SC declines plea against ‘VIP darshan’ in temple
SC Declines Plea Against 'VIP Darshan' in Temple
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The Supreme Court of India refused to entertain a petition challenging the practice of 'VIP darshan' — preferential queue-jumping access granted to influential persons — at the Shri Mahakaleshwar temple, Ujjain (Madhya Pradesh), one of the 12 Jyotirlingas of India. [S1]
- Chief Justice of India Surya Kant articulated the judicial boundary: courts are not gatekeepers of temple entry; temple management is an internal religious affair. [S1]
- This case sits at the intersection of Article 14 (equality), Article 25 (freedom of religion), Article 26 (management of religious affairs), and Article 32 (right to constitutional remedies). [S2]
- Examinees must understand the constitutional limits of judicial intervention in religious institutions — a recurring UPSC Mains theme (GS-II: Polity; GS-IV: Ethics).
2. Why in the News
- January 27, 2026: The Supreme Court dismissed a petition by Darpan Awasthi, represented by Advocate Vishnu Shankar Jain, challenging VIP darshan practices at Mahakaleshwar temple, Ujjain. [S1]
- The petitioner had earlier challenged a Madhya Pradesh High Court order that dismissed his original writ petition against preferential VIP access to the garbh graha (sanctum sanctorum) — specifically, the right to pour water (abhishek) on the deity — while denying such access to ordinary devotees. [S1]
- The controversy gained prior salience when Shrikant Shinde (son of then-Maharashtra CM Eknath Shinde) allegedly entered the sanctum sanctorum despite an existing ban, leading to removal of a temple official for dereliction. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- Mahakaleshwar Temple, Ujjain is one of the 12 Jyotirlingas; it is managed by the Shri Mahakaleshwar Temple Management Committee (SMTMC) under the Madhya Pradesh government. [S1]
- The temple has a long history of VIP entry norms that permit influential persons (politicians, celebrities, bureaucrats) to bypass general queues and access the inner sanctum.
- Eknath Shinde episode (2023): His son's unauthorized entry into the sanctum triggered public outrage; an official was removed, highlighting the gap between policy and practice. [S3]
- Shri Mahakal Mahalok corridor was inaugurated in October 2022 by PM Modi, massively expanding the temple precinct and increasing footfall — intensifying the debate around equitable darshan access. [S4]
- The MP High Court dismissed the original petition, holding that temple management lies within the domain of the Management Committee; the petitioner escalated to the SC.
- The SC on January 27, 2026 closed the matter, declining to interfere. [S1]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Temple | Shri Mahakaleshwar Jyotirlinga, Ujjain, Madhya Pradesh |
| Deity | Mahakal (Shiva) — one of 12 Jyotirlingas |
| Management Body | Shri Mahakaleshwar Temple Management Committee (under MP Govt.) |
| CJI at the time | Justice Surya Kant |
| Petitioner | Darpan Awasthi |
| Petitioner's Counsel | Advocate Vishnu Shankar Jain |
| SC Bench date | January 27, 2026 (reported January 28, 2026) |
| Lower court | Madhya Pradesh High Court (dismissed original petition) |
| Core dispute | VIP access to garbh graha (sanctum sanctorum) for abhishek (water offering) vs. denial to general public |
| SC observation | "In the presence of Mahakal, nobody is a VIP"; courts are not temple gatekeepers |
| Relevant Articles | Art. 14, Art. 25, Art. 26, Art. 32, Art. 226 |
| Mahakal Mahalok corridor | Inaugurated October 2022; expanded pilgrimage infrastructure |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 25 guarantees every individual the freedom of conscience and right to freely profess, practise, and propagate religion — subject to public order, morality, and health. [S2]
- Article 26 gives every religious denomination the right to manage its own affairs in matters of religion — but this right is not absolute and must conform to other Fundamental Rights, including Article 14 (equality before law). [S2]
- VIP darshan is arguably violative of Article 14: granting preferential access based on social/political status creates an arbitrary classification without intelligible differentia. [S2]
- The SC's refusal to hear the petition does not create a binding precedent validating VIP darshan; it is merely a non-exercise of jurisdiction — the constitutional question remains open.
