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Secularism in India

With the Forty-second Amendment of the Constitution of India enacted in 1976,[1] the Preamble to the Constitution asserted that India is a secular nation.[2][3] However, the Supreme Court of India in the 1994 case S. R. Bommai v. Union of India established the fact that India was secular since the formation of the republic.[4] The judgement established that there is separation of state and religion. It stated "In matters of State, religion has no place. And if the Constitution requires the State to be secular in thought and action, the same requirement attaches to political parties as well. The Constitution does not recognize, it does not permit, mixing religion and State power. That is the constitutional injunction. None can say otherwise so long as this Constitution governs this country. Politics and religion cannot be mixed. Any State government which pursues nonsecular on policies or nonsecular course of action acts contrary to the constitutional mandate and renders itself amenable to action under Article 356".[4][5][6] Furthermore, constitutionally, state-owned educational institutions are prohibited from imparting religious instructions, and Article 27 of the constitution prohibits using tax-payers money for the promotion of any religion.[7]

Officially, secularism has always inspired modern India.[2] However, India's secularism does not completely separate religion and state.[2] The Indian Constitution has allowed extensive interference of the state in religious affairs, such as constitutional abolition of untouchability, opening up of all Hindu temples to people of 'lower caste' etc.[8] The degree of separation between the state and religion has varied with several court and executive orders in place since the birth of the Republic.[9] In matters of law in modern India, personal laws – on matters such as marriage, divorce, inheritance, alimony – varies if one is a Muslim or not (Muslims have an option to marry under secular law if they wish).[10][11][12] The Indian Constitution permits partial financial support for religious schools as well as the financing of religious buildings and infrastructure by the state.[13] The Islamic Central Wakf Council and many Hindu temples of great religious significance are administered and managed (through funding) by the federal and the state governments in accordance with the Places of Worship (Special Provisions) Act, 1991, and the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains Act, 1958, which mandates state maintenance of religious buildings that were created before August 15, 1947 (the date of Indian independence), while also retaining their religious character.[12][14][15][16] The attempt to respect religious law has created a number of issues in India, such as acceptability of polygamy, unequal inheritance rights, extra judicial unilateral divorce rights favorable to some males, and conflicting interpretations of religious books.[17][18]

Secularism as practiced in India, with its marked differences with Western practice of secularism, is a controversial topic in India. Supporters of the Indian concept of secularism claim it respects "minorities and pluralism". Critics claim the Indian form of secularism as "pseudo-secularism".[2][19] Supporters state that any attempt to introduce a uniform civil code, that is equal laws for every citizen irrespective of his or her religion, would impose majoritarian Hindu sensibilities and ideals.[20][12] Critics state that India's acceptance of Sharia and religious laws violates the principle of Equality before the law.[21][22]

History

 
Ellora Caves, a world heritage site, are in the Indian state of Maharashtra. The 35 caves were carved into the vertical face of the Charanandri hills between the 5th and 10th centuries. The 12 Buddhist caves, 17 Hindu caves and 5 Jain caves, built in proximity, suggest religious co-existence and secular sentiments for diversity prevalent during pre-Islamic period of Indian history.[23][24]

Ashoka about 2200 years ago, Harsha about 1400 years ago accepted and patronised different religions.[3] The people in ancient India had freedom of religion, and the state granted citizenship to each individual regardless of whether someone's religion was Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism or any other.[25] Ellora cave temples built next to each other between 5th and 10th centuries, for example, shows a coexistence of religions and a spirit of acceptance of different faiths.[26][27]

There should not be honour of one's own (religious) sect and condemnation of others without any grounds.

— Ashoka, Rock Edicts XII, about 250 BC, [25][28]

This approach to interfaith relations changed with the arrival of Islam and establishment of Delhi Sultanate in North India by the 12th century, followed by Deccan Sultanate in Central India.[25] The political doctrines of Islam, as well as its religious views were at odds with doctrines of Hinduism, Christianity and other Indian religions.[3][29] New temples and monasteries were not allowed. As with Levant, Southeast Europe and Spain, Islamic rulers in India treated Hindus as dhimmis in exchange of annual payment of jizya taxes, in a sharia-based state jurisprudence. With the arrival of Mughal era, Sharia was imposed with continued zeal, with Akbar – the Mughal Emperor – as the first significant exception.[25] Akbar sought to fuse ideas, professed equality between Islam and other religions of India, forbade forced conversions to Islam, abolished religion-based discriminatory jizya taxes, and welcomed building of Hindu temples.[30][31] However, the descendants of Akbar, particularly Aurangzeb, reverted to treating Islam as the primary state religion, destruction of temples, and reimposed religion-based discriminatory jizya taxes.[3]

 
Akbar's tomb at Sikandra, near Agra India. Akbar's instruction for his mausoleum was that it incorporate elements from different religions including Islam and Hinduism.

After Aurangzeb, India came into control of East India Company and the British Raj. The colonial administrators did not separate religion from state, but marked the end of equal hierarchy between Islam and Hinduism, and reintroduced the notion of equality before the law for Hindus, Christians and Muslims.[17] The British Empire sought commerce and trade, with a policy of neutrality to all of India's diverse religions.[25] Before 1858, the Britishers followed the policy of patronizing and supporting the native religions as the earlier rulers had done.[32] By the mid-19th century, the British Raj administered India, in matters related to marriage, inheritance of property and divorces, according to personal laws based on each Indian subject's religion, according to interpretations of respective religious documents by Islamic jurists, Hindu pundits and other religious scholars. In 1864, the Raj eliminated all religious jurists, pandits and scholars because the interpretations of the same verse or religious document varied, the scholars and jurists disagreed with each other, and the process of justice had become inconsistent and suspiciously corrupt.[17] The late 19th century marked the arrival of Anglo-Hindu and Anglo-Muslim personal laws to divide adjacent communities by British, where the governance did not separate the state and religion, but continued to differentiate and administer people based on their personal religion.[17][33] The British Raj provided the Indian Christians, Indian Zoroastrians and others with their own personal laws, such as the Indian Succession Act of 1850, Special Marriage Act of 1872 and other laws that were similar to Common Laws in Europe.[34]

For several years past it has been the cherished desire of the Muslims of British India that Customary Law should in no case take the place of Muslim Personal Law. The matter has been repeatedly agitated in the press as well as on the platform. The Jamiat-ul-Ulema-i-Hind, the greatest Moslem religious body has supported the demand and invited the attention of all concerned to the urgent necessity of introducing a measure to this effect.

— Preamble to Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act, 1937, [35][36]

Although the British administration provided India with a common law, its divide and rule policy contributed to promoting discord between communities.[37] The Morley-Minto reforms provided separate electorate to Muslims, justifying the demands of the Muslim league.

