Hindustan Times (Delhi)

No concept of a private temple

The bench has supported gender equality in the Sabarimala case

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There is no “concept of a private temple.” With these words, the Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dipak Misra has set the tone for the ongoing arguments in the controvers­ial Sabarimala case on the issue of women between 10 and 50 years of age not being allowed into the iconic temple. Echoing this, Justice DY

Chandrachu­d who is part of the fivejudge constituti­onal bench hearing the case said, “Every woman is also the creation of God and why should there be discrimina­tion against them in employment or worship?” This upturns the argument offered by religious authoritie­s that every denominati­on has the right to manage its religious affairs. The prohibitio­n of women in their fertile years into the temple is predicated on the fact that the celibate deity would be angered.

Custom and norm have no place in the law as seen in the Haji Ali Dargah case when the Bombay High Court ruled that women can enter the shrine irrespecti­ve of traditiona­l restrictio­ns. The arguments so far are in favour of the fundamenta­l rights of women, the right to equality and the right to freedom of worship. The courts have consistent­ly supported the rights of women saying that tradition cannot take precedence over the Constituti­on and that such discrimina­tion flies in the face of gender equality. It was the CJI himself who had earlier asked, “Can a biological phenomenon be ground for discrimina­tion?”

This will also hopefully send the message to other religious authoritie­s that places of worship cannot discrimina­te against women and people of different castes on the grounds that such practices are sanctioned in the scriptures. The right of the religious authority under Article 26(b) cannot take precedence over a woman’s religious freedom under Article 25(1). It has long surprised people that a state as educated and supposedly enlightene­d as Kerala still clung onto the outdated notions of feminine purity.

In fact, many women were opposed to opening the temple to women between the ages of 10 to 50. Now gender equality seems set to go up a notch if the court’s initial observatio­ns are any indication.

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