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________________ 172 AKÂRANGA SUTRA. (see II, 1, 8, § 2), having reflected (on its fitness for a stay); he should ask permission to take possession of it from him who is the landlord or the steward of that place: 'Indeed, O long-lived one! for the time, and in the space which you concede us, we shall dwell here. We shall take possession of the place for as long a time as the place belongs to you; and of as much of it as belongs to you; for as many fellowascetics (as shall stand in need of it); afterwards we shall take to wandering?' (2) Having got possession of some place, a mendicant should invite to that food, &c., which he himself has collected, any fellow-ascetics arriving there who follow the same rules and are zealous brethren; but he should not invite them to anything of which he has taken possession for the sake of somebody else. (3) Having got possession of some place (in a traveller's hall, &c.), a mendicant should offer a footstool or bench or bed or couch, which he himself has begged, to any fellow-ascetics arriving there who follow other rules than he, yet are zealous brethren; but he should not offer them anything of which he has taken possession for the sake of somebody else. (4) Having got possession of some place in a traveller's hall, &c., a mendicant might ask from a householder or his sons the loan of a needle or a Pippalaka? or an ear-picker or a nail-parer, he should not give or lend it to somebody else; but Compare the corresponding precept in II, 2, 3, $ 3. * The Guzerati commentator only says that pippalaka is some utensil. The older commentators do not explain this passage.
SR No.011059
Book TitleJaina Sutras 01 Acharang Sutra and Kalpa Sutra
Original Sutra AuthorN/A
AuthorHermann Jacobi
PublisherMax Muller
Publication Year
Total Pages396
LanguageEnglish
ClassificationBook_English
File Size30 MB
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