- Essential Religious Practices (ERP) doctrine is relevant: courts intervene in religious matters only where fundamental rights are clearly violated; internal temple management generally falls outside ERP scrutiny.
Ethical / Governance
- VIP culture in pilgrim centres violates the principle of equality before God and law — the CJI himself noted "nobody is a VIP before Mahakal." [S1]
- Preferential access, especially when monetised (paid special darshan queues), raises issues of economic exclusion — the affluent access the sanctum while ordinary devotees cannot. [S2]
- Temple authorities face a conflict of interest: revenue from special darshan tickets incentivises VIP arrangements; transparency and accountability in temple management committees is weak.
- Chilkur Balaji Temple (Hyderabad) is a cited counter-example: it abolished VIP darshan and banned hundi donations, asserting spiritual equality as a constitutional value. [S2]
Social
- VIP darshan perpetuates class hierarchy within devotional spaces — contradicting the egalitarian ethos of Bhakti traditions.
- Ordinary pilgrims, including economically marginalised devotees who travel long distances, face multi-hour queues while powerful individuals bypass them.
- Gender dimension: women may face additional physical hardship in crowded queues when VIPs receive expedited access.
Administrative
- Temple management in India is a State subject (List II, Entry 28 — Charities and Charitable Institutions, charitable and religious endowments and institutions); hence the MP government and the SMTMC hold primary jurisdiction.
- The SC's restraint effectively reinforces the State's / temple committee's administrative autonomy to frame darshan policies.
- High footfall post-Mahakal Mahalok corridor expansion makes equitable crowd management a pressing public order and pilgrim safety issue. [S4]
Historical
- VIP darshan norms evolved historically alongside the practice of rajashray (royal patronage) of temples; kings and nobles always had privileged temple access.
- Post-Independence, political and bureaucratic elites inherited these privileges, institutionalising them in the form of special passes and management committee discretion.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- October 2022: Shri Mahakal Mahalok corridor (₹856 crore project) inaugurated, dramatically increasing visitor footfall and intensifying access disputes. [S4]
- 2023: Eknath Shinde's son controversially entered the sanctum sanctorum; a temple official removed as a consequence; the incident reignited the VIP darshan debate. [S3]
- 2025: Madhya Pradesh High Court dismisses Darpan Awasthi's petition challenging VIP darshan arrangements.
- January 27, 2026: Supreme Court (CJI Surya Kant) declines to entertain the challenge; delivers notable observation on judicial limits in temple management. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Mahakaleshwar temple is one of the 12 Jyotirlingas and is located in Ujjain, Madhya Pradesh. [S1]
- The temple is managed by the Shri Mahakaleshwar Temple Management Committee, constituted under the Madhya Pradesh government. [S1]
- CJI Surya Kant presided over the bench that declined the VIP darshan petition on January 27, 2026. [S1]
- The petitioner's counsel was Advocate Vishnu Shankar Jain — the same advocate associated with several temple-related cases including Gyanvapi. [S1]
- The SC observed: "In the presence of Mahakal, nobody is a VIP" — articulating judicial non-interference in temple entry matters. [S1]
- The term garbh graha refers to the sanctum sanctorum of a Hindu temple — the innermost chamber housing the principal deity. [S1]
- Article 26 of the Constitution guarantees religious denominations the right to manage their own affairs in matters of religion — subject to public order, morality, and health. [S2]
- VIP darshan based on economic or political status is prima facie violative of Article 14 (equality before law). [S2]
- Chilkur Balaji Temple, Hyderabad, is a noted example of a temple that abolished VIP darshan and hundi donations. [S2]
- The Mahakal Mahalok Corridor was inaugurated in October 2022 at an estimated cost of ₹856 crore. [S4]
- The SC's declining to hear a petition is not a precedent; it is an exercise of discretion under Article 136 (SLP) or Article 32 — the constitutional question is not adjudicated on merits.
