Deities’ Rights?

IF 0.6 0 RELIGION Journal of Law and Religion Pub Date : 2023-10-24 DOI:10.1017/jlr.2023.27
Deepa Das Acevedo
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Abstract

Abstract A brief commotion arose during the hearings for one of twenty-first-century India’s most widely discussed legal disputes, when a dynamic young attorney suggested that deities, too, had constitutional rights. The suggestion was not absurd. Like a human being or a corporation, Hindu temple deities can participate in litigation, incur financial obligations, and own property. There was nothing to suggest, said the attorney, that the same deity who enjoyed many of the rights and obligations accorded to human persons could not also lay claim to some of their constitutional freedoms. The lone justice to consider this claim blandly and briefly observed that having specific legal rights did not perforce endow one with constitutional rights. Nevertheless, a handful of recent and high-profile disputes concerning Hindu temple deities and the growing influence of Hindu nationalist politics together suggest that the issue of deities’ rights is far from a settled matter. This article argues that declining to recognize deities’ constitutional rights accurately reflects dueling commitments in the Indian Constitution.
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神灵的权利?
在21世纪印度最受广泛讨论的法律纠纷之一的听证会上,一位精力充沛的年轻律师提出,神灵也享有宪法赋予的权利,这引起了一阵短暂的骚动。这个建议并不荒谬。就像人类或公司一样,印度寺庙的神灵可以参与诉讼,承担经济责任,并拥有财产。律师说,没有任何迹象表明,享有赋予人类的许多权利和义务的同一个神不能也要求人类的一些宪法自由。唯一一位温和而简短地考虑这一主张的法官指出,拥有特定的法律权利并不必然赋予一个人宪法权利。然而,最近发生的一些引人注目的关于印度教寺庙神灵的争议,以及印度教民族主义政治日益增长的影响力,都表明,神灵的权利问题远未得到解决。本文认为,拒绝承认神灵的宪法权利准确地反映了印度宪法中的斗争承诺。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
55
期刊介绍: The Journal of Law and Religion publishes cutting-edge research on religion, human rights, and religious freedom; religion-state relations; religious sources and dimensions of public, private, penal, and procedural law; religious legal systems and their place in secular law; theological jurisprudence; political theology; legal and religious ethics; and more. The Journal provides a distinguished forum for deep dialogue among Buddhist, Confucian, Christian, Hindu, Indigenous, Jewish, Muslim, and other faith traditions about fundamental questions of law, society, and politics.
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