In the first half of 20th century, the British Raj faced increasing amounts of social activism for self-rule by a disparate groups such as those led by Hindu Gandhi and Muslim Jinnah; the colonial administration, under pressure, enacted a number of laws before India's independence in 1947, that continue to be the laws of India in 2013. One such law enacted during the colonial era was the 1937 Indian Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act, which instead of separating state and religion for Western secularism, did the reverse.[38]

It, along with additional laws such as Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act of 1939 that followed, established the principle that religious laws of Indian Muslims can be their personal laws. It also set the precedent that religious law, such as sharia, can overlap and supersede common and civil laws, that elected legislators may not revise or enact laws that supersede religious laws, that people of one nation need not live under the same laws, and that law enforcement process for different individuals shall depend on their religion.[38][17] The Indian Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act of 1937 continues to be the law of land of modern India for Indian Muslims, while parliament-based, non-religious uniform civil code passed in mid-1950s applies to Indians who are Hindus (which includes Buddhists, Jains, Sikhs, Parsees), as well as to Indian Christians and Jews.[17][39]

Current status

The 7th schedule of Indian constitution places religious institutions, charities and trusts into so-called Concurrent List, which means that both the central government of India, and various state governments in India can make their own laws about religious institutions, charities and trusts. If there is a conflict between central government enacted law and state government law, then the central government law prevails. This principle of overlap, rather than separation of religion and state in India was further recognised in a series of constitutional amendments starting with Article 290 in 1956, to the addition of word 'secular' to the Preamble of Indian Constitution in 1975.[17][3]

 
The central and state governments of India finance and manage religious buildings and infrastructure. Above, the inauguration of National Waqf Development Corporation Limited in 2014 for Waqf properties.[40]

The overlap of religion and state, through Concurrent List structure, has given various religions in India, state support to religious schools and personal laws. This state intervention while resonant with the dictates of each religion, are unequal and conflicting. For example, a 1951 Religious and Charitable Endowment Indian law allows state governments to forcibly take over, own and operate Hindu temples,[41] and collect revenue from offerings and redistribute that revenue to any non-temple purposes including maintenance of religious institutions opposed to the temple;[42] Indian law also allows Islamic and other minority religious schools to receive partial financial support from state and central government of India, to offer religious indoctrination, if the school agrees that the student has an option to opt out from religious indoctrination if he or she so asks, and that the school will not discriminate any student based on religion, race or any other grounds. Educational institutions wholly owned and operated by government are prohibited from imparting religious indoctrination, but religious sects and endowments may open their own school, impart religious indoctrination and have a right to partial state financial assistance.[3]

In terms of religions of India with significant populations, only Islam has religious laws in form of sharia which India allows as Muslim Personal Law.[43]

Secularism in India mean the separation of religion from state. Religious laws in personal domain, for Muslim Indians; and currently, in some situations such as religious indoctrination schools the state partially finances certain religious schools. These differences have led a number of scholars[12][44] to declare that India is not a secular state, as the word secularism is widely understood in the West and elsewhere; rather it is a strategy for political goals in a nation with a complex history, and one that achieves the opposite of its stated intentions. The attempt to have a Uniform Civil Code has long been discussed as a means to realize a secular Indian state.[12][44] The overlap between religion and state has created tension between supporters of Indian form of secularism and the supporters of Hindu nationalism. Hindu nationalists use the Uniform Civil Code platform to agitate their base, even though there has been no actual implementation.[45] They characterize secularism as practiced in India as "pseudo-secularism", a camouflaged hypocrisy for the political "appeasement of minorities".[19][46][47] As of 28 July 2020, there were pleas going on Supreme court of India to remove the words secular and socialist from the Preamble to the Constitution of India.[48][49]

Demand for Hindu Rashtra

Most Right Wing Hindu organisations like RSS, Bajrang Dal, Vishwa Hindu Parishad have demanded that India should be declared a "Hindu nation" by constitution to safeguard the rights and life of Hindus in this largest democracy.[50][51][52] As far citizens concerned, only 7/20th Indian Hindus are in the favour of making India as Hindu Rashtra.[53] Nearly two-thirds of Indian Hindus (64% of the population) say's that it is very important to be Hindu to be truly Indian or citizen of India.[54]

As of 28 July 2020, there were pleas going on Supreme Court of India to remove the words secular and socialist from the Preamble to the Constitution of India.[55] Recently ex-Rajya Sabha MP Subramanian Swamy's have made Plead to Supreme Court of India for Deletion of "Socialist" & "Secular" words from Preamble to the Constitution of India.[56][57]

Comparison with Western secularism

In the West, the word secular implies three things: freedom of religion, equal citizenship to each citizen regardless of their religion, and the separation of religion and state (polity).[58] One of the core principles in the constitution of Western democracies has been this separation, with the state asserting its political authority in matters of law, while accepting every individual's right to pursue his or her own religion and the right of religion to shape its own concepts of spirituality. Everyone is equal under law, and subject to the same laws irrespective of his or her religion, in the West.[58]

In contrast, in India, the word secular means thorough-going separation of religion and state.[59] According to the Constitution of India, states Smith, there is no official state religion in India, schools that are wholly owned by the state can not mandate religious instruction (Article 28), and tax-payers money cannot be used to support any religion (Article 27).[7] Overlap is permitted, whereby institutions that are not entirely financed by the state can mandate religious instruction, and state can provide financial aid to maintain religious buildings or infrastructure in accordance with law.[60] Furthermore, India's constitutional framework allows "extensive state interference in religious affairs".[8]

According to R.A. Jahagirdar, in the Indian context, secularism has been interpreted as the equality before law, including of all religions, while the state is neutral.[61] Article 44 of the Directive Principles of State Policy adds, "the state shall endeavor to secure for the citizens a uniform civil code throughout the territory of India."[11] This intent for secular personal laws has been unsettling especially to Indian Muslims, states Smith, in part because they view the alteration of Muslim personal law to be a "grave violation of their freedom of religion".[62]

The term secularism in India also differs from the French concept for secularity, namely laïcité.[2][63] While the French concept demands absence of governmental institutions in religion, as well as absence of religion in governmental institutions and schools; the Indian concept, in contrast, provides financial support to religious schools. The Indian structure has created incentives for various religious denominations to start and maintain schools, impart religious education (optionally), and receive partial but significant financial support from the Indian government. Similarly, the Indian government has established statutory institutions to regulate and financially administer the historic Islamic Central Wakf Council, historic Hindu temples, Buddhist monasteries, and certain Christian religious institutions.[12][64]

Law

Indian concept of secularism, where religious laws are applicable to certain minorities and the state is expected to even-handedly involve itself in religion, is a controversial subject.[17][20][44] Any attempts and demand by the Indian populace to a uniform civil code is considered a threat to right to religious personal laws by Indian Muslims.[3][65]

Shah Bano case

In 1978, the Shah Bano case brought the secularism debate along with a demand for uniform civil code in India to the forefront.[20][21]

Shah Bano was a 62-year-old Muslim Indian who was divorced by her husband of 44 years in 1978. Indian Muslim Personal Law required her husband to pay no alimony. Shah Bano sued for regular maintenance payments under Section 125 of the Criminal Procedure Code, 1978.[21] Shah Bano won her case, as well appeals to the highest court. Along with alimony, the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of India wrote in his opinion just how unfairly Islamic personal laws treated women and thus how necessary it was for the nation to adopt a Uniform Civil Code. The Chief Justice further ruled that no authoritative text of Islam forbade the payment of regular maintenance to ex-wives.[20][43]

