Sabarimala Debate: Deity’s ‘Naishtika Brahmachari’ Identity vs. Article 25

During the high-profile Sabarimala review hearing, the Travancore Devaswom Board (TDB) has underscored the unique character of the temple’s deity as the primary legal justification for restricted entry. Senior Counsel Abhishek Manu Singhvi argued that Lord Ayyappa’s identity as a Naishtika Brahmachari (perennial celibate) is the very foundation of the temple’s fame and religious significance.

Why in News

  • A nine-judge Supreme Court Bench is hearing the Sabarimala temple case regarding the entry of women.
  • The Travancore Devaswom Board (TDB) argued that the deity at Sabarimala is a “special deity” in the form of a Naishtika Brahmachari (perennial celibate).
  • TDB counsel Abhishek Manu Singhvi argued the foundation of the deity’s fame lies in this celibate form, requiring worshippers to observe vratham.
  • Justice B.V. Nagarathna observed that Article 25(2)(a) requires religious practices to be left “untouched.”

Impact

  • Economic: [NOT RELEVANT]
  • Social: Critical test of gender equality versus the right to maintain traditional religious denominations and practices.
  • Policy: Will define the scope of judicial intervention in “essential religious practices.”
  • Ecological: [NOT RELEVANT]

GS Paper Focus

GS-2 — Governance: Separation of powers; Fundamental Rights; Structure, organization and functioning of the Judiciary.

Policies & Schemes

1. Article 25 of the Constitution (Freedom of conscience/religion).

2. Article 26 (Freedom to manage religious affairs).

System-level Insight

The Sabarimala case highlights the “Essentiality Doctrine Paradox.” The Indian system struggles to reconcile individual freedom of conscience (Article 25) with the institutional right of a religious denomination to define the “character” of its deity. The TDB’s argument suggests that the “identity” of the deity is an objective religious fact that constitutional morality must accommodate, rather than override.

Interview Angle

Can the ‘Identity of a Deity‘ be used as a legal ground to restrict a class of citizens from a public place of worship? Discuss in the light of the Sabarimala proceedings.

Vocabulary

1. Antithetical — Directly opposed or contrasted — Advanced

2. Naishtika Brahmachari — A perennial/lifelong celibate — Advanced

3. Sub-classification — Division into further, smaller groups — Intermediate

4. Eschewed — Deliberately avoided; abstained from — Intermediate

5. In toto — In total; altogether — Advanced