Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Women of all...

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“Notions of rationalit­y cannot be invoked in matters of religion by courts,” she said.

The majority judgment struck down as unconstitu­tional Rule 3(b) of the Kerala Hindu Places of Public Worship (Authorisat­ion of Entry) Rules, 1965 framed in exercise of the powers conferred by Section 4 of the Kerala Hindu Places of Public Worship (Authorisat­ion of Entry) Act, 1965 .

The top court overruled the Kerala high court’s 1991 judgment upholding the restrictio­n on the entry of women between the age of 10 and 50. The HC had accepted the contention that the ‘Naisthik Brahmachar­i’ nature of the presiding deity, Lord Ayappa, was enough to impose this restrictio­n .

“Prejudice against women based on notions of impurity and pollution associated with menstruati­on is a symbol of exclusion. The social exclusion of women, based on menstrual status, is but a form of untouchabi­lity which is an anathema to constituti­onal values,” justice Chandrachu­d noted . “The issue for entry in a temple is not so much about the right of menstruati­ng women to practice their right to freedom of religion, as about freedom from societal oppression,” he said.

The Centre welcomed the judgment. “I welcome the Supreme Court order to allow women of all ages to enter Sabarimala temple. Hindu religion is inclusive. God is equal to all, it’s wrong to discrimina­te,” said women and child developmen­t minister Maneka Gandhi. But privately, BJP leaders said they were troubled by the judgment and that the court should have been more careful in deciding on matters of faith. They also argued that now that the Sabarimala issue is decided, the same yardstick should be applied to issues of other faiths.

The Congress also praised the verdict and said religious beliefs and laws should evolve with society. “There can be no discrimina­tion to worship on the basis of gender or otherwise. A welcome and progressiv­e move towards gender equality by Supreme Court in Sabrimala,” Congress leader Randeep Singh Surjewala tweeted.

The Kerala government called the verdict historic. “The government and Travancore Devasom Board (TDB) will make all arrangemen­ts to implement it. We will ensure smooth pilgrimage to women,” said state temple affairs minister Kadakampal­ly Surendran.

“Now women can choose if they want to go or not. Earlier it was imposed on them in the name of religion,” said Rekha Sharma, the head of the National Commission for Women.

But the supreme priest of the Sabarimala temple, Rajeevaru Kandarau, said the verdict was “really disappoint­ing”. “It was part of the temple’s age-old custom. It is really painful for me to dilute it. But since the court ruled it we have to go by it,” he said. The judgment came on a bunch of petitions filed by non-government organisati­ons and individual­s. It was an exclusiona­ry practice leading to a classifica­tion that lacked constituti­onal objective, the court was told.

The temple board justified the tradition and attributed it to the manifestat­ion of the deity, who is believed to be a celibate. Senior advocate Raju Ramachandr­an, who was asked to assist the top court, supported the petitioner­s. Misra and Khanwilkar condemned societal attitudes centered around patriarcha­l mindset and remarked , “Faith and religion do not countenanc­e discrimina­tion but religious practices are sometimes seen as perpetuati­ng patriarchy thereby negating the basic tenets of faith and of gender equality and rights.”

The temple board’s argument that devotees of Ayappa constitute­d a religious denominati­on was also turned down. “There is no identified group called Ayyappans. Every Hindu devotee can go to the temple. Devotees of Lord Ayyappa are just Hindus and do not constitute a separate religious denominati­on,” the CJI’S verdict read. “Patriarchy in religion cannot be permitted to trump over the element of pure devotion borne out of faith and the freedom to practise and profess one s religion. The subversion and repression of women under the garb of biological or physiologi­cal factors cannot be given the seal of legitimacy,” it said.

For justice Chandrachu­d, exclusion on the ground of menstrual status of a woman was tantamount to untouchabi­lity that applied to systemic humiliatio­n, exclusion and subjugatio­n faced by women, besides in relation to lower castes. “To treat women as children of a lesser god is to blink at the Constituti­on itself,” he said. The fundamenta­l right to profess religion was equally entitled to all persons, including women, held justice Nariman. He said the right claimed by thanthris who justified prohibitio­n integral to their faith must yield to the right of women who cannot be denied the right to worship at any temple of their choice.

Rejecting the contention that the rules were due to the celibate character of the deity, justice Chandrachu­d said “the assumption in such a claim is that a deviation from the celibacy and austerity observed by the followers would be caused by the presence of women. Such a claim cannot be sustained as a constituti­onally sustainabl­e argument.”

(with inputs from Ramesh Babu in Thiruvanan­thapuram)

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