The Shah Bano ruling immediately triggered a controversy and mass demonstrations by Muslim men. The Islamic Clergy and the Muslim Personal Law Board of India, argued against the ruling.[43] Shortly after the Supreme Court's ruling, the Indian government with Rajiv Gandhi as Prime Minister,[66] enacted a new law which deprived all Muslim women, and only Muslim women, of the right of maintenance guaranteed to women of Hindu, Christian, Parsees, Jews and other religions. Indian Muslims consider the new 1986 law, which selectively exempts them from maintenance payment to ex-wife because of their religion, as secular because it respects Muslim men's religious rights and recognises that they are culturally different from Indian men and women of other religions. Muslim opponents argue that any attempt to introduce Uniform Civil Code, that is equal laws for every human being independent of his or her religion, would reflect majoritarian Hindu sensibilities and ideals.[20][67]

Islamic feminists

The controversy is not limited to Hindu versus Muslim populations in India. The Islamic feminists movement in India, for example, claim[68] that the issue with Muslim Personal Law in India is a historic and ongoing misinterpretation of the Quran. The feminists claim that the Quran grants Muslim women rights that in practice are routinely denied to them by male Muslim ulema in India. They claim that the 'patriarchal' interpretations of the Quran on the illiterate Muslim Indian masses is abusive, and they demand that they have a right to read the Quran for themselves and interpret it in a woman-friendly way.[citation needed]India has no legal mechanism to accept or enforce the demands of these Islamic feminists over religious law.[citation needed]

Women's rights in India

Some religious rights granted by Indian concept of secularism, which are claimed as abusive against Indian women, include child marriage,[65] polygamy, unequal inheritance rights of women and men, extrajudicial unilateral divorce rights of Muslim man that are not allowed to a Muslim woman, and subjective nature of shariat courts, jamaats, dar-ul quzat and religious qazis who preside over Islamic family law matters.[17][18] Triple Talaq was banned in India, following a historic bill being passed on 30 July 2019.[69]

State subsidy for religious pilgrimage

India continued offering liberal subsidies for religious pilgrimage after 1950, under its polymorphous interpretation of secularism.[70] The largest and most controversial has been the Haj subsidy program for the Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca, which was criticized as benefitting affluent Muslims and discriminatory against Hindus and Christians who did not get similar subsidy for trips to their own holy places.[70] The central government spent about $120 million in Haj subsidies in 2011.[71] In 2012, the Supreme Court of India ordered an end to the religious subsidies program within 10 years.[72] According to a Wall Street Journal article, Indian Muslim leaders supported an end to the Hajj subsidies, because "hajj must be performed with money righteously earned by a Muslim, and not on money from charity or borrowings. ."[71]

Goa

Goa is the only state in India which has Uniform Civil Code.[73] This system is derived from Portuguese colonization and is maintained until today.[74] The Goa Civil Code, also called the Goa Family Law, is the set of civil laws that governs the residents of the Indian state of Goa. In India, as a whole, there are religion-specific civil codes that separately govern adherents of different religions. Goa is an exception to that rule, in that a single secular code/law governs all Goans, irrespective of religion, ethnicity or linguistic affiliation. It suggests the possibility to establish uniform civil code within a country having rich religious diversity like India.[74] There are still problems in terms of actual implementation in everyday life.[75]

Article 25(2)(b)

Article 25(2)(b) of the Indian constitution clubs Sikhs, Buddhists and Jains along with Hindus, a position contested by some of these community leaders.[76]

Views

 
A Hindu temple in Jaipur, India, merging the traditional tiered tower of Hinduism, the pyramid stupa of Buddhism and the dome of Islam. The marble sides are carved with figures of Hindu deities, as well as Christian Saints and Jesus Christ.

Writing in the Wall Street Journal, Sadanand Dhume criticises Indian "Secularism" as a fraud and a failure, since it isn't really "secularism" as it is understood in the western world (as separation of religion and state) but more along the lines of religious appeasement. He writes that the flawed understanding of secularism among India's left wing intelligentsia has led Indian politicians to pander to religious leaders and preachers including Zakir Naik, and has led India to take a soft stand against Islamic terrorism, religious militancy and communal disharmony in general.[22]

Historian Ronald Inden writes:[77]

Nehru's India was supposed to be committed to 'secularism'. The idea here in its weaker publicly reiterated form was that the government would not interfere in 'personal' religious matters and would create circumstances in which people of all religions could live in harmony. The idea in its stronger, unofficially stated form was that in order to modernise, India would have to set aside centuries of traditional religious ignorance and superstition and eventually eliminate Hinduism and Islam from people's lives altogether. After Independence, governments implemented secularism mostly by refusing to recognise the religious pasts of Indian nationalism, whether Hindu or Muslim, and at the same time (inconsistently) by retaining Muslim 'personal law' .[77]

Amartya Sen, the Indian Nobel Laureate, suggests[78] that secularism in the political – as opposed to ecclesiastical – sense requires the separation of the state from any particular religious order. This, claims Sen, can be interpreted in at least two different ways: "The first view argues the state be equidistant from all religions – refusing to take sides and having a neutral attitude towards them. The second view insists that the state must not have any relation at all with any religion," quotes Minhaz Merchant.[79] In both interpretations, secularism goes against giving any religion a privileged position in the activities of the state. Sen argues that the first form is more suited to India, where there is no demand that the state stay clear of any association with any religious matter whatsoever. Rather what is needed is to make sure that in so far as the state has to deal with different religions and members of different religious communities, there must be a basic symmetry of treatment.[79] Sen does not claim that modern India is symmetric in its treatment or offer any views of whether acceptance of sharia in matters such as child marriage is equivalent to having a neutral attitude towards a religion. Critics of Sen claim that secularism, as practised in India, is not the secularism of first or second variety Sen enumerates.[79]

Pakistani columnist Farman Nawaz in his article "Why Indian Muslim Ullema are not popular in Pakistan?" states "Maulana Arshad Madani stated that seventy years ago the cause of division of India was sectarianism and if today again the same temptation will raise its head then results will be the same. Maulana Arshad Madani considers secularism inevitable for the unity of India." Maulana Arshad Madani is a staunch critic of sectarianism in India. He is of the opinion that India was divided in 1947 because of sectarianism. He suggests secularism inevitable for the solidarity and integrity of India.[80]

India’s former vice president Hamid Ansari said in an interview published by The Wire on August 7, 2022 that secularism is critical to the integrity of the country and its steady weakening is endangering India’s future. He also said that India’s 15% Muslim population is hurt by the prejudice they face and feel they are being ill-treated. He expressed his concerns about India’s future in this hostile environment but hoped that things will change.[81]

