Retnamma,
Thiruvananthapuram
The government should govern, not run, religious bodies. It is shocking
to learn that a mere Rs. 36 crore is earned from 4.7 lakh acres of
agricultural land and 2.6 crore square feet of urban temple sites. These
buildings and lands must be liberated from the hands of politicians’
kith and kin.
N.R. Ramachandran,
Chennai
While I concur with Subramanian Swamy on his broad opinion on the
maladministration of religious institutions by the state, the “obvious
question” he points out is perhaps misleading. Dr. Swamy, with his legal
acumen, knows more than anyone that Article 26 grants the fundamental
right to every religious denomination to administer such property in
accordance with law. Therefore, government interference is a function of
lawful management and need not connote prejudice against any particular
religious disposition. However, the rank insensitivity of government
officials towards our priceless heritage, as alleged by Dr. Swamy, if
true, is indeed appalling.
Shijoy Varughese,
Ghaziabad
The freedom to practise one’s religion is a non-discriminatory and
non-discretional constitutional provision which applies universally.
This religious freedom extends to the right to administer one’s place of
worship. True secularism means requires the government to view all
religions with equal dispassion.
T.K.S. Thathachari
Bangalore
source: the hindu dot com
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