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Tuesday, March 31, 2026 · Past event
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Mahavir Jayanti 2026
Event overview
Mahavir Jayanti 2026 — celebration of the birth of Bhagwan Mahavira, the 24th Tirthankara of Jainism, observed with processions, prayers, and almsgiving.
Mahavir Jayanti 2026 — the celebration of the birth of Bhagwan Mahavira, the 24th and last Tirthankara of Jainism — falling on Tuesday, March 31, 2026. Observed across India and the Jain diaspora with temple processions, almsgiving, and recitations of the Jain Agamas.
Mahavir Jayanti commemorates the birth of Vardhamana Mahavira (599–527 BCE in the traditional Jain dating) — the most recent Tirthankara, the founder of the modern Jain monastic and lay community, and the spiritual authority on whose teachings the Jain canon (the Agamas) is based. Mahavira was born in Kundalpur (modern Vaishali in Bihar) on the 13th tithi of the bright fortnight (Shukla Paksha) of the Hindu lunisolar month of Chaitra. He renounced his princely life at age 30, attained enlightenment at age 42, and led a community of monks, nuns and lay followers for the remaining 30 years of his life.
The festival is observed by both major Jain sects — the Shvetambara (white-clad) and the Digambara (sky-clad) — with some variation in ritual but unified in date. It is one of the most important days in the Jain calendar alongside Paryushan and Diwali (the latter marking the day of Mahavira's nirvana in 527 BCE). Mahavir Jayanti is a public holiday in India, recognised in the Indian government's gazette of restricted holidays.
The day's principal observances are non-violent and contemplative. Major Jain temples — Palitana in Gujarat (with its 863 temples on Shatrunjaya Hill), Shravanabelagola in Karnataka, the Dilwara Temples on Mount Abu in Rajasthan, and the Khandagiri-Udayagiri caves in Odisha — see significantly elevated pilgrim footfall. Statues of Mahavira are bathed (abhisheka), anointed with sandalwood paste and saffron, and decorated with garlands.
The day begins with abhisheka — the ritual bathing of the Mahavira murti — at major Jain temples. The bathing water is collected and distributed as prasad. The Jain community organises shobha yatras (ceremonial processions) through their towns and cities, often featuring a chariot bearing the Mahavira murti, accompanied by drumming, devotional singing, and the chanting of the Navkar Mantra (the supreme Jain prayer). In Mumbai, Surat, Ahmedabad, Jaipur, Indore, Kolkata, Bengaluru, Chennai, Delhi and the major Jain centres of Karnataka, these processions involve tens of thousands of participants.
Almsgiving (dana) is a central observance. Jains traditionally distribute food, water, books, and basic necessities to the poor; many also fund temple repairs, vegetarian meal services, or animal sanctuaries (panjarapole) on this day. Strict vegetarianism is universal in Jain practice; on Mahavir Jayanti many Jains take additional fasts, abstain from root vegetables, or observe full silence.
In the Jain diaspora — primarily in the US (the Jain Center of America in New York, Pittsburgh, Chicago, the Jain Center of Northern California), the UK (the Jain Samaj in London, Leicester, and Manchester), Belgium (the Antwerp Jain community, important to the diamond trade), Singapore, Mauritius, Kenya, Tanzania and East Africa — the day is observed with community processions and almsgiving programmes.
The Jain temples of Palitana, Shravanabelagola, Dilwara, and the major city centres publish their Mahavir Jayanti programmes online. Doordarshan and major regional broadcasters cover the principal Mumbai, Ahmedabad and Jaipur processions. The Jaina Federation (jaina.org) coordinates diaspora observances. Most major temples now stream their abhisheka and shobha yatra on YouTube.
Mahavir Jayanti 2026 falls in the same week as Hanuman Jayanti 2026 and shares the calendar with Paryushan Parva 2026 — Jainism's other major annual observance. See also Diwali 2026 (which is also observed by Jains, marking Mahavira's nirvana).
When is Mahavir Jayanti 2026? Tuesday, March 31, 2026 — the 13th of Chaitra Shukla Paksha. Who was Mahavira? The 24th and last Tirthankara of Jainism (599–527 BCE in the traditional dating); founder of the modern Jain community and the spiritual authority on whose teachings the Jain Agamas are based. Is it a public holiday? Yes — Mahavir Jayanti is a recognised holiday in the Indian government's gazette and a state holiday in Maharashtra, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Karnataka, and several other states. What's the principal observance? Abhisheka (ritual bathing) of the Mahavira murti at Jain temples, followed by shobha yatra (community processions) and almsgiving (dana).
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