Aishwarya Deb: Religion V. Reform: Role of Indian Judiciary
Aishwarya Deb: Religion V. Reform: Role of Indian Judiciary
Aishwarya Deb: Religion V. Reform: Role of Indian Judiciary
ABSTRACT
Even though India has considerably benefitted from the distinction between what is essential to
a religion and what is not, the “essential religious practices” test has always remained a
debatable issue regarding its legality in a secular state. Very recently, the Supreme Court
resorted to the said test while deliberating upon the issue of triple talaq in Shayara Bano v.
Union of India, where it could have easily taken the gender based reasoning to reach its final
judgment. However, not only in this case but in many others also, the Supreme Court has
preferred to declare something as not essentially religious, rather than subjecting it to other
secular tests like public order or morality and more so, avoiding to adopt an approach towards
horizontal application of fundamental rights. The legitimacy of the test has come into limelight
yet again with the case of Goolrokh Gupta v. Burjor Pardiwala. Though the Hon’ble Supreme
Court has passed an interim order in favour of the Parsi woman, thereby allowing her to attend
her parent’s last rites, the primary question as to what constitutes the religious identity of a
Parsi has not yet been settled. It is just a matter of time before we get to see the verdict of the
Hon’ble Court and also which path it ultimately resorted to. In this context, the present paper
seeks to delve into the question of competency of the Courts in transforming itself into a
theological authority by tracing the evolution of the test and analysing its legitimacy in a nation
like India, by briefly comparing with the ECthR doctrine of margin of appreciation.
I. INTRODUCTION
“Religion is most threatening to liberal democracy where it informs national identity or
permeates everyday life.”1
Religion is undoubtedly an important facet of Indian nationhood. However one cannot deny
the fact that in India, primarily, the source of discrimination has been religious personal laws,
unlike other countries where it results from the codification of the prejudices of the
powerful.2 Despite such inconveniences, it is difficult to identify a person without referring to
his or her religion, owing to the fact that India is a deeply religious society and religion also
provides certain perks to respective communities. In such a scenario, religion in India is not
just a problem to overcome but also a presence to be accommodated. The concept of religious
freedom in India, enshrined under Article 25 of the Constitution of India, has been clubbed
with a mandate to the state to intervene in religious affairs which go against the societal
order. This emanates from the idea that even though Indian nationalism commits itself to
social reform, it is anchored to rival and contentious religious or cultural traditions. So much
so, the State, more often than not, has to intervene in matters of religious concern in pursuit
* The author is a Doctoral Candidate at the West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences, Kolkata,
India. The author can be reached at aishwarya.deb@nalsar.ac.in.
1
Gary Jeffrey Jacobsohn preface to Gary Jeffrey Jacobsohn, The Wheel Of Law (Princeton University Press,
New Jersey,2003)
2
Gary Jeffrey Jacobsohn, The Wheel Of Law 104 (Princeton University Press, New Jersey,2003)
3
(2017) 9 SCC 1.
4
Mehal Jain, Parsi Woman’s Identity Crisis: Prima Facie No Case For Accepting ‘Doctrine Of Merger Of
Wife’s Religious Identity With That Of Husband, Observes SC (December 7, 2017), available at
http://www.livelaw.in/parsi-womans-identity-crisis-prima-facie-no-case-accepting-doctrine-merger-wifes-
religious-identity-husband-observes-sc/ (Last visited on February 09,2018).
6
Shylashri Shankar, A Juridical Voyage of “Essential Practices of Religion” From India to Malaysia and
Pakistan, available at http://www.cprindia.org/articles/juridical-voyage-%E2%80%9Cessential-practices-
religion%E2%80%9D-india-malaysia-and-pakistan (Last visited on February 09, 2018).
7
Id. at 14.
8
CONSTITUENT ASSEMBLY DEBATES, December 02, 1948 speech by DR. B.R. AMBEDKAR, available at
http://parliamentofindia.nic.in/ls/debates/vol7p18b.htm (Last visited on February 08, 2018).
9
The Constitution of India, 1950, art.25.
10
Justice Aftab Alam, The Idea of Secularism and the Supreme Court of India, (October 14, 2009), available at
https://gandhifoundation.files.wordpress.com/2009/10/justice-aftab-alam-2009-gf-annual-lecture2.pdf (Last
visited on February 08, 2018).
11
Ibid.
12
AIR 1954 SC 282.
13
AIR 1958 SC 255.
14
AIR 1961 SC 1402.
15
See id., at para 33.
16
AIR 1958 SC 731.
17
AIR 1962 SC 853.
18
See id., at para 33.
19
See supra note 17 at para 43.
20
AIR 1966 SC 1119.
21
(1983) 4 SCC 522.
22
See supra note 12.
23
Id., at para 21.
24
NUJS Law Review, Editorial Note, 9 NUJS L. Rev. 1 (2016).
25
Supra note 13.
26
The Agamas are a collection of religious scriptures of various Hindu devotional schools. The Supreme Court
specifically referred to the text of Agamas to find out the true essence of Hinduism as a religion.
27
(1983) 1 SCC 51.
28
Mohd. Ismail Faruqui v. Union of India, (1994) 6 SCC 360.
35
AIR 2016 SC 209.
36
Jeffrey A. Redding, “Secularism, the Rule of Law, and Sharia Courts: An Ethnographic Examination of a
Constitutional Controversy”, 57 St. Louis U. L.J. 339 (2013).
37
Noorjehan Safia Niaz v. State of Maharashtra, 2016 SCC OnLine Bom 5394.
44
Danial Latifi v. Union of India, (2001) 7 SCC 740.
45
Supra note 10.
46
Supra note 3.
47
Id., at para 53.2.
48
Indian Young Lawyers Association & Ors. V. State of Kerala & Ors., (2017) 10 SCC 689.
49
Id., at para 30.
50
Supra note 4.
51
Ibid.
52
[2011] ECHR 2412.
53
The European Convention on Human Rights, 1950, art.9.
54
Marisa Iglesias Vila, A Margin of Appreciation Doctrine for the European Convention on Human Rights: In
Search of a Balance between Democracy and Rights in the International Sphere, available at
https://law.yale.edu/system/files/documents/pdf/sela/SELA13_Iglesias_CV_Eng_20130508.pdf (Last visited on
February 08, 2018).
55
Id.
56
Zengin v. Turkey, [2008] 46 EHRR 44.
57
Supra note 54 at 10.
58
Id.
59
[2008] ECHR 1579.
60
Supra note 54 at 12.