See also

References

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  66. ^ Thomas R. Metcalf (2002). A concise history of India. Cambridge University Press. p. 257. ISBN 978-0-521-63974-3. Rajiv Gandhi cared little about the Shah Bano case himself, and no doubt would have preferred a common civil code; nevertheless he saw in the opposition to this supreme court decision a heaven-sent opportunity to draw Minority voters to the Congress cause.
  67. ^ Kirti Singh, "Obstacles to Women's Rights in India" in Rebecca J. Cook, ed. Human Rights of Women: National and International Perspectives (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1994), pp. 375–396
  68. ^ Sylvia Vatuk, "Islamic Feminism in India: Indian Muslim Women Activists and the Reform of Muslim Personal Law", Modern Asian Studies, Volume 42, Issue 2–3, March 2008, pp. 489–518
  69. ^ "History made, triple talaq bill passed by Parliament". India Today Web Desk. 30 July 2019.
  70. ^ a b Rao, B. (2006). "The Variant Meanings of Secularism in India: Notes Toward Conceptual Clarifications". Journal of Church and State. Oxford University Press. 48 (1): 59–60, 47–81. doi:10.1093/jcs/48.1.47.
  71. ^ a b Agarwal, Vibhuti (10 May 2012). "Should the Government Stop Funding the Hajj?". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
  72. ^ Achin, Kurt (10 May 2012). "Indian Supreme Court Orders End to Hajj Subsidies". Voice of America. Retrieved 3 January 2020.
  73. ^ Fernandes, Aureliano (2000). "Political Transition in Post-Colonial Societies. Goa in Perspective". Lusotopie. 7 (1): 341–358.
  74. ^ a b Vohra, Rytim; Maya (2014). "Empirical Research on the Need for Uniform Civil Code in India" (PDF). International Journal of Law and Legal Jurisprudence Studies. 2: 245–256.
  75. ^ Desouza, Shaila (May 2004). "A Situational Analysis of Women in Goa" (PDF). National Commission for Women.
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  80. ^ Farman Nawaz. "Why Indian Muslim Ullema are not popular in Pakistan?". The Pashtun Times.
  81. ^ "Watch | Hamid Ansari—Secularism Critical for India; I'm Worried About Our Future; Muslims Hurt by Prejudice". The Wire. Retrieved 7 August 2022.

Further reading

Scholarly works
  • Smith, Donald Eugene (2011) [first published 1963]. India as a Secular State. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-7778-2., Archive
  • Chatterjee, Nandini (2011). The Making of Indian Secularism: Empire, Law and Christianity, 1830-1960. Palgrave Macmillan UK. ISBN 978-0-230-29808-8.
  • Larson, Gerald James, ed. (2001). Religion and Personal Law in Secular India: A Call to Judgment. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-253-21480-7.
  • Cossman, Brenda; Kapur, Ratna (2001). Secularism's Last Sigh?: Hindutva and the (mis)rule of Law. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-565798-2.
  • Rajagopalan, Swarna (2003). "Secularism in India: Accepted Principle, Contentious Interpretation". In William Safran (ed.). The Secular and the Sacred: Nation, Religion, and Politics. Psychology Press. pp. 241–. ISBN 978-0-7146-5368-6.
  • Vivek Swaroop Sharma (2016). "Secularism and Religious Violence in Hinduism and Islam" in Economic and Political Weekly 51 (18), pp. 19–21.
Popular works
  • Dalwai, Hamid Umar (1968). Muslim Politics in Secular India. Hind Pocket Books.
  • Vivek Swaroop Sharma (2015). "The Myth of a Liberal India" in The National Interest 140 pp. 66–71.

External links

  • India: Secularism and Freedom of Religion University of Vermont, United States
  • Legalizing Religion: Indian Supreme Court and Secularism Ronojoy Sen, University of Hawaii
  • Republic of India - Legal systems, constitutional history and secularism Emory Law School, Atlanta
  • Secularism In India : History, Implications and Alternatives

