Balancing faith, dignity and constitutional rights


Balancing Faith, Dignity and Constitutional Rights

The Sabarimala Jurisprudence and India's Religious Freedom Architecture


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Chronological milestones:

Year Event
1965 Kerala Hindu Places of Public Worship (Authorisation of Entry) Act enacted — Rule 3(b) became the rule restricting women aged 10–50 from Sabarimala. [S3]
1991 Kerala High Court upheld the restriction, ruling it a valid custom of the temple.
2006 Indian Young Lawyers Association files PIL in Supreme Court challenging the restriction.
28 Sep 2018 Five-judge bench delivers 4:1 verdict; women of all ages declared entitled to enter. [S2]
Nov 2019 Supreme Court refers review petitions to nine-judge bench (3:2 majority); links case to broader questions on ERP doctrine, entry rights in mosques, dargahs, Parsi fire temples. [S1]
2025–26 Nine-judge bench hears final arguments; case also encompasses Muslim women's entry to mosques and rights of Parsi women married to non-Parsis. [S1]

Related antecedents: - Shirur Mutt case (1954): SC first articulated the Essential Religious Practices (ERP) test — only practices essential or integral to a religion are protected under Article 26. - Haji Ali Dargah case (2016): Bombay HC struck down ban on women entering the inner sanctum, citing Article 14 and 25.


4. Core Static Facts

Constitutional provisions at stake:

Article Provision
Art. 14 Right to Equality
Art. 15 Non-discrimination on grounds of sex, religion, race, caste
Art. 17 Abolition of Untouchability
Art. 21 Right to life and personal dignity
Art. 25 Freedom of conscience and free profession, practice, propagation of religion (subject to public order, morality, health)
Art. 26 Freedom to manage religious affairs — available to religious denominations

Key statutory instrument: - Kerala Hindu Places of Public Worship (Authorisation of Entry) Act, 1965Rule 3(b): barred women "who are not by custom and usage allowed to enter a place of public worship." [S3]

The 2018 Bench — composition:

Judge Opinion
CJI Dipak Misra (+ Khanwilkar J.) Majority — struck down restriction
Justice Rohinton Nariman Concurring
Justice D.Y. Chandrachud Concurring (equality code argument)
Justice Indu Malhotra Dissent — courts should not interfere in matters of faith

Key doctrines:


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Social

Ethical / Governance

Historical

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. The 2018 Sabarimala judgment was delivered by a 5-judge Constitution Bench with a 4:1 majority. [S2]
  2. The sole dissenting judge in Indian Young Lawyers Association v. State of Kerala (2018) was Justice Indu Malhotra. [S2]
  3. The restriction on women's entry at Sabarimala was contained in Rule 3(b) of the Kerala Hindu Places of Public Worship (Authorisation of Entry) Act, 1965. [S3]
  4. The Essential Religious Practices (ERP) test was first articulated by the Supreme Court in the Shirur Mutt case, 1954. [S2]
  5. Women between the ages of 10 and 50 were restricted from entering Sabarimala — corresponding to menstruating age. [S2]
  6. The majority held that Ayyappa devotees do not constitute a separate religious denomination under Article 26. [S2]
  7. In November 2019, the Supreme Court referred review petitions in the Sabarimala case to a nine-judge bench by a 3:2 majority. [S1]
  8. The nine-judge bench hearing the review (2026) is headed by CJI Surya Kant. [S1]
  9. The constitutional provision enabling the state to make laws for social welfare and reform in Hindu institutions is Article 25(2)(b). [S2]
  10. Justice D.Y. Chandrachud's concurring opinion introduced the concept of constitutional morality overriding popular morality in the religious context. [S2]
  11. The Haji Ali Dargah case (2016) was decided by the Bombay High Court, not the Supreme Court — a common confusion point. [S3]
  12. Article 17 (Untouchability Abolition) is often invoked alongside Art. 14, 15, 25 in temple entry cases, but does not directly apply to gender-based exclusions. [S2]
  13. The phrase "constitutional morality" was originally coined by B.R. Ambedkar in the Constituent Assembly debates. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping:

Paper Syllabus heading
GS-II Indian Constitution — significant provisions; SC landmark judgments; Fundamental Rights
GS-I Indian society — role of women; social reform; secularism
GS-IV Ethics — conflict between traditional values and constitutional morality; role of reason in governance

Plausible Mains question stems:

  1. "The Sabarimala judgment represents the triumph of constitutional morality over popular morality. Critically examine the proposition in light of India's religious freedom jurisprudence." (GS-II, 15 marks)
  2. "The Essential Religious Practices doctrine has become a judicial tool that paradoxically requires courts to make theological judgments. Discuss its evolution, critique, and proposed alternatives." (GS-II, 15 marks)
  3. "Balancing individual rights under Article 25 with denominational autonomy under Article 26 remains a constitutional challenge. Analyse with reference to landmark Supreme Court judgments." (GS-II, 10 marks)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Essential Religious Practices Doctrine Core test applied in Sabarimala — its evolution, critique, and pending nine-judge bench reformulation
Freedom of Religion (Articles 25–28) Direct constitutional provisions at stake — scope, limitations, state power
Uniform Civil Code (Art. 44) Intersects religion, gender, reform — similar tension between religious personal law and constitutional equality
Secularism in the Indian Constitution Kesavananda Bharati to present — India's "positive secularism" vs. strict separation model
Dalit Temple Entry Movement Historical precursor — links Art. 17, caste, religion, and state intervention
Haji Ali Dargah case (2016) Parallel gender exclusion case in Islamic context — Bombay HC ruling on women's entry
Triple Talaq judgment (2017) Shayara Bano v. Union of India — another intersection of Muslim personal law and constitutional rights of women
Constitutional Morality B.R. Ambedkar's concept; role in Navtej Singh Johar (Section 377), Sabarimala, and NALSA judgments

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Art. 25 and Art. 26: Art. 25 is an individual right; Art. 26 is a denominational right. The Sabarimala majority ruled on both — the crucial finding was that Ayyappa devotees do NOT form a denomination, so Art. 26 was inapplicable.

  2. Wrong year for ERP doctrine origin: The ERP test originated in the Shirur Mutt case (1954), NOT in Sabarimala. Aspirants conflate the two.

  3. Attributing the "constitutional morality" argument to CJI Dipak Misra: It was Justice D.Y. Chandrachud's concurring opinion — not the CJI's lead opinion — that developed this concept most expansively.

  4. Thinking the 2019 referral overturned the 2018 verdict: The 2019 referral did NOT reverse the 2018 judgment. The 2018 verdict stands; the nine-judge bench is hearing review petitions and examining additional constitutional questions.

  5. Misidentifying the dissenter: Justice Indu Malhotra dissented (opposed women's entry); Justice Chandrachud concurred (favoured entry on broadest grounds). The two are frequently confused in MCQs.


11. Sources