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Social Justice

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August 25, 2018

Using state power to enforce the sacred, both defiles the sacred and messes with the secular. Discuss in the light of the proposed Punjab’s sacrilege law. (200 words)

Refer – The Indian Express

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IAS Parliament 6 years

KEY POINTS

·         Punjab Cabinet recently decided to amend the law to make acts of “sacrilege against the religious books” punishable with life imprisonment.

Defiles the sacred

·         The amendment defiles the sacredness of the Books, the eternity of the Words because the status of the Book now becomes an artefact of state power.

·         Rather than being luminous, potent and transcendent texts, their status is now reduced to a section of the Indian Penal Code.

·         It is if the songs of Krishna, or the word of Mohammad, or the teaching of the Gurus, now need the imprimatur of state violence to secure their sacredness.

Messes with the secular

·         Blasphemy laws are largely aimed at preserving public order that might get disturbed by actions that flare up religious sentiments.

·         While the sanctity of the religion is indeed important, a secular state works not to preserve religion but to preserve law and individual freedoms.

·         Hence, the argument that the state needs to use coercive power in deference to religious sentiments (however sincere those sentiments might be), is illiberal and dangerous.

·         In this context, actions perpetrated with the deliberate and malicious intention of outraging religious feelings and stir passions have to be curtailed.

·         Hence, while laws need to be a minimum safeguard and limited in scope, the current proposal seeks to appease religious groups disproportionately.

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