The Travancore Devaswom Board (TDB), which manages
the historic Sabarimala temple in Kerala, told the Supreme Court on Wednesday
that religion is a set of beliefs and practices followed by a denomination with
a broadly similar identity and the court cannot sit in judgement of that
belief.
A nine-judge Constitution bench headed by Chief
Justice Surya Kant was told by the board, which is a statutory autonomous body
that manages over 1,000 temples in South India, that the beliefs and practices
of the community have to be judged by the subjective belief of the community
and the court is bound to accept their belief.
Senior advocate Abhishek Singhvi, appearing for the
TDB said, "Religion is a set of beliefs and practices followed by a
group/sect/denomination with a broadly similar identity. While Article 25
clearly vests in an individual the right to profess, practice and propagate
religion, such individual rights cannot be allowed to extend to an area which
intrudes upon the mass of individual rights of all other adherents of that
religion or denomination." The bench also comprising Justices B V Nagarathna,
M M Sundresh, Ahsanuddin Amanullah, Aravind Kumar, Augustine George Masih,
Prasanna B Varale, R Mahadevan, and Joymalya Bagchi was told by Singhvi that it
is impermissible to add, modify or subtract from the specific constitutional
text and accordingly, the additional derogation of 'essentiality' as engrafted
by some judgments is entirely impermissible.
Singhvi, on the fourth-day of hearing, said Article
25 of the Constitution guarantees to all persons the freedom of conscience and
the right to freely profess, practice and propagate religion subject to public
order, morality, health, and other provisions of Part III of the Constitution.
The hearing is underway.
The nine-judge bench is hearing petitions related to
discrimination against women at religious places, including the Sabarimala
temple, and on the ambit and scope of the religious freedom practised by
multiple faiths.
On April 9, the top court observed that Hinduism
will be adversely impacted and the society will stand divided if temples and
"mutts" restrict entry on the grounds of sect and separate
denominations inside a religion.
It made the oral observations while responding to
the submissions of senior advocate C S Vaidyanathan that Article 26(b) of the
Constitution gives the right to a religious denomination to manage its own
affairs and will have primacy over Article 25(2)(b), which empowers the State
to throw open all Hindu religious institutions of public nature.
Vaidyanathan appeared in court on behalf of the
devotees of Lord Ayyappa of the historic Sabarimala temple in Kerala.
In September 2018, a five-judge Constitution bench,
by a 4:1 majority verdict, had lifted the ban that prevented women between the
ages of 10 and 50 from entering the Sabarimala Ayyappa temple in Kerala, and
held that the centuries-old Hindu religious practice was illegal and
unconstitutional.
Later, on November 14, 2019, another five-judge
bench headed by the then CJI Ranjan Gogoi, by a majority of 3:2, referred the
issue of discrimination against women at various places of worship to a larger
bench.
The bench had then framed broad issues on freedom
across religions, saying they cannot be decided without any facts of the
particular case.