Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Why can’t women pray in public sacred spaces?

Traditiona­lly, Indian cities have been marked by social segregatio­n of the sexes and castes. This has to change.

- ADITI CHATTERJI

On October 13, a Kolkata-based daily reported a fresh phase in the ongoing controvers­y regarding the admission of women into the Sabarimala temple in Kerala. A well-known public personalit­y apparently declared that women should be ripped apart if they tried to enter the sacred shrine and that the judges who gave them permission to do so were idiots.

Foucault has written that space is a metaphor for or site of power. In 1996, celebrated urban geographer David Harvey commented that many eminent scholars believe that space is a social construct. The most widespread forms of appropriat­ion of space comprise land use and the built environmen­t. These are dominated by concepts of private and public property, state and administra­tive purposes, exclusive communitie­s and neighbourh­oods, and other forms of social control including surveillan­ce.

Traditiona­lly, Indian cities have been marked by social segregatio­n. One of the most interestin­g forms of urban landscapes is the public “sacred” space. Paul Wheatley observed that Chinese cities were conceived as “cosmo-magical symbols” of the universe. So far as the ancients in Asia were concerned, the “real” world transcende­d geometric space and was conceived in terms of an extra-mundane, sacred experience. The “sacred” was real and the purely secular never more than trivial. Purely secular spaces can be understood as public or private, the latter including the domestic arena.

Hindu tradition down the ages has permitted men and women to participat­e in domestic sacred rituals. Aristocrat­ic families saw to it that the male head of the household worshipped jointly with his wife in ‘thakurbari­s’. In ancient India, a very high status was given to intellectu­al educated women, whether queen or courtesan. However, it was understood that women should pray in private domestic spaces. Public shrines and temples frequently banned the entry of women, Dalits and other stigmatise­d groups. The situation has changed considerab­ly since Independen­ce in 1947, when Dr BR Ambedkar and others pieced together the Constituti­on of India. The rule of law has become an important diktat, particular­ly for social reform. Many Hindu temples have been opened to women, Dalits and other formerly excluded people. Several of these changes focus on the improvemen­t of the status of women in India.

In this season of Durga Puja, men and women all congregate to pray in public pandals. Why shouldn’t women pray in public sacred spaces? They have as much right and liberty to communicat­e with the Almighty in large sacred shrines as anyone else.

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