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Lingayats As Minorities: Why It Is Near-Impossible To Remain A Hindu And Run A School Or College In India

  • No, the Lingayats are not fighting Hinduism.
  • We discuss the four things that are key to understanding the Lingayat demands and agitation– and they have more to do with Indian education than branching off from Hinduism.

Swarajya StaffMar 19, 2018, 06:31 PM | Updated 06:31 PM IST
Basavanna, who is credited with founding Lingyatism. (Sscheral via Wikimedia Commons)

Basavanna, who is credited with founding Lingyatism. (Sscheral via Wikimedia Commons)


Contrary to what some sections of the media would want you to believe, the Lingayat issue is not a philosophical argument with Hinduism rather it is the inevitable consequence of a discriminatory and exploitative legal regime put in place by the Sonia Gandhi-led United Progressive Alliance (UPA).

Thus, when reading and talking about the Lingayat agitations, there are four things one needs to keep in mind. But first,

What exactly is the Lingayat demand?

As Hariprasad N explains here, what “the Lingayats are asking for is an inclusion in the list of ‘religious minorities’ officially recognised by the Government of India. In other words, the demand is for ‘legal’ recognition as minorities, and not in any other way”.

Now, here are the four points.

1. This is not a revolt against Hindu philosophy, culture or practices.

Some articles in the media have tried to spin the Lingayat movement as a revolt against Hinduism itself. A closer look at the demands, however, proves the claim to be false.

If this was indeed a case of revolt against Hinduism, the Lingayats know better than to address their demands to the state. As Twitter user @realitycheckind explains in his blog:

“If that were all there is to it, Lingayatism doesn't need a gazette notification but can cleave from Hinduism by a natural process. There is no Hindu pope who is going to prevent them from separating, nor will there be any institutional retaliation. All they need is to develop an inside / outside view with Hindus and build higher walls and deeper moats. They can use unique types of food, perfumes, practices that appear strange to Hindus, mutilations, naming babies in certain way, controlling intercourse with Hindus, and so on.”

However, the Lingayats do nothing of this sort but insist only on a “Central Govt notification (a mere piece of paper) that amends the National Commission of Minorities Act 1992 and adds them as the 7th religious minority in India”.

What this implies is that the Lingayat demonstrations are not about some imagined philosophical schism with Hinduism but about obtaining a certificate from the central government.

2. Why would any community not want to avail of Article 30?

Article 30 of the Indian Constitution gives “all minorities, whether based on religion or language,... the right to establish and administer educational institutions of their choice”. In effect, this means that minority educational institutions are immune from intervention, and takeover, from the state.

Today, Lingayats run numerous educational institutions. And since they are not classified as a minority, all their institutions are, in theory, vulnerable to intervention from the state.

However, that they have managed to establish a network of educational institutions without being classified as a minority is by itself a strong argument for the abolition of Article 30 altogether. As @realitycheckind explains:

“If you argue that Lingayat have been unfairly denied minority status for 40 years, then it follows that they have managed to roll out such large education network without minority status.”

However, till Article 30 remains, it will continue to be available as a tool to splinter Hindu society. As he explains, one “strategy could be to select groups to be groomed for eventual split by allowing them to roll out big institutions”, and when the institutional network is well-established, such groups will willingly ask to be classified as minorities, separate from Hindus, for the sake of safeguarding their institutions.

3. Communities would rather be classified as non-Hindu than suffer the “93rd Amendment”.

In 2005, the Sonia Gandhi-led UPA introduced the Ninety-third Amendment to the Constitution, which added clause (5) to Article 15. The clause reads:

Nothing in this article or in sub-clause (g) of clause (1) of article 19 shall prevent the State from making any special provision, by law, for the advancement of any socially and educationally backward classes of citizens or for the Scheduled Castes or the Scheduled Tribes in so far as such special provisions relate to their admission to educational institutions including private educational institutions, whether aided or unaided by the State, other than the minority educational institutions referred to in clause (1) of article 30.

Put simply, any Hindu-run educational institution can be “taken over to any percent along any social justice axes in any aspect of management”.

The Lingayats, with their numerous educational institutions, naturally wish to protect themselves from this draconian law. And the only way to save yourself from the Ninety-third Amendment is to have yourself declared a minority. “The reward is a safe harbor with total and permanent autonomy guaranteed constitutionally. The ungainly sight of begging for minority status will be forgotten” once the comfort of statutory protection is achieved.

4. How to turn the debate on its head?

The Lingayats today, and other Hindu communities who make similar demands in the future, cannot be blamed for wanting to protect their institutions. The only way out of this quagmire is through a seemingly drastic measure – repealing the Ninety-third Amendment and extending the privilege of Article 30 to all communities, irrespective of whether they are majority or minority.

The current legislative regime makes it near-impossible to remain a Hindu and run a school or college. Either this exploitative regime goes, or the Hindu society in India braces itself for gradual fragmentation.

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