A Supreme Court bench lifted the ban on women entering the Sabarimala shrine in Kerala’s Pathanamthitta district by a majority decision in September 2018. According to the ruling, subjecting devotion to gender discrimination is illegal and unconstitutional. The temple has traditionally prohibited women of menstruating age from ten to fifty years of age from entering due to the belief that the deity, lord Ayyappan, is celibate.?
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In response, Hindu upper and middle caste communities in Kerala organised Naamajapa yatras - localised rallies in which worshippers chanted Ayyappa mantras. Right-wing Hindu political outfits saw this as an opportunity to make significant inroads into Kerala's politico-cultural fabric, something they had been trying hard until then. Their involvement in these rallies mobilised women to protest against the temple entry and made it a state-wide issue.?It is worth noting that their protest was directed at the leadership of the CPI(M) and not the Supreme Court that issued the verdict.?A campaign was launched in which they mobilised pious Hindus on a war footing and women protestors against the temple entry under the banner of a 'ready to wait' campaign which emphasised devoutness towards lord Ayyappan and their willingness to wait until the age of 50??to enter the shrine.
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After the verdict, two women, Bindu Ammini and Kanaka Durga entered the temple secretly and evidently with the knowledge and support of the CPI(M) government and its police forces. It caused a huge furore in the state wherein public anger was directed solely towards the ‘supposed’ malicious act of Kerala’s Chief Minister and his government. Later on, Rehana Fathima, an activist, tried to enter the shrine but failed while S P Manju, president of the Kerala Dalit Mahila Federation, claimed she entered disguised as an old woman to escape scrutiny. However, the Kerala government informed the Supreme Court during the consideration of a revision petition that 51 women out of about 7,500 women registered online for admission to the temple had entered without trouble.
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Interestingly, despite their heroic act which jeopardised their safety, these women were not widely acknowledged, let alone celebrated. Does this lack of acknowledgement and public recognition even in so-called progressive and feminist circles in the state have a plausible explanation? These women paid a heavy price in their personal and political lives ranging from domestic and social violence to multiple overt physical assaults.