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| The Supreme Court in India has overturned a rule that forbade the majority of women from entering one of the holiest temples for Hindus |
India's top court on Friday revoked a ban on women entering a famous Hindu temple following a decades-long legal battle, ruling that patriarchy cannot be allowed to trump faith.
The
decision is the latest by the Supreme Court in recent weeks to reflect a more
liberal outlook in the largely conservative and traditional society of 1.25
billion people.
Women in
India have been intensifying campaigns in recent years to be allowed to enter
Hindu temples and other religious sites.
The Ayyappa
temple in Sabarimala -- the subject of Friday's ruling and considered one of
the holiest for Hindus -- has traditionally barred all women of menstruating
age, between 10 and 50.
The
temple's rule emanated from the still widely held belief in India that
menstruating women are impure. In rural pockets of the country, many women are
still made to sleep and eat separately during menstruation.
The custom
in the temple in the southern state of Kerala was challenged by a clutch of
petitioners who argued that women cannot be denied the constitutional right to
worship.
"To
treat women as children of a lesser god is to blink at the constitution
itself," said Justice D. Y. Chandrachud, part of the five-judge bench that
gave a majority verdict on Friday.
Chief
Justice of India Dipak Misra said banning the entry of a large section of women
was discriminatory and violated their rights.
"Prohibiting
women (from entering the temple) violates the right of a woman to worship and
practise religion," he said.
Celibate
deity
While most
Hindu temples don't allow women to enter when they are menstruating, the
temple, commonly known as Sabarimala, was one of a few that did not allow any
woman of menstruating age.
Indu
Malhotra, the only woman judge on the bench, dissented with the majority
verdict, saying courts must not interfere with issues concerning "deep
religious sentiments".
The case
made headlines last month when a regional newspaper editor blamed devastating
floods in Kerala on women wanting to enter Sabarimala.
Millions of
devotees visit the temple every year to seek the blessings of Lord Ayyappa, the
presiding deity who is believed to be celibate.
According
to the temple website, pilgrims have to observe celibacy for 41 days before
entering the shrine. Some worshippers take an arduous forest route to reach the
hilltop temple, located some 1,200 metres (4,000 feet) above sea level.
Friday's
verdict was welcomed by India's Women and Child Development minister Maneka
Gandhi and other prominent women's rights activists.
"It
opens up the way forward for Hinduism to become even more inclusive and not a
property of one caste or one sex," Gandhi said.
In 2016,
hundreds of women campaigned in Maharashtra state to successfully end a ban on
women entering the Shani Shingnapur temple.
Women were
also prevented from entering Mumbai's Haji Ali Dargah mausoleum until the high
court scrapped the rule in 2016.
Rahul
Easwar, one of the main activists who backed the Sabarimala ban, said he would
appeal to the Supreme Court for a review before the temple reopens next month.
The revered shrine only opens for certain auspicious days each year.
"We
will go ahead with the fight as it (the verdict) affects the very core and
belief of temple systems," Easwar told reporters.
"Deities
have certain rights and their rights should be protected," he said.
Earlier
this month the Supreme Court scrapped a ban on gay sex dating back to 1861, and
on Thursday it said adultery would cease to be a crime.

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