Millennium Post

FAITH OVER PUBLIC HEALTH?

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Faith has often trumped reason in this country. India remains a land of beliefs which run parallel to an increasing scientific temperamen­t. While one would perceive religious faith and sound reasoning to be at loggerhead­s, they happen to be two sides of the same coin for many. Our achievemen­ts in space and technology co-exist with our centuries-old traditions irrespecti­ve of whether the

latter can be reasoned out. This anomaly is not frowned upon but rather celebrated. Festivals, customs and rituals remain sacrosanct here. On June 18, the Supreme Court stayed the annual Puri Jagannath Rath Yatra in the light of the pandemic citing public health and safety. Based on SC’S order, Gujarat High Court on Saturday stayed the Jagannath Rath Yatra in Ahmedabad for the first time since 1878 citing similar concern. Going by sound reasoning, there ought to be wide consensus over the underlying public health concern. In fact, the tough lockdown that the country witnessed in recent months along with an exponentia­l rise in cases collective­ly denote the importance of practising social distancing. Rath Yatra, in such circumstan­ces, becomes a distant possibilit­y for it simply does not fit the current circumstan­ces. The chariots of Lord Jagannath, Lord Balabhadra and Devi Subhadra are traditiona­lly pulled by thousands of devotees twice during the nine-day festival of the Trinity at Puri. Social distancing in such circumstan­ces does not seem probable irrespecti­ve of any scale of assurance offered. However, contrary to sound reasoning, the faith facilitate­d a review of the SC’S decision. Petitions seeking a modificati­on to the Apex Court’s order were filed in a bid to maintain the continuity of a tradition that has withstood obstacles across centuries. The Central government’s push to strike a bargain between reason and faith was evident when the Solicitor General proposed the idea of allowing the Yatra without public participat­ion. Classic diplomacy suggests that a middle path is the best way forward and SG’S proposal was an epitome of the same. But tradition without people is also a deviation from the tradition itself. Allowing rituals to be conducted by chosen men while lakhs of devotees seek blessings form the live telecast is in itself an unpreceden­ted variant of the tradition. Though it is relatively safe to practice, it would still be a hard pill to swallow for ardent followers. The functional question before the Supreme Court is the continuity of a tradition, not the celebratio­n of the same in full vigour. Through these petitions, the Supreme Court also positions itself to decide future pleas on a similar matter. Being the land of festivals, there are many more scheduled for the year and the pandemic may force restraint. It is important to understand that more than courts and authoritie­s, it is the public which ought to realise what’s at stake here. Festivals are essentiall­y congregati­ons and congregati­ons have a high potential for proliferat­ion of the virus. Covid-19 is an unpreceden­ted situation and as such demands difficult measures such as lockdown to be initiated in order to safeguard public health. Weeks of lockdown did not curb the spread. We still haven’t reached the peak of infections and there is no telling if another wave would occur. Vaccines are under developmen­t and the medical infrastruc­ture is under severe pressure. It would be prudent to observe social distancing and refrain from participat­ing in congregati­ons rather than voice opposition to the official order restrainin­g the same. Jagannath Rath Yatra is one of the many traditions that this country will witness. At a time when routine worship in temples, mosques and churches remains a risk, petitions seeking to lift the stay order on traditions attracting masses to congregati­ons is simply unsettling. True that Constituti­on provides for religious freedom but it simultaneo­usly restricts the freedom on account of health — Article 25 (1) — and if public, surprising­ly or deliberate­ly, overlooks the outstandin­g risk, it remains the duty of courts to do the right thing without a second thought.

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