Saturday, November 10, 2018

‘Free temples from state control and make India truly secular’


Sanjeev Kumar Nayak

    Published : November 10, 2018, 5:38 pm | Updated : November 10, 2018, 5:38 PM


A portion of the roof of 1,000-year-old Lord Vishnu temple at Thirukannapuram in Tamil Nadu painted with Christian angels during renovation.
Government agencies responsible for maintenance and renovation of old temples are stuffing the broken portions with stones, while artisans having expertise in carving traditional designs are dying of hunger.

 Union Home Minister Rajnath Singh had some time back dubbed the term “secular” as the “most misused” word in the country’s political discourse. He also pointed out that due to this rampant misapplication of the word, there have been instances of tension in our society, and hence it must end now. The assertion has not come out of the blue. Such wordplay by a section of the ideological-political spectrum in a bid to show Hinduism in poor light has proved quite damaging to our social fabric. The overbearing view that the majority community should not be allowed to dominate and hence kept under tight leash has led to enacting laws so as to control their endowments while their minority counterparts enjoy all the freedom, sometimes to unreasonable extent.

Supreme Court lawyer J. Sai Deepak says, “The Hindu temples have been usurped upon by the very institution that is duty-bound to protect the freedom of religion—the Indian state.” After the Apex Court struck down the Hindu Religion and Charitable Endowment (HRCE) Act in 1954 terming it as “unconstitutional”, Hindu endowments were brought under state control through the backdoor by enacting the same law albeit at provincial levels.

The main alibi was that it would check misuse and misappropriation of the properties. However, experience in the last half century reveals that it has only given rise to corruption, by none other than the state apparatus itself. There are umpteen numbers of cases wherein the politicos in power and the bureaucrats managing the temple affairs have been accused of massive corruption—the Tirupati episode being the latest glaring instance.

On the other hand, it amounts to “taxing” the Hindus for practising their religion in their own country. “For every hundred rupees a Hindu donates at a temple in Tamil Nadu, Rs 18 land in the coffers of the government. So, in effect, Hindus are paying a Jaziya-type religious tax even after Independence,” says Deepak, who is the legal mentor of the Indic Collective that advocates the right of the Indic way of life to exist and thrive.

Other ill-effects of the laws are also equally detrimental to the secular fabric of the country. They not only violate the fundamental rights of Hindus but also discriminatory in nature. Deepak points out: “Recently, the Devaswom Minister of Kerala took a lead in organising ‘beef festival’ there. Similarly, a top executive of the board that controls the affairs of Tirupati temple is a Christian while 40 other employees working there are non-Hindus.”

“Why are matters of a certain faith being allowed to be managed by those who profess a different faith?” he asks. This infiltration of temple management by non-Hindus facilitates religious conversion too. “The traditional eco-system has broken down. So people specialising in certain roles such as sculptors have suffered financially and thus been made more vulnerable to proselytisation.”

State meddling in the day-to-day business of Hindu temples is also bringing a bad name to the followers of the faith. In recent years, many of the temple practices have been introduced at the behest of the state authorities without taking the consent of the community leaders. Queuing up for darshan against a payment, for example, has actually embarrassed well-meaning Hindus but they only are blamed for it, whereas the decision was taken by the government of the day.

A closer look at the state of Hindu temples that are not popular or famous shows that approximately 85% of them receive a meagre Rs 10,000 annually or even less in contributions from devotees. In other words, temples with a monthly income of less than Rs 1,000 are under state control to “check corruption” and the state appointees have the last word in all matters, from approving budgets for performance of daily rituals there to appointing key functionaries to their administration.

On the other hand, the government agencies responsible for maintenance and renovation of old temples are simply stuffing the broken portions with insipid stones, whereas the artisans having expertise in carving traditional architectural designs are dying of hunger. The best example of it is the Sun Temple at Konark in Odisha which has lost its sheen to so-called preservation work.

Moreover, there are also instances wherein the old Hindu structures have been painted with artwork typical to other faiths. In a recent such incident, the HRCE Department of Tamil Nadu has been accused of painting the ceiling of the 1,000-year-old Lord Vishnu temple at Thirukannapuram with Christian angels. It is alleged that some of the top officials of the department are Christians who have facilitated this.

“By making temples subservient to it, the state has ended up smothering the cultural life of India and thus has alienated the Indians from their own roots,” Deepak says, adding that “in a way, the state in India has paralysed its own majority community”.

