From a royal cradle in Sauripura to the silent peaks of Mount Girnar — the complete arc of the soul known to history as Arishtanemi.
— Sauripura, the Birthplace
In the storied city of Sauripura (also remembered as Shauripuri, near present-day Bateshwar), the queen Shivadevi, consort of King Samudravijaya of the Yadu dynasty, beheld a sequence of fourteen auspicious dreams — the unmistakable Jain omens of a Tirthankara's descent into a mortal womb.
The child, named Nemikumar, arrived as the twenty-second link in an unbroken chain of awakened souls of this Avasarpini era. From his earliest years, his stillness held the gravity of someone listening to a music others had not yet learned to hear.
From the wonder of birth to the silence of liberation — each chapter a deliberate step into ever-deepening awareness.
Sauripura · Yadu Dynasty
Born to King Samudravijaya and Queen Shivadevi amid celestial signs — the fourteen great dreams foretelling a Tirthankara's arrival. The kingdom rejoiced; a soul long awaited had returned to walk among them.
Palace Life · Yadu Court
Trained in statecraft, archery, the arts and the scriptures, Nemikumar grew alongside his cousins Krishna and Balarama. Even as a youth, he displayed extraordinary strength tempered by an unmistakable inwardness.
Junagadh · The Betrothal
A grand alliance was arranged with Rajimati, daughter of King Ugrasena. The two kingdoms readied themselves for a wedding that would unite the Yadu and Bhoja lineages in lasting kinship.
On the Path to Junagadh
On the morning of his wedding, the cries of confined animals reached the prince. The ceremonial procession halted. He learned the creatures awaited slaughter for the marriage feast. Without anger, with utter clarity, Neminath turned the chariot away — the alliance, the crown, the bride relinquished in a single gesture of compassion.
Mount Raivataka · Sahasramra Garden
In the gardens of Mount Raivataka (a peak of the Girnar range), the prince accepted Diksha — plucking out his hair in five handfuls, donning the discipline of the wandering ascetic. Princess Rajimati, deeply moved, would later renounce the world herself and follow the Tirthankara's path.
Fifty-four Days of Austerity
For fifty-four days he engaged in deep meditation and severe austerities. Then, beneath a Vetas tree on Mount Girnar, the soul attained Keval Gyan — infinite knowledge, perception, bliss and energy. The Samavasarana assembly gathered; gods and beings of every realm came to hear the discourse.
Mount Girnar, Saurashtra
After decades of teaching, leading countless souls toward liberation, Lord Neminath attained Nirvana on Mount Girnar — his soul departing the cycle of birth and death entirely. The peak remains, to this day, one of the holiest sites of the Jain tradition.
The bridal procession was nearly at Junagadh's gates. Banners fluttered. Music spilled into the streets. Princess Rajimati, adorned and waiting, watched from the palace.
Then came a sound from the courtyards behind the cooking pavilions — a sound the prince could not unhear. He asked the charioteer. The charioteer, lowering his eyes, explained that hundreds of animals had been gathered for the wedding feast, awaiting their fate.
Neminath did not raise his voice. He turned the chariot back. By nightfall the animals were freed. By dawn the prince had walked into the forests of Mount Raivataka — alone, silent, irreversibly committed to the long road of Tirthankara-hood.
Rajimati, when she heard, did not curse him. Years later, she renounced the world too, and is remembered in Jain memory as one of the great aryikas — proof that two souls may walk the same path even when they do not share the same hearth.
The life of Neminath Bhagwan is not a relic to be admired from a respectful distance. It is a question that returns each morning: what am I willing to turn the chariot back for? Read on — to the teachings, to the symbols, to the lineage that connects him with Krishna himself.