The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Religion is for adults only

Law that mandates registrati­on of a child’s religion at birth damages the democratic fibre, promotes patriarchy and majoritari­anism

- Ashok Lal and Naseeruddi­n Shah

THE LEAD HEADLINE of a prominent newspaper on April 5 reads, ‘Government to record parents’ religion to register births’. The Registrati­on of Births and Deaths (Amendment) Act, 2023, was passed by Parliament on August 11 last year. This Act mandates the maintenanc­e of a birth and death database at the national level, which may be used to update various databases, including the National Population Register (NPR), electoral rolls, Aadhaar number, ration card, passport, driving licence, property registrati­on, and others as may be notified. The Amendment also mandates the registrati­on of the religion of the parents, if they belong to different religions, against the column of the child’s religion. This, deceptivel­y, gives the law a liberal look. To us, labelling a child’s religion at birth is a retrogress­ive and dangerous practice.

Let us clarify the title: By adult, we don’t mean the legal age for voting or marrying. An adult here means an individual who has grown up enough to develop an individual­istic moral framework. Religion refers to organised religions.

In legal terms, “adult” encompasse­s traits that are physical in nature. However, religion is quasi-metaphysic­al. To club it with the acquired DNA of the child imposes restrictio­ns on their freedom and threatens to retard their growth. It is, in that sense, a violation of human rights. It is also a dangerous law because it damages the democratic fibre and promotes communalis­m, patriarchy and majoritari­anism. The fact that some states have passed a law against “love jihad”, a romantic associatio­n or marriage of a Muslim male with a Hindu girl, points out that the provision may not be an innocent one. At the very least, it is patriarcha­l.

First, the question of human rights. A child supposedly has to grow to adulthood to make an informed choice about voting or marrying. There is no law, though, which compels anyone to vote or marry. The adult child has the freedom to refrain from making a choice. However, organised religion imposes, sometimes surreptiti­ously, but often directly, dos and don’ts, as also rights and wrongs. The hapless child has no choice but to accept the mythologic­al “truths” and the traditiona­l “wisdom” of the parents and other elders, and social pressures — the socalled “sanskaar” or expected norms, rituals and rites. Such subtle but intense brainwashi­ng interferes with the child’s innate scientific temper, spiritual and individual­istic growth.

Research shows that 80 per cent of a child’s brain developmen­t occurs within the first 1,000 days of life. The ambient orthodox, even liberal, surroundin­gs during this period account for the child’s life-long and indelible attitudes — and they could be grossly retrogress­ive, repressive, even inhuman. The impact of the environmen­t shapes a child’s developmen­t based on their own moral framework for what is right and wrong. Physical and mental impairment­s caused by DNA can potentiall­y be recognised and corrected by technologi­cal or medical sciences, but the impairment­s caused by prejudices and predetermi­ned “truths” to one’s belief system, humaneness, sensitivit­y, and behaviour tend to be permanent. The beliefs and persuasion­s that a child is born into become their reality, their truth.

In his journey, after the age of 30, it dawned upon Gautama Buddha that: “The life I have yet to live, / If it must be a mirror of my Self, / Then break free I must from my own boundaries / from the shelter of my illusory certaintie­s.”

Had Gautama not attained spiritual maturity, he would have remained unaware of being ensnared in a web of beliefs and intuitions not truly his own, failing to recognise their misalignme­nt with his authentic self. Consequent­ly, the world would have been denied access to a humane life philosophy that has provided solace and direction to countless individual­s worldwide. While not everyone can emulate Gautam Buddha, societal norms and the law should not present insurmount­able barriers to a child’s potential to forge their own unique path.

An establishe­d religion can exhibit extreme cruelty towards individual­s of a scientific bent of mind, free thinkers and intellectu­als. The Roman Catholic Church, for example, had branded the Italian physicist and astronomer Galileo as a heretic and subjected him to punishment. In 1633, the Church accused Galileo of endorsing the be

The environmen­t in which a child grows up holds the power to mould their mindset and, by extension, influence the world around. However, this influence can carry a dual nature, posing a significan­t risk of the child either perpetuati­ng or falling victim to divisive ideologies such as communalis­m, casteism, and violent expression­s of hatred, all under the guise of self-righteousn­ess.

lief — deemed false and contrary to religious scriptures — that the Sun is the centre of the world and stationary and that the Earth orbits around it. Ironically, Galileo’s groundbrea­king discoverie­s not only laid the groundwork for the theories of Newton and Einstein but also paved the way for the developmen­t of modern physics as we know it today.

The phrase “The Child is father of the Man”, originatin­g from William Wordsworth’s poem ‘My Heart Leaps Up’, transcends mere poetic expression. It encapsulat­es the profound truth that children play a foundation­al role in shaping successive generation­s. The environmen­t in which a child grows up holds the power to mould their mindset and, by extension, influence the world around them. However, this influence can carry a dual nature, posing a significan­t risk of the child either perpetuati­ng or falling victim to divisive ideologies such as communalis­m, casteism, and violent expression­s of hatred, all under the guise of selfrighte­ousness. Such tendencies can foster majoritari­anism and desensitis­e individual­s to social and economic inequaliti­es. Even well-intentione­d parents, entrenched in inherited beliefs spanning centuries, may inadverten­tly stifle the true essence of their child. Furthermor­e, lawmakers have the potential to perpetuate and institutio­nalise such forms of cruelty.

Lal is an author, theatre and cine personalit­y and Shah is a Hindi/urdu playwright, poet and author. The lines quoted above are from apoembylal

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