*Is Bhoomi Puja by state a Secular Act?*


*Ram Puniyani*



It is a common sight to see the statues, photos and symbols of Hindu Gods
and Goddesses in different Government owned public places like police
station and other buildings. Similarly state run buses also have the photos
of Hindu Gods and Godesses. We have stopped thinking whether it is right. It
is a common observation that most of the time Hindu rituals are performed
while the construction of state projects, buildings etc are undertaken. The
practice has become a sort of routine to which not many people give a
thought. We remember that after independence serious scholars criticized the
government for not being secular enough. Around that time when Pundit Nehru
was the Prime Minister, the Central Cabinet not only turned down the
proposal of building Somanth temple with state money but Dr. Rajendra
Prasad, the then President was also advised not to inaugurate the temple in
his capacity as the President of India. The visits of public functionaries
to the holy places were a strictly private matter, away form the glare of
media.



Times seem to have been changing. The politicians are competing with each
other to seek the divine blessing through different well advertised visits,
the inaugural ceremonies of state sponsored buildings have the Brahmin
priest supervising laying of the foundation stone and undertaking a bhoomi
puja (Worship of Earth) and doing his best to get the approval of the
supernatural powers though the chanting of Mantras. In this scenario, the
move by Rajesh Solanki, a dalit activist from Gujarat to file a Public
Interest Litigation against the bhoomi pujan and chanting of mantras
performed at the time of foundation stone laying ceremony for the new
building for the High court, came as a move to set the things on secular
grounds. The function was performed in the presence of the Governor of the
State of Gujarat and the Chief Justice of the State amongst others.
Solanki’s plea was that a secular state should not perform the religious
rituals. Such an act of worship violates the basic principles of the Indian
Constitution, which is secular and lays the boundaries between the state and
the religion. Solanki argued that the puja and chanting of mantras by
Brahmin priests would make the judiciary loose its secular credentials.



Rather than upholding his rational and secular plea, the court went on to
dismiss the petition and also fined the petitioner Rs 20000, doubting his
bona fides. The judges went onto say that the Bhoomi puja is meant to seek
the pardon of the Earth to graciously bear the burden of the damage to make
the construction, to make the construction successful. And since this is for
the welfare of all it fits into the Hindu values of Vasudhaiva Kutumbkam
(All beings on the planet are one family) and Sarvajan Sukhino Bhavantu (For
the good of all).



There is a lot of mix up in different arguments being put forward. To begin
with to regard that for making a construction the Earth has to be worshipped
is a purely Hindu concept. The people from other religions will do different
things to start their construction work, like sprinkling Holy water by
Christian priest for example. The atheists will be more concerned about the
preservation of ecological balance and to see that the geological and
architectural aspects have been fully taken care of. The legal defense of
the practices of one religion for state function is nothing short of
violating the basic principles of Indian Constitution, which ensures that
state keep its distance from all religions and then treats them all on the
equal ground, reaffirmed in S. R. Bommai case. Secularism, as understood in
S.R. Bommai is that (1) the state has no religion (2) the state stands aloof
from religion and (3) the state does not promote or identify with any
religion.

.

It is true that moral values of many religions can be accepted by the
society at large, like Vasudhaiva Kutumbkam (Hinduism), or ‘all men are
brother’ (Islam) or ‘Love thy neighbor’ (Christianity) but as far as rituals
are concerned it is a different cup of tea. The core of religions is not
rituals but moral values. In popular perception and practices it is the
rituals which are identified with the religion. This is a matter of social
understudying and different streams will go by different opinion on this.
The core point is that the saints of the genre of Kabir, Nizamuddin Auliya,
and Gandhi harped on the moral aspects of the religions. As far as practice
of religion is concerned people have no restriction in following their
social and personal practices, which are so diverse between different
religions and even within the same religion as different sects follow
different religious practices.



Such a judgment goes totally against the Article 51 (A) of the Constitution
also, which directs us to promote the rational thought in the society. The
promotion of rituals of one particular faith by the State is against the
spirit of our Constitution. Again in many instances there is just a thin
borderline between faith and blind faith. Blind faith will push the society
in the retrograde direction. Today we know that unless the location for a
construction is selected properly, geological and construction aspects are
taken care of scientifically, accidents do happen. That’s why state has
developed many a norms of construction which are necessary to be cleared and
we have witnessed that violation of such norms have led to accidents. Our
courts have to promote these aspects of Constitution rather than to prove in
a convoluted way that practices of one religion should be accepted as the
state practices. Father of the Nation Mahatma Gandhi had gone on to state
that “In India, for whose fashioning I have worked all my life, every man
enjoys equality of status, whatever his religion is. The state is bound to
be wholly Secular" (Harijan August 31, 1947) and, "religion is not the test
of nationality but is a personal matter between man and God, (ibid pg 90),
and," religion is a personal affair of each Individual, it must not be mixed
up with politics or national Affairs"(ibid pg 90).

Last few decades identification of Hindu religious practices has been
accepted as the state norms and this needs to be given a rethinking.



--

Issues in Secular Politics

III March 2011

www.pluralindia.com

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