[As in Iran, at its very heart lies the issue of the right to choose by a
female -- in this case a Muslim.
The right to choose, of course, is crucial just not only in relation to the
state but also in relation to the community -- including family and friends.

At yet another level, in India, while the BJP is constantly trying to
humiliate the Muslims and provoking Hindu-Muslim conflicts as an integral
element of its larger project, the PFI and the likes are responding to
those provocations in ways that would just be loved by the BJP.

Nonetheless, the fight for the right to reject hijab is the obverse side of
the right to wear hijab, if one so wishes.
Imposition -- whether by the state or society or whoever -- either way, is
to be opposed tooth and nail.

The split in the subject Supreme Court verdict is only emblematic of the
split and tussle between human aspirations to assert and strengthen
individual agency vis-a-vis the collective and the drive by the collective
to maximise control of individual conduct.
Not to forget, in India today--under the incumbent regime, this drive is
assuming more and more monstrous proportions by the day. And also
noteworthy is the fact that the highest court has largely transformed
itself into an executive court.

<<The final important facet is perhaps the most basic of all: education.
Dhulia J. asks himself whether “we are making the life of a girl child any
better by denying her education, merely because she wears a hijab!”
(paragraph 66). This observation comes in the context of the admitted fact
that after the Karnataka High Court’s judgment, many girls were unable to
take their exams. Once again, the differences between Dhulia J. and Gupta
J. are stark: for Gupta J., there is nothing to see here, as the girl
students’ missing exams is, essentially, their own fault for refusing to
follow the uniform. Dhulia J., on the other hand, recognises that the
situation is rather more complex: it is a known fact, for example, that in
many households, access to education is a contested terrain between the
girl-child and her (conservative) family, with permission to go to school
contingent upon the wearing of the hijab. Indeed, as Nisha Susan highlights
in this article, there are a range of complicated reasons why someone might
wear the hijab, and it is almost never as simple as a total
compulsion/unencumbered choice binary: indeed, agency is something that is
both situated and negotiated, especially when it comes to women dealing
with patriarchy, both within the home and outside. Thus, for Dhulia J.,
what it basically comes down to is whether the effect of the Court’s
judgment will be the denial of access to education; and if so, how best to
ensure that that outcome is avoided.

*Conclusion*

At one level, the split within the bench turns upon different
understandings of the law and of its application. On a closer look,
however, the difference is much more fundamental: it is a difference in
world-view.

One of these worlds is governed by the iron laws of discipline and control;
of inflexible rules and punitive action for those that question them; of
authority that brooks no “rebel or defiance”; of homogeneity, the denial of
difference, and the “unanimity of the graveyard”; of one tune and one song;
and a world in which students are like undifferentiable lumps of clay, to
be moulded into what the authority considers to be “model citizens.”

The other world celebrates freedom and plurality; believes that rules
should allow space to breathe instead of suffocation; values diversity –
and the expression of diversity – over homogeneity; believes in the beauty
of an orchestra, with many voices, rather than just one; sees the classroom
as a space of liberation rather than control; and considers students to be
autonomous, thinking beings, capable of making choices, and even difficult,
negotiated choices.

Which world would we rather live in? That question is for each of us to
answer for ourselves. Which world do we live in? The answer to that hangs
in the balance; and all eyes will now turn to the Chief Justice, and the
next – and perhaps – final round in the history of this case.>>

(Excerpted from: <
https://indconlawphil.wordpress.com/2022/10/13/discipline-or-freedom-the-supreme-courts-split-verdict-in-the-hijab-case/
>.)

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