secularism, india, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, m. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message With the Forty second Amendment of the Constitution of India enacted in 1976 1 the Preamble to the Constitution asserted that India is a secular nation 2 3 However the Supreme Court of India in the 1994 case S R Bommai v Union of India established the fact that India was secular since the formation of the republic 4 The judgement established that there is separation of state and religion It stated In matters of State religion has no place And if the Constitution requires the State to be secular in thought and action the same requirement attaches to political parties as well The Constitution does not recognize it does not permit mixing religion and State power That is the constitutional injunction None can say otherwise so long as this Constitution governs this country Politics and religion cannot be mixed Any State government which pursues nonsecular on policies or nonsecular course of action acts contrary to the constitutional mandate and renders itself amenable to action under Article 356 4 5 6 Furthermore constitutionally state owned educational institutions are prohibited from imparting religious instructions and Article 27 of the constitution prohibits using tax payers money for the promotion of any religion 7 Officially secularism has always inspired modern India 2 However India s secularism does not completely separate religion and state 2 The Indian Constitution has allowed extensive interference of the state in religious affairs such as constitutional abolition of untouchability opening up of all Hindu temples to people of lower caste etc 8 The degree of separation between the state and religion has varied with several court and executive orders in place since the birth of the Republic 9 In matters of law in modern India personal laws on matters such as marriage divorce inheritance alimony varies if one is a Muslim or not Muslims have an option to marry under secular law if they wish 10 11 12 The Indian Constitution permits partial financial support for religious schools as well as the financing of religious buildings and infrastructure by the state 13 The Islamic Central Wakf Council and many Hindu temples of great religious significance are administered and managed through funding by the federal and the state governments in accordance with the Places of Worship Special Provisions Act 1991 and the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Sites and Remains Act 1958 which mandates state maintenance of religious buildings that were created before August 15 1947 the date of Indian independence while also retaining their religious character 12 14 15 16 The attempt to respect religious law has created a number of issues in India such as acceptability of polygamy unequal inheritance rights extra judicial unilateral divorce rights favorable to some males and conflicting interpretations of religious books 17 18 Secularism as practiced in India with its marked differences with Western practice of secularism is a controversial topic in India Supporters of the Indian concept of secularism claim it respects minorities and pluralism Critics claim the Indian form of secularism as pseudo secularism 2 19 Supporters state that any attempt to introduce a uniform civil code that is equal laws for every citizen irrespective of his or her religion would impose majoritarian Hindu sensibilities and ideals 20 12 Critics state that India s acceptance of Sharia and religious laws violates the principle of Equality before the law 21 22 Contents 1 History 2 Current status 3 Demand for Hindu Rashtra 4 Comparison with Western secularism 5 Law 5 1 Shah Bano case 5 2 Islamic feminists 5 3 Women s rights in India 5 4 State subsidy for religious pilgrimage 5 5 Goa 5 6 Article 25 2 b 6 Views 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory Edit Ellora Caves a world heritage site are in the Indian state of Maharashtra The 35 caves were carved into the vertical face of the Charanandri hills between the 5th and 10th centuries The 12 Buddhist caves 17 Hindu caves and 5 Jain caves built in proximity suggest religious co existence and secular sentiments for diversity prevalent during pre Islamic period of Indian history 23 24 Ashoka about 2200 years ago Harsha about 1400 years ago accepted and patronised different religions 3 The people in ancient India had freedom of religion and the state granted citizenship to each individual regardless of whether someone s religion was Hinduism Buddhism Jainism or any other 25 Ellora cave temples built next to each other between 5th and 10th centuries for example shows a coexistence of religions and a spirit of acceptance of different faiths 26 27 There should not be honour of one s own religious sect and condemnation of others without any grounds Ashoka Rock Edicts XII about 250 BC 25 28 This approach to interfaith relations changed with the arrival of Islam and establishment of Delhi Sultanate in North India by the 12th century followed by Deccan Sultanate in Central India 25 The political doctrines of Islam as well as its religious views were at odds with doctrines of Hinduism Christianity and other Indian religions 3 29 New temples and monasteries were not allowed As with Levant Southeast Europe and Spain Islamic rulers in India treated Hindus as dhimmis in exchange of annual payment of jizya taxes in a sharia based state jurisprudence With the arrival of Mughal era Sharia was imposed with continued zeal with Akbar the Mughal Emperor as the first significant exception 25 Akbar sought to fuse ideas professed equality between Islam and other religions of India forbade forced conversions to Islam abolished religion based discriminatory jizya taxes and welcomed building of Hindu temples 30 31 However the descendants of Akbar particularly Aurangzeb reverted to treating Islam as the primary state religion destruction of temples and reimposed religion based discriminatory jizya taxes 3 Akbar s tomb at Sikandra near Agra India Akbar s instruction for his mausoleum was that it incorporate elements from different religions including Islam and Hinduism After Aurangzeb India came into control of East India Company and the British Raj The colonial administrators did not separate religion from state but marked the end of equal hierarchy between Islam and Hinduism and reintroduced the notion of equality before the law for Hindus Christians and Muslims 17 The British Empire sought commerce and trade with a policy of neutrality to all of India s diverse religions 25 Before 1858 the Britishers followed the policy of patronizing and supporting the native religions as the earlier rulers had done 32 By the mid 19th century the British Raj administered India in matters related to marriage inheritance of property and divorces according to personal laws based on each Indian subject s religion according to interpretations of respective religious documents by Islamic jurists Hindu pundits and other religious scholars In 1864 the Raj eliminated all religious jurists pandits and scholars because the interpretations of the same verse or religious document varied the scholars and jurists disagreed with each other and the process of justice had become inconsistent and suspiciously corrupt 17 The late 19th century marked the arrival of Anglo Hindu and Anglo Muslim personal laws to divide adjacent communities by British where the governance did not separate the state and religion but continued to differentiate and administer people based on their personal religion 17 33 The British Raj provided the Indian Christians Indian Zoroastrians and others with their own personal laws such as the Indian Succession Act of 1850 Special Marriage Act of 1872 and other laws that were similar to Common Laws in Europe 34 For several years past it has been the cherished desire of the Muslims of British India that Customary Law should in no case take the place of Muslim Personal Law The matter has been repeatedly agitated in the press as well as on the platform The Jamiat ul Ulema i Hind the greatest Moslem religious body has supported the demand and invited the attention of all concerned to the urgent necessity of introducing a measure to this effect Preamble to Muslim Personal Law Shariat Application Act 1937 35 36 Although the British administration provided India with a common law its divide and rule policy contributed to promoting discord between communities 37 The Morley Minto reforms provided separate electorate to Muslims justifying the demands of the Muslim league In the first half of 20th century the British Raj faced increasing amounts of social activism for self rule by a disparate groups such as those led by Hindu Gandhi and Muslim Jinnah the colonial administration under pressure enacted a number of laws before India s independence in 1947 that continue to be the laws of India in 2013 One such law enacted during the colonial era was the 1937 Indian Muslim Personal Law Shariat Application Act which instead of separating state and religion for Western secularism did the reverse 38 It along with additional laws such as Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act of 1939 that followed established the principle that religious