With over 2000 Hindu protesters arrested by the Kerala Government and a controversy refusing to die down anytime soon, the real Sabarimala issue is not about equality or justice.
Image Courtesy: Karan Acharya |
The Sabarimala issue over the past few weeks and the Supreme Court judgement allowing women of all ages to enter into Sabarimala temple
is an example of how the judiciary could stray into the religious beliefs of the
majority community of India, Hindus. While the majority status of Hindus in the state of Kerala has been dwindling with thriving religious
conversions over the years, Hindus still form the majority in India (though the
quantum of such majority is questionable due to statistical reliability errors and possible misrepresentations).
It is no secret that India has been one of the prime targets
for religious conversions. Christianity has been at the forefront of religious conversions since the 1990s, from the initial focus on Islamic conversions in the 1980s. The
nationalist BJP government in power for the past 4 years, and the impending Indian
general elections in 2019 featured by lack of consensus on a serious opposition contender yet to match the stature of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, have apparently rattled the opposition, who may want to maximise
havoc to reap political dividends.
South India in particular, has been a hotbed of caste-based
politics, ironically, all in the name of eliminating caste. In Tamil Nadu for instance, Dravidian
forces have started creating petty differences to reinforce distinctions based on caste. Caste
divisions are typically made to look deeper and graver around elections to draw
mileage against an otherwise united Hindu majority, and this election would be
even murkier, in an effort to dislodge the ruling BJP.
Coming back to the Sabarimala issue, over 2000 Hindu devotees who protested against the Supreme Court judgement last
week have been arrested, with over 500 remanded to judicial custody. The same
Kerala Government that refused to honour the Supreme Court verdict and filed a review petition on the Mullaperiyar dam case is now intent on upholding
the SC verdict on the Sabarimala issue. The Communist government’s hardline stance against religion seems to be at play in acting against the core belief
structure of Sabarimala Ayyappan temple. It is yet another issue as to how the powerful arguments made against the litigation in the Supreme
Court were discarded and age-old traditions were done away with in one fell
swoop by a landmark verdict.
Now, it is up to the Ayyappa devotees of Sabarimala to fend
for themselves in what could be described as an emergency-like situation in Kerala – Sabarimala devotees are being hunted
based on videos of protests held over the past few days. There have been
hundreds of peaceful marches organised in Kerela against the Supreme Court
verdict on Sabarimala. The irony is that there are videos that clearly show
devotees protesting peacefully being targeted by the Kerala police in a heavy-handed manner.
In a nut shell, an age-old tradition is broken and Hindu
religious sentiments are hurt. The judiciary tampers with religion when some of the original
petitioners themselves have expressed solidarity with the protesting Hindu devotees, non-Hindu women are facilitated into
the temple who allegedly indulged in sacrilege, protesting devotees are targeted by the state
machinery with police indulging in violence, and now, over 2000 protesters have
been taken into custody.
Spurious "Devotee" Rehana Fathima; Image: 24News |
The timing of the controversy that has been deliberately
raked up, smacks heavily of political overtones. And as the countdown to 2019
general elections in India gets underway, the political game in India would
increasingly resort to fanning religious hatred, hurting religious sentiments,
creating and widening existing caste-based fault lines, pandering to minorities, and dividing the people,
particularly the majority community, in an unscrupulous quest for power.
The British laid down the rules of the divide-and-rule game,
and the Indian politicians have perfected it to a fine art. It is now up to the
Hindus to stand by Dharma and refuse to be taken for a free ride in the great Indian political
circus.