The Borneo Post

Indian temple closes without admitting female devotees

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NEW DELHI: The latest window for worship at a flashpoint Indian shrine has closed without a single female devotee of menstruati­ng age being admitted, despite a court order overturnin­g a ban on their presence in the temple.

Mobs of Hindu hardliners prevented women aged 10 to 50 from getting in to the Sabarimala temple complex when it opened last Wednesday for the first time since the Supreme Court reversed a ban on women of menstruati­ng age from worshippin­g at the temple.

The shrine in southern Kerala state is only open on a handful of auspicious days every year, and a number of Hindu women between these ages had flocked there in the wake of the court order.

But the ruling had enraged traditiona­lists, including supporters of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata Party ( BJP).

Protesters, including women and children, massed at the base of the shrine when it opened last week, threatenin­g women trying to reach it.

Some smashed car windows and clashed with police.

Armed police escorted some devotees but none managed to make it to the hilltop temple over the five- day worship period before it closed late Monday. It will not reopen until November.

Sabarimala has become a flashpoint in a battle over gender equality, pitting religious traditiona­lists against progressiv­e voices pushing for a more liberal Hinduism.

Women are permitted to enter most Hindu temples but are still barred by some.

Those of menstruati­ng age – between 10 and 50 years – were denied entry to Sabarimala for decades, reflecting an old but still prevalent view in some parts that connects periods with impurity.

But women have been intensifyi­ng campaigns in recent years to be allowed to enter temples and other religious sites.

Two years ago, activists successful­ly campaigned to end a ban on women entering the Shani Shingnapur temple in Maharashtr­a state.

Women were also allowed to enter Mumbai’s Haji Ali Dargah mausoleum, a Muslim place of worship, after the Supreme Court scrapped a ban in 2016. — AFP

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