Talking about the way out, another Supreme Court lawyer preferring anonymity said, “We are not totally against the laws concerning the Hindu endowments like the Christians. But it should be simple ‘regulation’ as in the case of Waqf properties and not ‘total control’ or ‘takeover’. The state should play the role of an ‘observer’ and ‘auditor’ in case of irregularities, but they must not interfere in the administration or rituals of the temples. That’s exactly what the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) does as far as government functioning is concerned.”

Ideally speaking, the scope of the state’s power should be strictly restricted to regulation of financial, political or other secular activities of an institution. This will ensure that at no point of time, the state has the power to take over the administration of any Hindu institution, directly or indirectly. This approach strikes a balance between the rights of religious denomination under Article 26 and the power of the state to intervene in secular aspects of administration under Article 25 (2)(a).

Secondly, the role of any HRCE legislation must be minimal and should not have the effect of undermining, diluting, curtailing or encroaching upon religious aspects under the garb of intervening in secular aspects. Clearly, the state’s overarching role in administering Hindu endowments should be done away and replaced with a minimalist framework whose mandate is limited to corrective intervention through regulation in the event of mismanagement.

A model legislation should empower traditional temple management systems to the extent that such systems are not inherently discriminatory on a caste or gender basis. Where the history of the traditional management system of a certain temple is lost or unavailable, the legislation must provide for community representation.

Resources of Hindu endowments and the proceeds from there should not be used for any secular purpose without the consent of the community, and in any event, should not be used to benefit any other community in the form of subsidies like Haj trips. Also, no member of any other community should have a say or role, direct or indirect, in the administration of Hindu institutions.

Lastly, the model legislation should provide for annual and random audit of the accounts of Hindu institutions. This is for the limited purpose of ensuring that there is no mismanagement. A legislation with all these attributes would go a long way in undoing the harm done by decades of state intervention. Severing the state from the temple would also allow the Hindu community to access and use its own resources to protect and further its interests. These resources could be used to tackle the existential threats to Hindu way of life and their civilisational journey.

Concluded

https://www.sundayguardianlive.com/news/free-temples-state-control-make-india-truly-secular

‘Free temples from state control and make India truly secular’


Friday, November 9, 2018

Kerala: 3 lakh devotees, including 539 women, sign up digital crowd management system at Sabarimala Temple

At least three lakh devotees, including 539 women in the age group between 10 to 50 years, registered on the online portal started by Kerala police for implementing Digitised Crowd Management System (DCMS) at Sabarimala Temple. 

Kerala: 3 lakh devotees, including 539 women, sign up digital crowd management system at  Sabarimala Temple
PTI photo
Thiruvananthapuram: At least three lakh devotees, including 539 women in the age group between 10 to 50 years, registered on the online portal started by Kerala police for implementing Digitised Crowd Management System (DCMS) at Sabarimala Temple.
Last month, the state police had announced the DCMS initiative in an effort to make devotees visit hassle-free.
Devotees can opt for their preferred date and time to visit the 12th-century shrine, bookings for which can be done through the official website.
Devotees can also fix darshan timings and book bus tickets from Nilakkal to Pamba. The booking will be valid for 48 hours.
Kerala has been on a boil after the September 28 Supreme Court verdict permitting women of all age groups into the Sabarimala temple with right wing and Hindu outfits on a warpath over the state government's decision to go ahead and implement the top court verdict.
The hill shrine had recently witnessed protests by devotees against the attempt by some young women, including journalists, to enter the temple.
The day also saw the Kerala High Court coming down on the recent agitation at Sabarimala.
The court on Thursday turned down a bail plea by a man arrested last month, saying protests against the entry of women to the Sabarimala temple were unacceptable.
"The protests at Sabarimala are not acceptable as it is against the verdict of the Supreme Court," a High Court bench said, rejecting the request for bail by Kochi resident Govind Madhusudhan.
With agency inputs

http://zeenews.india.com/kerala/kerala-3-lakh-devotees-including-539-women-sign-up-digital-crowd-management-system-at-sabarimala-temple-2154111.html

Temples to treat own waste

tnn | Nov 9, 2018, 12.30 AM IST
Coimbatore: The garbage yard behind the Perur Temple may disappear soon, thanks to the ambitious ‘Green Cover Project’ of the Hindu religious and charitable endowments (HR&CE) department.
The department plans to implement the project at 40,000-odd temples across Tamil Nadu. It aims to treat all forms of garbage on the temple premises.

