The Asian Age

SC rejects basis of ‘ love jihad’

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The Supreme Court’s ruling on Thursday upholding the validity of the marriage of a young Hindu adult in Kerala, Akhila Asokan, who converted to Islam in 2016 and took the Islamic name of Hadiya, and married a young Muslim man, Shafin Jahan, in July, is important on several grounds. The three- judge bench, headed by the Chief Justice of India, drew pointed attention to an important aspect of the Constituti­on — that an adult of sound mind can choose to follow any religion ( or not follow any) and marry anyone at all, even by giving up the religion of her/ his parents.

Families and the wider society often interfere in matters that the judgment dealt with, and unthinking­ly intrude upon an individual’s inherent right to privacy, which an earlier judgment of the court held was like a fundamenta­l right.

Worryingly, the political space captured by the RSS- BJP in recent times has permitted prominent individual­s associated with it to endorse the egregious idea of “love jihad”, which seeks to suggest that Muslim men are coercing or inveigling Hindu women into marriage with a view to religious conversion. The court’s judgment has the effect of outlawing “love jihad” as a concept. In doing so, it holds the Kerala high court — which had annulled Hadiya’s marriage last year — guilty of wrongheade­d deliberati­on. If there is forced conversion or marriage on false grounds, it must be duly establishe­d in court. The Supreme Court has also essentiall­y thrown cold water on the ardour of the National Investigat­ion Agency, which now says it has no evidence that the young couple had planned to escape to Syria to join ISIS.

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