Jain Samvatsari Michhami Dukkadam, is the culmination of the sacred Paryushan Parva a time for forgiveness and inner purification. This day holds profound spiritual value for Jain communities across India as they seek and offer forgiveness. In 2025 Samvatsari will fall on August .
Samvatsari (for Śvetāmbara Jains) is the final day of the eight-day Paryushan festival, a period of reflection, fasting, and scripture study. It represents a spiritual high point where Jains aim to clear their karma by seeking forgiveness from all beings.
Derived from Prakrit, “Michhami Dukkadam” translates to “may all the evil that has been done be futile.” It’s a humble phrase, offered to friends and relatives as a sincere plea for forgiveness.
In 2025, Samvatsari falls on Thursday, 28 August. This day corresponds to Bhadrapada Shukla Panchami in the Jain calendar. Observance spans from sunrise to sunset, with the forgiveness ritual performed in the evening after pratikraman.
Michhami Dukkadam is a special Jain tradition observed on Samvatsari, where people say sorry for any hurt they may have caused, knowingly or unknowingly. It’s a time to clean the heart, forgive others, and start fresh.
Also Read: Jain Paryushan Parv 2025 Dates, Rituals, and Significance
On Samvatsari, Jains perform:
Exchanging Michhami Dukkadam in person, over calls or messages
Traditionally spoken face-to-face, it’s now also shared via messages, calls, or social media. Simple phrases in English or Hindi help spread the spirit of forgiveness .
Forgiveness (Kshama) is central to Jain philosophy. Recognized in texts like the Kalpa Sutra and the Paryushan framework, it fosters inner peace and spiritual growth.
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Samvatsari Michhami Dukkadam 2025 on 28 August offers a sacred opportunity for forgiveness, renewal, and peace. Beyond tradition, this day invites every individual—regardless of faith—to embrace humility, mend relationships, and begin anew. Reflect, forgive, and move forward with a pure heart.
For deeper insights into your spiritual journey during this time, consider consulting our Jain calendar guide or speaking with an expert astrologer.
It means “May my mistakes be fruitless,” and expresses a heartfelt seeking and granting of forgiveness.
Śvetāmbara Jains observe Samvatsari; Digambaras observe Kshamavani on a slightly different day.
Yes—this expression transcends religion and encourages universal forgiveness and harmony.
Fasting is common and spiritually encouraged, but not mandatory—it depends on personal practice and ability .
Conceptually similar, Kshamavani is the Digambara equivalent, observed a day or two later, based on their lunar calendar.
Author : Nikita Sharma