As many 100 HR&CE staff working in temples across Coimbatore, Nilgiris, Tirupur, Namakkal, Erode, Dharmapuri and Salem underwent training at the Sree Ayyappan Seva Sangam here on Thursday on how to identify biodegradable and non-degradable waste and what can be recycled. “The project is the brainchild of HR&CE commissioner TK Ramachandran. We have tied up with Exnora International to find ways to handle temple waste,” project head BR Ashok said.

All temples will be provided with at least two large garbage bins under the project. “We want to start source segregation as the first step. The main wastes generated at temples are flowers, paper sachets, dhonai on which prasadam is served, coconuts, fruits, food waste generated by devotees, waste water from the temple and toilets. We want to create awareness among devotees about disposing biodegradable waste like food, flowers and fruits into the specific bin. Waste water will be treated in treatment plants. Coconuts will be used to make products. Dhonai will be shredded and composted,” Ashok told TOI.

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/coimbatore/temples-to-treat-own-waste/articleshow/66549617.cms

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

In the Temples of Tamil Nadu, a Thorn Still Troubles Periyar’s Heart

Non-Brahmin students, including Dalits, trained as priests are stranded but still hopeful.

Chennai: G. Balaguru, 32, was performing a puja at a small private temple in the village of Pallipattu, in southern Tamil Nadu, when the news reached him. The Kerala government was appointing 54 non-Brahmins, including Dalits, as temple priests.
For the second time in a year, Balaguru felt his hopes rise that he might someday be appointed as a temple priest by the government of Tamil Nadu. The first time, T. Marichami – a non-Brahmin – was appointed to a temple at Madurai by the state government’s Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments (HR&CE) Department.
Balaguru’s dream towards the ‘someday’ started over a decade ago. In 2007, he had joined a training school in Tiruchendur to be trained as a priest. Six such schools were set up across the state after the DMK government in 2006 issued an order allowing members of all communities to become temple priests. Balaguru, a Dalit, had always been pious and keenly interested in ‘temple affairs.’
“I used to do accounting in local temples as a volunteer,” he said. “My father had passed away some years ago and my mother used to work for a hundred days a year under MGNREGA. She was actually thrilled at the possibility of her son working in a government temple sometime.”
Students of the temple-priest training institute.
The journey towards the dream was not easy, however, for the 206 students trained in the schools.
“It is mandatory that those who have been trained have to be provided with government jobs,” said V. Ranganathan, state coordinator of Tamil Nadu government-qualified Archakas’s Association. “That has not happened till now.”
Also read: Casteism Front and Centre at Pune Summit to Promote Brahmin Entrepreneurs
The process of training was in itself discriminatory, Ranganathan said. “We need to be trained in two procedures – to perform rituals in the Tamil way and in the Agama way [using Sanskrit slokas and mantras]. It was easy for us to learn the Tamil way of doing things. When it came to Agama way, the Brahmins opposed it tooth and nail, and would threaten anyone who came forward to teach us the Agamas. A 90-year-old man who came forward heeding to our requests was beaten up. In fact, the association of priests had passed a resolution against teaching us.”
Discrimination was evident again when the students were required to do practical sessions with the idols of deities. “With the priests refusing to give us idols, we had to make our own idols for our practical sessions. We have also been assaulted by them.”

