Current Affairs14 Jul, 2025The HinduSecularism — implici...
GS 2: Polity

Secularism — implicit from day one, explicit in 1976, Pg6

This article defends Indian secularism as a foundational principle of the Constitution, rooted in India’s freedom movement, Ashokan Dhamma, and modern constitutional philosophy

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Key Highlights:

  • Secularism was not inserted artificially in 1976; it was inherent in the Constitution from the beginning.
  • Indian secularism is distinct from Western models, favouring equal respect for all religions rather than strict separation.
  • The inclusion of “secular” in the Preamble during the Emergency only made explicit what was implicit.
  • Ashoka’s edicts, the freedom movement resolutions, and early constitutional drafts all reflect secular principles.
  • Secularism ensures autonomy of religions, protecting them from state interference.

Critical Issues Raised:

  • Hindutva advocates’ misunderstanding: The belief that secularism gives undue privilege to minorities is misguided; secularism benefits all religions by preventing state control over them.
  • Historical distortion: Claims that secularism is alien to India are factually incorrect — even the Hindu Mahasabha’s 1944 draft constitution rejected a theocratic state.
  • State domination of religion: Examples from Islamic and Christian history illustrate how state religion weakens spiritual autonomy.

Broader Implications:

  • Rejection of theocratic models: India must avoid regressive paths like Iran, Pakistan, or Saudi Arabia, despite growing majoritarian sentiment.
  • Constitutional silence ≠ absence: Like “judicial review” and “federalism,” secularism was always part of the Constitution’s basic structure, even if not expressly stated.
  • Modern alternatives exist: Other democracies (UK, Greece, Ireland, Sri Lanka) maintain dominant religious heritages but still guarantee equal rights and freedoms.
  • India’s uniqueness lies in “principled distance”, not hostility toward religion — inspired by Ashoka’s governance philosophy, not Western secularism alone.

Key Concepts Involved:

  • Ashokan Dhamma: Promoted tolerance, coexistence, and moral governance, not theological supremacy.
  • Basic Structure Doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati Case, 1973): Declared secularism as a non-amendable core value of the Constitution.
  • Western model of secularism: is the principle of complete separation between religion and the state, where religion is confined to the private sphere and the state neither supports nor interferes with religious institutions or practices. 
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