
Where every
step is a
prayer.
A marble sanctuary consecrated in the tirtha of Bhagwan Mahavira — open to all who seek the path of ahimsa.
- Paryushana 2026✦
- Mahavir Jayanti✦
- Das Lakshana Parva✦
- Samvatsari✦
- Diwali Puja✦
- Pratishtha Mahotsava✦
- Kshamavani✦
- Navapad Oli✦
- Paryushana 2026✦
- Mahavir Jayanti✦
- Das Lakshana Parva✦
- Samvatsari✦
- Diwali Puja✦
- Pratishtha Mahotsava✦
- Kshamavani✦
- Navapad Oli✦
A tirtha born of devotion,
carved in prayer.
In Vikram Samvat 1842, Sheth Virchandbhai Zaveri undertook the pratishtha of this derasar after a vision of Bhagwan Mahavira at Shatrunjaya. What began as a single marble shikhara in a forest clearing has grown, generation by generation, into a living tirtha — where the Panchkalyanak of the 24th Tirthankara is remembered daily through stavan, abhisheka, and the quiet turning of the prayer wheel at dusk.

Pratishtha Samaroha
Pratishtha Samaroha
The first consecration, Vikram Samvat 1842

Bhagwan Mahavira
Bhagwan Mahavira
24th Tirthankara, Veer Nirvana Samvat 2552

Shikhara
Shikhara
Rising 72 feet, carved in Rajasthani makrana marble
Tirth Marg
Tirth Marg
Every step on this path, a sankalp

Jali Kaam
Jali Kaam
Hand-carved by Sompura shilpis, four generations

Pushpa Rangoli
Pushpa Rangoli
Laid each dawn by the temple sevika mandal

Mahavir Jayanti
Mahavir Jayanti
Chaitra Shukla Trayodashi — the entire sangha gathers

Abhisheka
Abhisheka
Panchamrit snan performed at Brahma muhurta
Your pilgrimage
begins here.
Whether you come for Paryushana, a family pratishtha smarana, or a quiet morning abhisheka — we welcome you. Share your details and our sevak will reach out within one day.
Rituals that breathe across seasons.
From the lamp lit before the first stavan to the last abhisheka of Paryushana — the temple is always alive.
Deepotsav
Diwali — every lamp a vow of ahimsa

Pratikraman
Dawn and dusk — the soul's accounting

Pushpa Sajja
Mahavir Jayanti — flowers offered, no blood spilled

Murtipuja
Panchamrit abhisheka at Brahma muhurta

Ghanta Naad
The first bell — the courtyard wakes

Paryushana Parva
Bhadrapada — eight days of the highest dharma

Chandan Puja
The fragrance that carries the mantra forward

Brahma Muhurta
The hour before dawn — the temple breathes

Shilpa Kala
Das Lakshana — ten days, ten virtues carved in stone
The wheel of the year,
turning in dharma.
Birth anniversary of the 24th Tirthankara — procession, abhisheka, and mass stavan
Eight days of the highest dharma — fasting, confession, and Samvatsari kshamapana
Ten days, ten virtues — Uttam Kshama to Uttam Brahmacharya observed in congregation
Samvatsari — the day of universal forgiveness, michchhami dukkadam
Nine days of fasting on alternate days, worshipping the Navapad — the nine holy stations
Nirvana Ladunath — the day Bhagwan Mahavira attained moksha, celebrated with deepotsav
Annual mahotsava commemorating the original pratishtha of the derasar
Annual calendar of all parvas, utsavs, and tirth dates. No other correspondence.
Those who walked this path.
"Paryushana aṭhī divase āpanā derasarmā āvavuṁ — e amārā parivāranī parampara chhe. Sanghamāṁ e anubhava svargathī ūṇo nathī."
Sheth Hemantbhai & Sushilaben Parekh
Ahmedabad
"After fifteen years in Toronto, I had forgotten what it felt like to hear stavan echoing off real stone. Coming here for Mahavir Jayanti brought something back that I did not know I had lost."
Priya Kothari-Shah
Toronto, Canada
"The abhisheka at Brahma muhurta — the marble still cool, the mist still in the trees, the priest's voice the only sound — this is what tirth yatra means. We will return every year."
Dr. Rajesh & Meenaben Sanghvi
Mumbai