Right to Pray

The Tensions between Gender and Faith Traditions in India

Authors

  • Ivy Dhar Dr B. R. Ambedkar University Delhi Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.19328

Keywords:

rights, pray, faith, gender, activism

Abstract

Focusing on cultural restrictions on women’s access to the garbhagriha in specific Hindu temples in India, this paper attempts to contextualize the wider debates around gender in faith-based practices and the confrontation between the ‘right to pray’ movement and its opponents. It reviews the complexities of practising public religion in a democratic nation. In the ambit of the contemporary feminist movement, activism has been initiated for reclaiming space for women in the realm of religion and faith. This was most clearly demonstrated in the women-led right to pray movement. The movement has been continuously evolving in local spaces and remains diversified across public places of worship. Debates around the exclusion of women have required the judiciary to reinterpret the relation between public temples and the equality proclaimed by the Constitution. By looking at the Sabarimala and Shani Shingnapur temple protests, this paper reflects on the conflict between activism and faith traditions. It charts the legal outcomes, local responses, political tensions, and the associated gender subjectivity. It attempts to revisit the role of women as recipients rather than agents of religion in public spaces, while extending the arguments to other aspects of ritual.

Author Biography

  • Ivy Dhar, Dr B. R. Ambedkar University Delhi

    Ivy Dhar is a faculty member at Dr B. R. Ambedkar University Delhi. Her research interests include gender and conflict, identity and cultural politics. Some of her publications in the related field of study are ‘Assamese Identity and the Ethnic Dissent: Asom Sahitya Sabha at the Crossroads’ (in Unheeded Hinterland: Identity and Sovereignty in Northeast India, Routledge, 2016) and co-authored ‘Rethinking Conflict Prevention through Grassroots Activism: Narratives of Women Building Peace in Rural India’ (Explorations, ISS E-Journal, 2020).

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Published

2021-08-04

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How to Cite

Dhar, I. (2021). Right to Pray: The Tensions between Gender and Faith Traditions in India. Religions of South Asia, 14(3), 258–284. https://doi.org/10.1558/rosa.19328