laws of Indian Muslims can be their personal laws It also set the precedent that religious law such as sharia can overlap and supersede common and civil laws that elected legislators may not revise or enact laws that supersede religious laws that people of one nation need not live under the same laws and that law enforcement process for different individuals shall depend on their religion 38 17 The Indian Muslim Personal Law Shariat Application Act of 1937 continues to be the law of land of modern India for Indian Muslims while parliament based non religious uniform civil code passed in mid 1950s applies to Indians who are Hindus which includes Buddhists Jains Sikhs Parsees as well as to Indian Christians and Jews 17 39 Current status EditThe 7th schedule of Indian constitution places religious institutions charities and trusts into so called Concurrent List which means that both the central government of India and various state governments in India can make their own laws about religious institutions charities and trusts If there is a conflict between central government enacted law and state government law then the central government law prevails This principle of overlap rather than separation of religion and state in India was further recognised in a series of constitutional amendments starting with Article 290 in 1956 to the addition of word secular to the Preamble of Indian Constitution in 1975 17 3 The central and state governments of India finance and manage religious buildings and infrastructure Above the inauguration of National Waqf Development Corporation Limited in 2014 for Waqf properties 40 The overlap of religion and state through Concurrent List structure has given various religions in India state support to religious schools and personal laws This state intervention while resonant with the dictates of each religion are unequal and conflicting For example a 1951 Religious and Charitable Endowment Indian law allows state governments to forcibly take over own and operate Hindu temples 41 and collect revenue from offerings and redistribute that revenue to any non temple purposes including maintenance of religious institutions opposed to the temple 42 Indian law also allows Islamic and other minority religious schools to receive partial financial support from state and central government of India to offer religious indoctrination if the school agrees that the student has an option to opt out from religious indoctrination if he or she so asks and that the school will not discriminate any student based on religion race or any other grounds Educational institutions wholly owned and operated by government are prohibited from imparting religious indoctrination but religious sects and endowments may open their own school impart religious indoctrination and have a right to partial state financial assistance 3 In terms of religions of India with significant populations only Islam has religious laws in form of sharia which India allows as Muslim Personal Law 43 Secularism in India mean the separation of religion from state Religious laws in personal domain for Muslim Indians and currently in some situations such as religious indoctrination schools the state partially finances certain religious schools These differences have led a number of scholars 12 44 to declare that India is not a secular state as the word secularism is widely understood in the West and elsewhere rather it is a strategy for political goals in a nation with a complex history and one that achieves the opposite of its stated intentions The attempt to have a Uniform Civil Code has long been discussed as a means to realize a secular Indian state 12 44 The overlap between religion and state has created tension between supporters of Indian form of secularism and the supporters of Hindu nationalism Hindu nationalists use the Uniform Civil Code platform to agitate their base even though there has been no actual implementation 45 They characterize secularism as practiced in India as pseudo secularism a camouflaged hypocrisy for the political appeasement of minorities 19 46 47 As of 28 July 2020 there were pleas going on Supreme court of India to remove the words secular and socialist from the Preamble to the Constitution of India 48 49 Demand for Hindu Rashtra EditMain articles Hindu Nationalism and Hindutva Most Right Wing Hindu organisations like RSS Bajrang Dal Vishwa Hindu Parishad have demanded that India should be declared a Hindu nation by constitution to safeguard the rights and life of Hindus in this largest democracy 50 51 52 As far citizens concerned only 7 20th Indian Hindus are in the favour of making India as Hindu Rashtra 53 Nearly two thirds of Indian Hindus 64 of the population say s that it is very important to be Hindu to be truly Indian or citizen of India 54 As of 28 July 2020 there were pleas going on Supreme Court of India to remove the words secular and socialist from the Preamble to the Constitution of India 55 Recently ex Rajya Sabha MP Subramanian Swamy s have made Plead to Supreme Court of India for Deletion of Socialist amp Secular words from Preamble to the Constitution of India 56 57 Comparison with Western secularism EditMain article Secularism In the West the word secular implies three things freedom of religion equal citizenship to each citizen regardless of their religion and the separation of religion and state polity 58 One of the core principles in the constitution of Western democracies has been this separation with the state asserting its political authority in matters of law while accepting every individual s right to pursue his or her own religion and the right of religion to shape its own concepts of spirituality Everyone is equal under law and subject to the same laws irrespective of his or her religion in the West 58 In contrast in India the word secular means thorough going separation of religion and state 59 According to the Constitution of India states Smith there is no official state religion in India schools that are wholly owned by the state can not mandate religious instruction Article 28 and tax payers money cannot be used to support any religion Article 27 7 Overlap is permitted whereby institutions that are not entirely financed by the state can mandate religious instruction and state can provide financial aid to maintain religious buildings or infrastructure in accordance with law 60 Furthermore India s constitutional framework allows extensive state interference in religious affairs 8 According to R A Jahagirdar in the Indian context secularism has been interpreted as the equality before law including of all religions while the state is neutral 61 Article 44 of the Directive Principles of State Policy adds the state shall endeavor to secure for the citizens a uniform civil code throughout the territory of India 11 This intent for secular personal laws has been unsettling especially to Indian Muslims states Smith in part because they view the alteration of Muslim personal law to be a grave violation of their freedom of religion 62 The term secularism in India also differs from the French concept for secularity namely laicite 2 63 While the French concept demands absence of governmental institutions in religion as well as absence of religion in governmental institutions and schools the Indian concept in contrast provides financial support to religious schools The Indian structure has created incentives for various religious denominations to start and maintain schools impart religious education optionally and receive partial but significant financial support from the Indian government Similarly the Indian government has established statutory institutions to regulate and financially administer the historic Islamic Central Wakf Council historic Hindu temples Buddhist monasteries and certain Christian religious institutions 12 64 Law EditIndian concept of secularism where religious laws are applicable to certain minorities and the state is expected to even handedly involve itself in religion is a controversial subject 17 20 44 Any attempts and demand by the Indian populace to a uniform civil code is considered a threat to right to religious personal laws by Indian Muslims 3 65 Shah Bano case Edit Main article Mohd Ahmed Khan v Shah Bano Begum In 1978 the Shah Bano case brought the secularism debate along with a demand for uniform civil code in India to the forefront 20 21 Shah Bano was a 62 year old Muslim Indian who was divorced by her husband of 44 years in 1978 Indian Muslim Personal Law required her husband to pay no alimony Shah Bano sued for regular maintenance payments under Section 125 of the Criminal Procedure Code 1978 21 Shah Bano won her case as well appeals to the highest court Along with alimony the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of India wrote in his opinion just how unfairly Islamic personal laws treated women and thus how necessary it was for the nation to adopt a Uniform Civil Code The Chief Justice further ruled that no authoritative text of Islam forbade the payment of regular maintenance to ex wives 20 43 The Shah Bano ruling immediately triggered a controversy and mass demonstrations by Muslim men The Islamic Clergy and the Muslim Personal Law Board of India argued against the ruling 43 Shortly