Students with a 90-year-old guru who was allegedly assaulted for offering to teach them Agama slokas.
Many of these 200-odd students continue to work in private temples for meagre salaries. Thirty-year-old A. Arun works in a temple at Aathur near Salem. “I did the course in Madurai. I do hope that someday we will land in government jobs; that is why I still continue to work as a priest.” He agrees that the government salaries could still be meagre, but landing a government job is more about dignity. “We do not want to be left out, especially in temples governed by the government which should treat everyone equally. It is our fundamental right.”
But S. Balakumar who works at a temple in Vellore has possibly given up all hopes. “Some of us work as priests, but there are others who have not been able to secure such jobs. They do menial works and have invited ridicule of those around them. It is very frustrating.”
Ironically, the schools stopped functioning after the first batch of students ran into trouble.
When E.V. Ramaswami, widely known as Periyar, announced a struggle in 1970 demanding that all communities should be allowed to work as temple priests, he called the discrimination a thorn in his heart. At the time, the DMK government asked Periyar to not go ahead with the protests and passed a law to the effect. In 1972, however, the law was challenged in the Supreme Court, which ruled against it. When passing the order in 2006, then chief minister M. Karunanidhi famously said that the thorn in the heart of Periyar was finally removed.
Also read: The Trigger Behind the Defacing of the ‘Disputed’ Manu Statue at Rajasthan HC
In 2015, the apex court refused to strike down the order, but said that appointments should be in accordance with the Agama that governs the worship at respective temples. Since then, except for Marichami’s appointment, there has been no progress.
More recently, these students including Marichami met DMK president M.K. Stalin and thanked him for the party’s efforts towards making members of all communities as temple priests.
“The present AIADMK government should take a cue from the Kerala government and appoint all of us as temple priests. It needs to show some strong political will,” says Balaguru. “You claim that Tamil Nadu is a land of Periyar, and that you follow his footsteps. Would it suffice to merely garland his statue on his birth and death anniversaries?”
G. Balaguru, a trainee Dalit priest.
Ranganathan says a social revolution is necessary to bring about the change. “A non-Brahmin can even become an IAS officer in this country, but cannot step into a temple,” he said. “I think this discrimination and untouchability is not just rampant but encouraged in the Hindu religion. It was a movement like Makkal Urimai Paathukaapu Maiyam (Centre for Protection of Public Rights) that stood up for us when we were stranded. No Hindu religious movement did. I personally believe that caste has to be annihilated for a non-Brahmin to cross all hurdles and become a priest. I have hence decided to follow the path of Periyar.”
Others hope that their ‘someday’ will arrive soon.
Kavitha Muralidharan is an independent journalist.

https://thewire.in/caste/tamil-nadu-temples-dalit-priests

 

Tuesday, November 6, 2018

Supreme-court-karnataka-administration-mahabaleshwara-gokarna-temple-sri-ramchandrapura-mutt

Gokarna Supreme Court

https://barandbench.com/supreme-court-karnataka-administration-mahabaleshwara-gokarna-temple-sri-ramchandrapura-mutt/

Temple management: ‘Government can’t dictate terms to TDB’

The Kerala High Court on Monday orally observed that the state government has no power to interfere in the day-to-day affairs of the Sabarimala temple.
Published: 06th November 2018 10:05 AM  |   Last Updated: 06th November 2018 10:05 AM   |  A+A-
Sabarimala
Sabarimala Lord Ayyappa temple (File | EPS)
By Express News Service
KOCHI: The Kerala High Court on Monday orally observed that the state government has no power to interfere in the day-to-day affairs of the Sabarimala temple. At the same time, the state was justified in looking into the law and order situation at the temple premises. The court also made it clear that the government cannot dictate terms on Travancore Devaswom Board (TDB) with regard to the running of the temple.
The observation came when the counsel for the petitioner pointed out that when the temple opened for Chithira Atta Vishesham on Monday, the police reportedly demanded to hand over the keys of all rooms at the pilgrim centre at Sannidhanam which were managed by the Board.
The court directed the state to file an affidavit on November 12. A Division Bench comprising Justice PR Ramachandra Menon and Justice N Anilkumar issued the order on the petition filed by TR Ramesh of Thiruvananthapuram seeking a directive to TDB not to implement any of the oral or written directives of the CM of Kerala or the Minister for Devaswom with regard to religious matters, entry of pilgrims, and other related matters in the Sabarimala. He also sought to declare any kind of interference by the government in the administration of the Board as illegal.
Citing Kashi Vishwanath temple case verdict by the SC, the counsel for the petitioner said that the administration and governance of the temple is vested with the Board, and not the state government. In the case of management of Sabarimala, there was no provision enabling the government to control the temple.
High Court flays police action
Kochi: The Kerala High Court on Monday criticised the alleged police action which led to the destruction of vehicles including two-wheelers parked at Nilakkal and on the way to Sabarimala. The court observed that it was seen that a group of police personnel apparently in a frenzy were seen damaging vehicles including two-wheelers and autorickshaws. The police didn’t have any license at all to damage the properties. “Are they fit enough to continue in service. Where is the rule of law?” asked the court, after examining the photographs showing the alleged police atrocities at Nilakkal. The court said if this was true, prima facie they were not discharging their duties. The court added there should not be any police excesses or hardships to the pilgrims. The court directed the state police chief to conduct a preliminary inquiry into these incidents and file a report along with a list of police officers who allegedly indulged in vandalism and a decision on the future course of action against them.

http://www.newindianexpress.com/states/kerala/2018/nov/06/temple-management-government-cant-dictate-terms-to-tdb-1894785.html