Zoya Mateen
Publish: 17 Mar 2022, 07:56 pm
The row over the headscarf has sparked a number of protests in Karnataka || Photo: Collected
The hijab, according to a landmark Indian court ruling on
Tuesday, has "something to do with culture but certainly not with religion".
A three-judge bench in the southern state of Karnataka
upheld a government ban on the headscarf in schools and colleges on the grounds
that wearing it was not "essential" to Islam.
The verdict, which came in the wake of a polarising row over
the hijab, has been challenged in the Supreme Court - an appeal against the ban
was filed hours after the high court order.
But legal experts and scholars have begun weighing in,
trying to unpack what the ruling means in a diverse country where public
displays of faith are common.
At the heart of the verdict is the so-called "essentiality
test" - used to determine if something is essential to a faith - which
Indian courts are increasingly using to settle disputes around religion.
Is wearing the hijab essential to Islam?
This was the question that drove the hearing and formed the
basis of the 129-page verdict.
The petitioners were a group of Muslim girls barred from
wearing the hijab in class in a government college in Karnataka's Udupi
district - they protested, but the college didn't relent, and the matter ended
up in court.
The girls argued that banning the hijab was not only
discriminatory but also impinged on their right to freedom of expression and
religion. Their faith, they said, required them to cover their head.
The government challenged this, saying that the burden was
on the petitioners to prove that the hijab was an "essential"
religious practice.
After 11 days of heated exchanges and adjournments, the
court concluded that the petitioners had "miserably failed" to prove
this.
Quoting passages from the Koran, it ruled that: "It is
not that if the practice of wearing hijab is not adhered to, those not wearing
hijab become the sinners, Islam loses its glory and it ceases to be a
religion."
Therefore, it added, the state has the right to prescribe a
uniform without the hijab - it dismissed the students' objections, saying the
rule was a "reasonable restriction" on their constitutional rights.
"What is not religiously made obligatory therefore
cannot be made a quintessential aspect of the religion through public
agitations or by the passionate arguments in courts," the order said.
But constitutional experts and legal scholars say this is
not a question for the court to decide. "You're entering into theological
terrain that lawyers and judges have little knowledge about," says senior
Supreme Court lawyer Rebecca John.
The 'essentiality test' - then and now
"When it comes to faith, there's no uniformity in
religious practices - you may come under the umbrella of a particular religion
but everybody has their own distinct flavour," John says.
"Even the hijab is symbolic to many things for many
kinds of people. The easiest way to condemn it is to say it's oppressive but
across the world, it is used as a symbol of resistance. So, we can't define
what is essential in absolute contours - people adapt it for different
reasons."
By doing so, she adds, the court is stripping women of their
agency, reducing complex and intimate choices to simple binary ones.
The Indian constitution allows states to curb the right to
freedom of religion on the grounds of public order, health, and morality. But
the essential religious practice test - which is used to determine what
practices are protected by the right to freedom of religion - was born in
court.
The Supreme Court first used the term "essential part
of a religion" in 1954, observing that practice is essential if removing
it causes a "fundamental change in the religion".
"This empowered religious communities," says legal
scholar and Professor Deepa Das Acevedo. "What lay beyond the state's
power to regulate or change would, effectively, be determined by the religious
communities themselves."
But over time, she adds, Indian courts have started using
the doctrine to do the "opposite", that is regulate these matters
themselves.
"So, the doctrine morphed from 'essentially religious'
to 'essential to religion'," she says.
This is unlike in other countries such as the US, where
courts accept a plaintiff's assertion that a given practice is religious,
without questioning it further.
But in India, the courts are making that decision - and
somewhat arbitrarily, experts say.
A question of choice
In 2017, India's Supreme Court banned instant divorce in
Islam, saying it was not an essential part of the faith and enjoyed no
protection. In 1994, the top court had settled a contentious land dispute
between Hindus and Muslims by saying that a mosque was not
"essential" to practicing Islam since namaz, or prayers, could be
offered anywhere. So, it ruled the land around the mosque could be given to
Hindus.
In 2018, the court again used the test to allow Hindu women
of all ages to enter the Sabarimala temple, which historically restricted women
of certain ages. The court said the restriction was not an "essential
religious practice".
In 2016, the high court in Kerala examined the Koran and
said the text prescribed covering the head to be a religious duty and,
therefore, deemed it essential to Islam. It was hearing a petition by students
who were not allowed to wear the hijab to a medical exam on the grounds that it
would enable them to cheat.
The petitioners in Karnataka had referred to this judgment,
but this time the court rejected their argument.
"The court has applied the test in an inconsistent
manner, repeatedly changing the method of determining essentiality, seriously
undermining religious liberty," legal scholar Faizan Mustafa, wrote in his
2017 paper, Freedom of Religion in India.
He argues that the test now restricts the scope of religious
freedom guaranteed by the constitution.
On the other hand, experts are also not sure what would have
been a good alternative doctrine to follow.
"If only I had an easy answer!" Acevedo says.
"The truth is that there is no such thing as a perfect doctrine. We hope
that the laws we craft and the people who interpret and apply them do so as
fairmindedly and as generously as possible. But that does not always happen.
And it doesn't mean that hitting on the perfect doctrine would solve all of our
problems."
John says the emphasis should be on choice.
"Who are we to say a woman's choice to wear the hijab
is not well thought out?" John asks. "The court should've
considered the agency argument instead of focusing only on the essentiality
test."
"If you must implement uniforms, then it should be across the board. You can't allow someone to wear a bindi or have sacred threads around their wrist. When you insist on it only for one class of people, that's discriminatory."
The Article was written by Zoya Mateen and first published in BBC Online
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