after the Supreme Court s ruling the Indian government with Rajiv Gandhi as Prime Minister 66 enacted a new law which deprived all Muslim women and only Muslim women of the right of maintenance guaranteed to women of Hindu Christian Parsees Jews and other religions Indian Muslims consider the new 1986 law which selectively exempts them from maintenance payment to ex wife because of their religion as secular because it respects Muslim men s religious rights and recognises that they are culturally different from Indian men and women of other religions Muslim opponents argue that any attempt to introduce Uniform Civil Code that is equal laws for every human being independent of his or her religion would reflect majoritarian Hindu sensibilities and ideals 20 67 Islamic feminists Edit The controversy is not limited to Hindu versus Muslim populations in India The Islamic feminists movement in India for example claim 68 that the issue with Muslim Personal Law in India is a historic and ongoing misinterpretation of the Quran The feminists claim that the Quran grants Muslim women rights that in practice are routinely denied to them by male Muslim ulema in India They claim that the patriarchal interpretations of the Quran on the illiterate Muslim Indian masses is abusive and they demand that they have a right to read the Quran for themselves and interpret it in a woman friendly way citation needed India has no legal mechanism to accept or enforce the demands of these Islamic feminists over religious law citation needed Women s rights in India Edit Some religious rights granted by Indian concept of secularism which are claimed as abusive against Indian women include child marriage 65 polygamy unequal inheritance rights of women and men extrajudicial unilateral divorce rights of Muslim man that are not allowed to a Muslim woman and subjective nature of shariat courts jamaats dar ul quzat and religious qazis who preside over Islamic family law matters 17 18 Triple Talaq was banned in India following a historic bill being passed on 30 July 2019 69 State subsidy for religious pilgrimage Edit India continued offering liberal subsidies for religious pilgrimage after 1950 under its polymorphous interpretation of secularism 70 The largest and most controversial has been the Haj subsidy program for the Islamic pilgrimage to Mecca which was criticized as benefitting affluent Muslims and discriminatory against Hindus and Christians who did not get similar subsidy for trips to their own holy places 70 The central government spent about 120 million in Haj subsidies in 2011 71 In 2012 the Supreme Court of India ordered an end to the religious subsidies program within 10 years 72 According to a Wall Street Journal article Indian Muslim leaders supported an end to the Hajj subsidies because hajj must be performed with money righteously earned by a Muslim and not on money from charity or borrowings 71 Goa Edit Goa is the only state in India which has Uniform Civil Code 73 This system is derived from Portuguese colonization and is maintained until today 74 The Goa Civil Code also called the Goa Family Law is the set of civil laws that governs the residents of the Indian state of Goa In India as a whole there are religion specific civil codes that separately govern adherents of different religions Goa is an exception to that rule in that a single secular code law governs all Goans irrespective of religion ethnicity or linguistic affiliation It suggests the possibility to establish uniform civil code within a country having rich religious diversity like India 74 There are still problems in terms of actual implementation in everyday life 75 Article 25 2 b Edit Article 25 2 b of the Indian constitution clubs Sikhs Buddhists and Jains along with Hindus a position contested by some of these community leaders 76 Views Edit A Hindu temple in Jaipur India merging the traditional tiered tower of Hinduism the pyramid stupa of Buddhism and the dome of Islam The marble sides are carved with figures of Hindu deities as well as Christian Saints and Jesus Christ Writing in the Wall Street Journal Sadanand Dhume criticises Indian Secularism as a fraud and a failure since it isn t really secularism as it is understood in the western world as separation of religion and state but more along the lines of religious appeasement He writes that the flawed understanding of secularism among India s left wing intelligentsia has led Indian politicians to pander to religious leaders and preachers including Zakir Naik and has led India to take a soft stand against Islamic terrorism religious militancy and communal disharmony in general 22 Historian Ronald Inden writes 77 Nehru s India was supposed to be committed to secularism The idea here in its weaker publicly reiterated form was that the government would not interfere in personal religious matters and would create circumstances in which people of all religions could live in harmony The idea in its stronger unofficially stated form was that in order to modernise India would have to set aside centuries of traditional religious ignorance and superstition and eventually eliminate Hinduism and Islam from people s lives altogether After Independence governments implemented secularism mostly by refusing to recognise the religious pasts of Indian nationalism whether Hindu or Muslim and at the same time inconsistently by retaining Muslim personal law 77 Amartya Sen the Indian Nobel Laureate suggests 78 that secularism in the political as opposed to ecclesiastical sense requires the separation of the state from any particular religious order This claims Sen can be interpreted in at least two different ways The first view argues the state be equidistant from all religions refusing to take sides and having a neutral attitude towards them The second view insists that the state must not have any relation at all with any religion quotes Minhaz Merchant 79 In both interpretations secularism goes against giving any religion a privileged position in the activities of the state Sen argues that the first form is more suited to India where there is no demand that the state stay clear of any association with any religious matter whatsoever Rather what is needed is to make sure that in so far as the state has to deal with different religions and members of different religious communities there must be a basic symmetry of treatment 79 Sen does not claim that modern India is symmetric in its treatment or offer any views of whether acceptance of sharia in matters such as child marriage is equivalent to having a neutral attitude towards a religion Critics of Sen claim that secularism as practised in India is not the secularism of first or second variety Sen enumerates 79 Pakistani columnist Farman Nawaz in his article Why Indian Muslim Ullema are not popular in Pakistan states Maulana Arshad Madani stated that seventy years ago the cause of division of India was sectarianism and if today again the same temptation will raise its head then results will be the same Maulana Arshad Madani considers secularism inevitable for the unity of India Maulana Arshad Madani is a staunch critic of sectarianism in India He is of the opinion that India was divided in 1947 because of sectarianism He suggests secularism inevitable for the solidarity and integrity of India 80 India s former vice president Hamid Ansari said in an interview published by The Wire on August 7 2022 that secularism is critical to the integrity of the country and its steady weakening is endangering India s future He also said that India s 15 Muslim population is hurt by the prejudice they face and feel they are being ill treated He expressed his concerns about India s future in this hostile environment but hoped that things will change 81 See also EditFreedom of religion in India Indian Humanist Union Irreligion in India Pseudo secularism Sarva Dharma Sama BhavaReferences Edit The Constitution Forty Second Amendment Act 1976 Government of India Archived from the original on 28 March 2015 Retrieved 1 December 2010 a b c d e Jaffrelot Christophe 15 May 2011 A skewed secularism Hindustan Times a b c d e f g Rajagopalan 2003 a b https indiankanoon org doc 60799 cf chl jschl tk 238573f48275b685fc4286d86fb7f8d791b95b89 1605159943 0 AUH3bFyciTLUFhD1SxBDxmdiWyx30gRbc9sKNMEp2AVFRikpp9Yj04upKlxDKg g67cgonAuoofwtbmSbe7LiFvmdvh1UpVsGEiqmE8NRpW9IZOEaFfi0nC hORolA9ehgyy8bJ19HFLaV5jtvnCBm9aDQBTp rkgKXSxmi5tSu9XKBw1fOvLunDzLkIS1P5Hnoz1yZ6hRi3oBb7brYxYqdXJe 3q0 BNsLFbEaLkO yaPSbwXcAdvByLdw3yqOivpiMoL6XXvbtnp3IQBCNCtUP6oABTxAbcofz2vMJei V6 RBiFUFq0DniR6cd7PxtJ IdP6T6u5yk3b1T owvbOVfS74wnCJe ke8RIQXBt bare URL When the Supreme Court Firmly De linked Religion from Politics 20 December 2017 Bommai Versus Union of India www lawteacher net a b Smith 2011 pp 126 132 a b Smith 2011 pp 133 134 How courts decide on matters of religion 5 March 2019 https legislative gov in sites default files A1954 43 1 pdf bare URL PDF a b Smith 2011 pp 277 291 a b c d e f D D Acevedo 2013 Secularism in the Indian Context Law amp Social Inquiry Volume 38 Issue 1 pp 138 167 doi 10 1111 j 1747 4469 2012 01304 x Smith 2011 pp 126 134 Subramanian Swamy 20 January 2014 Freeing temples from state control The Hindu https legislative gov in sites default files A1991 42 pdf bare URL PDF