- Temple management is a State subject under the Seventh Schedule, List II, Entry 28. [S2]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper(s): GS-II (Polity & Governance); GS-IV (Ethics)
Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: "Separation of powers between various organs dispute redressal mechanisms and institutions"; "Fundamental Rights" - GS-IV: "Ethics in public life"; "Role of civil society"; "Impartial service delivery"
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
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"The Supreme Court's refusal to hear a petition against VIP darshan raises fundamental questions about equality in public religious spaces. Examine the constitutional dimensions of VIP darshan practices in India." (GS-II, 250 words)
-
"Critically analyse the tension between Article 26 (religious denominations' right to manage their own affairs) and Article 14 (right to equality) in the context of preferential access practices at State-administered Hindu temples." (GS-II, 250 words)
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"Ethical issues in public institutions extend to religious spaces as well. Discuss the governance challenges posed by VIP culture in pilgrimage centres, with reference to recent judicial observations." (GS-IV, 150 words)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Essential Religious Practices (ERP) Doctrine | Supreme Court's benchmark for intervening in religious affairs — directly governs cases like this |
| Sabarimala Judgement (2018) | Landmark SC ruling on temple entry; demonstrates how courts can intervene when Fundamental Rights are at stake |
| State control of Hindu temples (HR&CE Acts) | Legislations by Tamil Nadu, AP, Telangana that allow State management of temples — contrasted with Article 26 |
| Articles 25–28 (Right to Religion) | The constitutional cluster governing all religious freedom jurisprudence |
| Seventh Schedule — Division of Powers | Entry 28, List II (State) — temple management as State subject |
| Judicial Review and Article 32 vs. Article 226 | Scope of SC and HC jurisdiction in writ petitions touching religious institutions |
| Mahakal Mahalok Corridor | Governance, urban planning, heritage conservation, and pilgrimage economy dimensions |
| Chilkur Balaji Model | Voluntary abolition of VIP darshan — a positive governance case study for GS-IV |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
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Confusing SC's refusal with a ruling on merits: The SC declining to hear a petition does NOT mean it upheld VIP darshan as constitutional; it merely exercised judicial restraint. No binding precedent was set.
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Wrong Article for temple management: Temple entry/management is primarily governed by Article 26, not Article 25. Art. 25 covers individual religious freedom; Art. 26 covers denominational/institutional rights. Conflating these is a common MCQ trap.
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Misidentifying the temple: Mahakaleshwar is a Jyotirlinga, not merely a famous temple. Knowing all 12 Jyotirlingas and their states is a tested factual area — Ujjain (MP) is the location.
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Assuming all temple management is with the Centre: Temple management is a State subject (List II); the Centre has no direct authority. Confusing this with the Centre's role in managing temples via SGPC, or with Waqf Board (which has a central statute), is a trap.
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Overstating CJI Surya Kant's observation as law: The remark "nobody is a VIP before Mahakal" is a judicial aside (obiter dicta) or courtroom observation — it is not a ratio decidendi and carries no binding force.
11. Sources
- [S1] "SC declines plea against 'VIP darshan' in temple" — The Hindu (January 28, 2026) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-28/ — (Tier 4; article content, primary source)
- [S2] "Legality of VIP Darshan in Religious Places: A Critical Overview" — Jus Corpus — https://www.juscorpus.com/legality-of-vip-darshan-in-religious-places-a-critical-overview/ — (Tier 3/reference)
- [S3] "Maharashtra CM's son enters Ujjain Mahakal temple's sanctum sanctorum despite ban, triggers row" — Tribune India — https://www.tribuneindia.com/news/india/maharashtra-cms-son-enters-ujjain-mahakal-temples-sanctum-sanctorum-despite-ban-triggers-row — (Tier 4/journalism)
- [S4] "Shri Mahakal Mahalok" — Wikipedia (citing government press releases) — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shri_Mahakal_Mahalok — (Reference)