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Sunday, August 30, 2026 · 81 days away
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Paryushan Parva 2026
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Event overview
Paryushan Parva 2026 — Jainism's holiest period; Shvetambara observe an 8-day fast culminating on Samvatsari, while Digambaras observe Das Lakshana over 10 days.
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Primary source
drikpanchang.com
Last reviewed
2026-04-30
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scheduled
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Single-date event without a reliable public start time; date-first countdown only.
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Event structured data is emitted because the record is single-date and scheduled or confirmed.
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Paryushan Parva 2026 — Jainism's holiest annual observance — beginning Sunday, August 30, 2026. Shvetambara Jains observe an 8-day Paryushan culminating in Samvatsari (the day of universal forgiveness), while Digambara Jains observe Das Lakshana over 10 days through early September.
Paryushan ("abiding" or "coming together") is the most spiritually intense period in the Jain calendar. For the eight or ten days of the festival, lay Jains intensify their daily practice through fasting, scriptural study, temple worship, and the cultivation of the cardinal Jain virtues. The two major Jain sects observe slightly different versions: Shvetambara Paryushan runs eight days and culminates in Samvatsari (the most important day); Digambara Das Lakshana runs ten days and is structured around the Daslakshana Dharma (ten-fold dharma) of the Tattvartha Sutra — forgiveness, humility, straightforwardness, contentment, truth, restraint, austerity, renunciation, non-attachment and chastity.
The festival's two anchors are the Antagada Dasha sutra (read in synagogue-equivalent form daily during Paryushan) and the Kalpa Sutra — the foundational Jain text recounting the lives of the Tirthankaras, especially Mahavira. The Kalpa Sutra is read aloud in Jain temples through the eight days of Paryushan, with the most-attended day being the day Mahavira's birth is recounted.
The festival is the period of maximum fasting in the Jain calendar. Many lay Jains undertake the eight-day Atthai fast (no food for eight days, only boiled water during daylight); some undertake longer fasts of 30, 60, 90, or even 180 days, monitored by Jain monks and sometimes extending well past Paryushan. Such extreme fasts are honoured with public ceremonies (Tapasya Paran) at the end. Children typically fast for shorter periods; even a single day's fast on Samvatsari is a major undertaking.
Each day during Paryushan, Jains visit the temple twice for darshan and pratikramana (the ritual of reflection on transgressions). Temples organise extensive Pravachan (sermons) by visiting monks, daily Kalpa Sutra recitations, and special pujas. The eighth and final day — Samvatsari (Saturday, September 6, 2026 in the Shvetambara tradition) — is the festival's climax. After morning observances, Jains practice the most distinctive observance of the festival: Micchami Dukkadam — the ritual of mutual forgiveness.
On Samvatsari, Jains contact every person they may have wronged, in person or by phone, message, or email, with the words "Micchami Dukkadam" — "May my wrongs be forgiven." The other person responds in kind. The practice extends beyond the Jain community to all relationships — colleagues, classmates, distant relatives, neighbours of any faith. The total number of "Micchami Dukkadam" exchanges in the global Jain community on Samvatsari is in the tens of millions; the day overwhelms WhatsApp's Indian network annually.
The Digambara observance of Das Lakshana follows a similar arc but emphasises the daily meditation on each of the ten dharmic virtues — one virtue per day — and culminates in Kshamavani Parva ("the day of forgiveness"), structurally equivalent to Samvatsari and observed about a week later in 2026.
Major Jain temples (Palitana, Shravanabelagola, Dilwara, and the city temples of Mumbai, Ahmedabad, Surat, Bengaluru, Jaipur, Kolkata) publish Paryushan calendars and live-stream the daily Kalpa Sutra recitations. The Jaina Federation (jaina.org) coordinates diaspora observances. The Atthai-completion (Tapasya Paran) ceremonies are televised by Doordarshan in Gujarat and Maharashtra. Most major Jain temples now stream their full Paryushan programme on YouTube.
Paryushan 2026 falls in the late-summer Hindu festival window alongside Onam 2026, Raksha Bandhan 2026, and the Jain festival cycle including Mahavir Jayanti 2026. The Jain Diwali (commemorating Mahavira's nirvana) is observed alongside Diwali 2026.
When is Paryushan 2026? Shvetambara Paryushan runs August 30 to September 6, 2026, with Samvatsari on September 6. Digambara Das Lakshana runs ten days following. What is Samvatsari? The eighth and final day of Shvetambara Paryushan, when Jains seek mutual forgiveness with the words "Micchami Dukkadam." What's the difference between Shvetambara and Digambara observance? Shvetambara observe Paryushan over 8 days ending in Samvatsari; Digambara observe Das Lakshana over 10 days ending in Kshamavani Parva. Both centre on forgiveness and self-purification. Is fasting required? No, but it is strongly encouraged. Many lay Jains undertake the 8-day Atthai fast; others do shorter fasts; even a single day's fast on Samvatsari is meaningful.
Date confidence
Paryushan Parva 2026 is tracked as a scheduled event. The date is suitable for countdown and calendar use, while final logistics should still be checked against the linked source.
Source
https://www.drikpanchang.com/festivals/paryushan/paryushan-date.htmlStructured data posture
This page emits Event structured data because the tracked record has a single scheduled or confirmed date. The linked source remains the final reference for time, venue, and operational changes.
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Source reviewed Apr 30, 2026. The countdown record is intentionally labeled as scheduled or expected; use the source link and any range notes before treating the date as final.
Live values rendered at Jun 2, 10:32 AM UTC.
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