoughts such as anger, hate, curse,
greed, jealous, ego, etc. Always be forgiving and devote the mind to
pious meditation.
- Vachana Gupti - regulation of speech.
One should guard his speech so that it might not utter harmful, harsh,
careless, foul, senseless, embarrassing, or bad language.
- Kaya Gupti - regulation of bodily
activity. One should guard movement of his body, so as not to hurt
others, walking with an eye on the path so as not to harm, or kill an
innocent life such as ants, bugs, etc. One should not day dream while
doing any activity. Develop decent behavior and manners.
Thus Samitis purify the actions and make
them faultless, while Guptis are prohibitions against sinful activities of
mind, speech, and body. Both are equally necessary for the spiritual
uplift of soul. Collectively all eight virtues are known as Ashta
Pravachan Mata.
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