https www indiaculture nic in sites default files Legislations 6 pdf bare URL PDF a b c d e f g h i Larson 2001 a b Zoya Hasan and Ritu Menon 2005 The Diversity of Muslim Women s Lives in India Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 3703 0 pp 26 45 59 64 92 119 a b Pantham Thomas 1997 Indian Secularism and Its Critics Some Reflections The Review of Politics Cambridge University Press 59 3 523 540 doi 10 1017 s0034670500027704 S2CID 146188919 a b c d e Craig Duncan Shah Bano The Dilemma of Religious Liberty and Sex Equality Cornell University Ithaca 2009 a b c John H Mansfield The Personal Laws or a Uniform Civil Code in Robert D Baird ed Religion and Law in Independent India Manohar Press 1993 pp 139 177 a b Dhume Sadanand 20 June 2010 The Trouble with Dr Zakir Naik The Wall Street Journal Pia Brancaccio 2000 The Buddhist Caves at Aurangabad The Impact of the Laity Ars Orientalis Vol 30 Supplement 1 pp 41 50 Owen L 2012 Carving Devotion in the Jain Caves at Ellora Vol 41 Brill The Netherlands a b c d e A V Thomas Christians in Secular India Fairleigh Dickinson University Press ISBN 978 0838610213 pp 26 27 Ellora Caves UNESCO World Heritage List 1983 Brockman N 2011 Encyclopedia of sacred places 2nd Edition see entries for Ajanta Ellora and other sacred places of India ISBN 978 1598846553 A L Basham The Wonder that was India Grove Press New York 1959 page 53 132 Makarand Paranjape 2009 Altered Destinations Self Society and Nation in India London Anthem Press South Asian Studies ISBN 978 1 84331 797 5 pp 150 152 See Mughal Empire Gale Encyclopedia of World History Governments Vol 1 Detroit Gale 2008 Richards John F The Mughal Empire New York Cambridge University Press 1993 Domenic Marbaniang Secularism in India 2005 as cited by Shiv Shankar Das in Buddha Dharma Secular Laws and Bahujan Politics in Uttar Pradesh Madhya Pradesh Journal of Social Sciences Vol 19 No 1 June 2014 p 121 Derrett J Duncan 1973 Religion Law and the State of India Faber amp Faber Limited ISBN 978 0 571 08478 4 Nandini Chatterjee The Making of Indian Secularism Empire Law and Christianity Macmillan ISBN 9780230220058 The Muslim Personal Law Shariat Application Act 1937 Universal Law Publishing New Delhi pp 3 7 The Muslim Personal Law Shariat Application Act 1937 ACT No 26 OF 1937 Government of India Tharoor Shashi The Partition The British game of divide and rule www aljazeera com a b Smith 2011 Chandra Mallampalli Christians and Public Life in Colonial India Contending with Marginality London 2004 Prime Minister to Launch National Waqf Development Corporation Tomorrow Press Information Bureau Government of India Ministry of Minority Affairs 28 January 2014 K N Kumari 1998 History of the Hindu Religious Endowments in Andhra Pradesh Northern Books ISBN 978 8172110857 Presler F A 1983 The structure and consequences of temple policy in Tamil Nadu 1967 81 Pacific Affairs 56 2 232 246 a b c Laura Jenkins Shah Bano Muslim Women s Rights University of Cincinnati Ohio 2000 a b c Madan T N 1987 Secularism in Its Place Journal of Asian Studies 46 4 747 759 Ghosh Partha 2018 The politics of personal law in South Asia Identity nationalism and the uniform civil code London Routledge pp 1 42 ISBN 978 1138551657 Ashis Nandy 2007 AD Needham and RS Rajan ed The Crisis of Secularism in India Duke University Press pp 109 112 ISBN 978 0 8223 3846 8 Ganguly Sumit 2002 India s Multiple Revolutions Journal of Democracy Johns Hopkins University Press 13 1 38 51 doi 10 1353 jod 2002 0007 S2CID 145715953 Quote they contend that secularism as practiced in India has amounted to little more than the pampering of minorities and is therefore pseudo secularism Plea in SC to remove socialist and secular words from Constitution s preamble India News Times of India The Times of India Plea in SC seeks to remove words socialist secular from Constitution s preamble India News Firstpost 29 July 2020 Declare India a Hindu Rashtra Hindu convention resolution Hindustan Times 17 June 2017 Archived from the original on 1 May 2021 Retrieved 2 September 2021 Hindu Rashtra draft proposes Varanasi as capital instead of Delhi 13 August 2022 India to become Hindu Rashtra by 2025 hints organiser of All India Hindu conference 12 June 2022 Does India belong to only Hindus Nearly 75 of Hindus say No finds CSDS survey 14 June 2019 https www pewresearch org fact tank 2021 06 29 key findings about religion in india Plea in SC seeks to remove words socialist secular from Constitution s preamble India News Firstpost Firstpost 29 July 2020 Archived from the original on 10 June 2021 Retrieved 2 September 2021 Subramanian Swamy s Plea to Delete Socialism amp Secularism from Preamble to Constitution Supreme Court to Hear on Sep 23 2 September 2022 https www thestatesman com subramanian swamy seeks deletion amp bare URL a b Smith 2011 pp 3 8 Smith 2011 pp 126 128 Smith 2011 pp 126 133 Justice R A Jahagirdar Secularism in India Archived 29 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine International Humanist and Ethical Union 11 May 2003 Smith 2011 pp 290 291 Elizabeth Hurd 2008 The Politics of Secularism in International Relations Princeton University Press Gary Jacobsohn The Wheel of Law India s Secularism in Comparative Constitutional Context Princeton University Press 2005 a b M G Radhakrishnan 22 September 2013 Muslim groups want minimum marital age scrapped India Today Thomas R Metcalf 2002 A concise history of India Cambridge University Press p 257 ISBN 978 0 521 63974 3 Rajiv Gandhi cared little about the Shah Bano case himself and no doubt would have preferred a common civil code nevertheless he saw in the opposition to this supreme court decision a heaven sent opportunity to draw Minority voters to the Congress cause Kirti Singh Obstacles to Women s Rights in India in Rebecca J Cook ed Human Rights of Women National and International Perspectives University of Pennsylvania Press 1994 pp 375 396 Sylvia Vatuk Islamic Feminism in India Indian Muslim Women Activists and the Reform of Muslim Personal Law Modern Asian Studies Volume 42 Issue 2 3 March 2008 pp 489 518 History made triple talaq bill passed by Parliament India Today Web Desk 30 July 2019 a b Rao B 2006 The Variant Meanings of Secularism in India Notes Toward Conceptual Clarifications Journal of Church and State Oxford University Press 48 1 59 60 47 81 doi 10 1093 jcs 48 1 47 a b Agarwal Vibhuti 10 May 2012 Should the Government Stop Funding the Hajj The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 3 January 2020 Achin Kurt 10 May 2012 Indian Supreme Court Orders End to Hajj Subsidies Voice of America Retrieved 3 January 2020 Fernandes Aureliano 2000 Political Transition in Post Colonial Societies Goa in Perspective Lusotopie 7 1 341 358 a b Vohra Rytim Maya 2014 Empirical Research on the Need for Uniform Civil Code in India PDF International Journal of Law and Legal Jurisprudence Studies 2 245 256 Desouza Shaila May 2004 A Situational Analysis of Women in Goa PDF National Commission for Women Obama Affirms Indian Constitution s Article 25 Over Objections of South Asian Americans Sikh Siyasat News 28 January 2015 Retrieved 23 November 2015 a b Ronald Inden Imagining India Indiana University Press 2000 p xii Amartya Sen 2006 The Argumentative Indian Writings on Indian History Culture and Identity ISBN 978 0312426026 Picador a b c Minhaz Merchant 24 July 2013 Amartya Sen and the ayatollahs of secularism part 3 The Times of India Farman Nawaz Why Indian Muslim Ullema are not popular in Pakistan The Pashtun Times Watch Hamid Ansari Secularism Critical for India I m Worried About Our Future Muslims Hurt by Prejudice The Wire Retrieved 7 August 2022 Further reading EditScholarly worksSmith Donald Eugene 2011 first published 1963 India as a Secular State Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 7778 2 Archive Chatterjee Nandini 2011 The Making of Indian Secularism Empire Law and Christianity 1830 1960 Palgrave Macmillan UK ISBN 978 0 230 29808 8 Larson Gerald James ed 2001 Religion and Personal Law in Secular India A Call to Judgment Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 21480 7 Cossman Brenda Kapur Ratna 2001 Secularism s Last Sigh Hindutva and the mis rule of Law Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 565798 2 Rajagopalan Swarna 2003 Secularism in India Accepted Principle Contentious Interpretation In William Safran ed The Secular and the Sacred Nation Religion and Politics Psychology Press pp 241 ISBN 978 0 7146 5368 6 Vivek Swaroop Sharma 2016 Secularism and Religious Violence in Hinduism and Islam in Economic and Political Weekly 51 18 pp 19 21 Popular worksDalwai Hamid Umar 1968 Muslim Politics in Secular India Hind Pocket Books Vivek Swaroop Sharma 2015 The Myth of a Liberal India in The National Interest 140 pp 66 71 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Secularism in India India Secularism and Freedom of Religion University of Vermont United States Legalizing Religion Indian Supreme Court and Secularism Ronojoy Sen University of Hawaii Republic of India Legal systems constitutional history and secularism Emory Law School Atlanta Secularism In India History Implications and Alternatives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php 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