Headlines
Jain community protests ban on religious fast to death
Jaipur/Lucknow/Bhopal, Aug 24
Thousands of Jain
community members took to the streets on Monday in various parts of the
country to protest against a Rajasthan High Court (HC) ruling earlier
this month declaring 'Santhara' or a fast-unto-death religious practice
followed by the community for years, as "unconstitutional".
Protests,
primarily "maun" (silent) rallies were reported from Jaipur and other
cities of Rajasthan, Bhopal and Indore in Madhya Pradesh, and Jhansi,
Ghaziabad, Mathura, Lucknow, Agra, Meerut, and Firozabad in Uttar
Pradesh with community members terming the verdict an interference in
their religious beliefs and an attempt to clamp down on an age-old
practice.
A division bench of the Rajasthan High Court on August
10 had declared Santhara unconstitutional while disposing off a public
interest litigation (PIL) filed in 2006 by Nikhil Soni, contending the
Santhara was akin to Sati and should be banned in the same way.
Soni
said the court has observed that Santhara violates the constitution's
article 21 and directed the state to stop the process. It had ruled if
someone practices it, then an FIR should be filed against them under the
Indian Penal Code's section 309 (punishment for attempting suicide) and
police should undertake an investigation into it.
Anyone provoking or supporting them should also be booked under section 306 (abetment of suicide), Soni told IANS.
In
Jaipur, Jains took out a march while keeping their shops and businesses
closed and not sending their children to schools and colleges. Schools
owned or run by the community remained closed.
"We want to educate people on Santhara so we took out this march," said Vijay Jain, a shopkeeper.
"There is a need to understand that Santhara and suicide are not the same," he added.
Similar marches were observed in other parts of the state including Kota, Banswara and Ajmer among others.
Hundreds
of Jains marched in Agra, Meerut, Baghpat, Lucknow, and Ghaziabad as
well as Jain dominated areas of Firozabad and Tundla in Uttar Pradesh.
While the protestors wore black bands, many people downed the shutters
of their business establishments in solidarity.
In Mainpuri, the
bastion of Samajwadi Party (SP) chief Mulayam Singh Yadav, people
belonging to the Jain community took out processions and gathered at the
Mandi Ramdas to express their displeasure at the court ruling. They
said Santhara cannot be equated to suicide and that it was a matter of
faith, something which cannot be checked or challenged by any court.
"A
person is driven to suicide by depression, frustration or anger while
Santhara is the highest practice of giving up one's body on one's own
volition," said Prasoon Jain, who runs a photography studio in Mainpuri.
A demonstration was also held in Khekhda area of Baghpat in
western UP and in Etmadpur and Chipitola areas in Agra, where protesters
who included a fair number of women and children also gave a memorandum
to the sub-divisional magistrate.
In Gorakhpur city of eastern
Uttar Pradesh, a 'Dharm Bachao Andolan' (Save Religion Movement) march
was taken out where protesters said they will not tolerate interference
in their religious beliefs.
Jain community leaders said on an
average every year, 300 people gave up their life by this practice of
Santhara and the number was around 100 in Rajasthan alone.
Protests
and demonstrations were also reported in many parts of Madhya Pradesh
including capital Bhopal, commercial capital Indore, Jabalpur, Morena,
Gwalior and Ujjain.
