Observing that Hinduism is a way of life, the
Supreme Court on Wednesday said it is not necessary for a Hindu to mandatorily
go to a temple or perform a ritual in order to remain a Hindu and even lighting
a lamp inside house is enough to prove one's belief.
The observation of a nine-judge constitution bench
headed by Chief Justice Surya Kant came while hearing petitions related to
discrimination against women at religious places, including the Sabarimala
temple in Kerala, and on the ambit of religious freedom practised by multiple
faiths, including Dawoodi Bohras.
Justices B V Nagarathna, M M Sundresh, Ahsanuddin
Amanullah, Aravind Kumar, Augustine George Masih, Prasanna B Varale, R
Mahadevan and Joymalya Bagchi are also part of the nine-judge bench.
As the hearing commenced on 15th day of hearing,
advocate Dr G Mohan Gopal, appearing for one of the intervenors submitted that
there has been demand for social justice emerging from within religious
communities.
"Hinduism was defined as a religious category.
Thereafter, in 1966, it was held that a Hindu is one who accepts the Vedas as
the highest authority in all matters religion and philosophy. They never asked
me. None of us ever said that.
"Now, I have the
highest respect for the Vedas and great admiration for it. But is it a fact
that every person today classified as Hindu accepts the Vedas as the highest
authority in all spiritual and philosophical matters?" he asked.
Responding to his submission, Justice Nagarathna
said, "That is why Hinduism is called as a way of life. It is not
necessary for a Hindu to mandatorily go to a temple or perform a ritual in
order to remain a Hindu." She said one need not be ritualistic and
nobody can come in the way for people having their faith.
CJI also remarked, "Even if an individual
lights a lamp inside his hut is enough to prove his religion." The
hearing is underway.
The top court had earlier observed that if
individuals start questioning every religious practice or matters of religion
before a constitutional court, then there will be hundreds of petitions and
every religion will "break" due to this.
A five-judge Constitution bench had lifted a ban that prevented women
between the ages of 10 and 50 from entering the Sabarimala Ayyappa temple in a
4:1 majority verdict in September 2018, ruling that the centuries-old Hindu
religious practice was illegal and unconstitutional.