Not at all. That means you were listening with your ears - and your mind - shut tight.
It means that the courts have to decide if what has been brought to their attention is covered under Art. 25 or Art. 26 of the Indian Constitution.
I'll take this further, once you have grasped this.
That is because the ulema of Deoband cannot discuss what fits or doesn't fit into the cover of those two articles of the constitution.
I repeat again, get your mind off the religious aspect, and try to understand that the courts, and ONLY the courts, decide on constitutional matters.
That is because the ulema of Deoband cannot discuss what fits or doesn't fit into the cover of those two articles of the constitution.
I repeat again, get your mind off the religious aspect, and try to understand that the courts, and ONLY the courts, decide on constitutional matters.
They have every right in India that is guaranteed to them under the Indian constitution.
It is sad, but you have not even tried to understand the difference between deciding on a question of religion, and deciding on whether a particular observance deserves the protection of the constitution or not.
Again, I repeat, the interpretation is to the extent that the Indian constitution allows protection.
If you shut your eyes, stick your fingers into your ears, and decide to scream loudly, it won't change things around.
Simple.
The courts didn't decide what a Sikh can or cannot do. It decides what part of being a Sikh is protected.
If you are saying that constitutional matters can be decided outside our courts, that is wrong, as far as India is concerned.
If you didn't know earlier, you should know now, the law is radically different in Pakistan.
How will it be decided what is protected and what is not? By whom?
It will always be like this, as long as we have a constitution, particularly one that offers protection to the practice of religion, and one that refuses to take sides for one religion and against another.
NO Muslim will go for any 'option' because Muslims who think and read and discuss these understand what courts are deciding.
This is indeed where the issue comes in.
There is no provision in the Indian constitution for alternative systems to the courts of law.
In Pakistan, that is explicitly embodied. No court will take the opinion of any but what it determines, to its own satisfaction and not in the opinion of others, what is the core of a religion, and what constitutes its essential religious practices.
Again, I repeat, you are applying the customs and practices of Pakistan to India; we have no Federal Shariat Court, for example. There is no provision for taking into account either the fatwas issued by a religious authority, or the rulings of a panchayat, or the rulings of a khap panchayat. Those are all considered the same; their rulings are not binding in law.
No court will take the opinion of the leading ulema, or of one alim or of anybody outside the court system at all. That applies to all religions.
Unfortunately for your argument, in India, the courts have all the right and exclusive rights to decide these. If they consult what they consider authentic definitions of the faith, and conclude that x, or y, or z is or is not essential, the only authority that can contradict them is either a higher court or parliament, by passing a law that specifically has the effect of contradicting the court's ruling, provided that in making such a law it does not violate the basic structure of the constitution.
That means that there is nothing higher in authority on all matters than the courts. Nothing.
During the notorious Shah Bano case, where the lady was represented by Jinnah's associate, Daniyal Latifi, no less than three separate, self-appointed, self-certified Muslim Personal Law Boards sought to be heard. None of them was heard. The judgement went against what they had proposed should be held to be the law, and it was only by act of Parliament that the judgement was reversed. That it was interpreted by the law courts in their own way is another matter altogether.
I understand what you believe is important for you. It is still very unlikely that the Indian law courts will agree with you, or with any other opinion, other than what it thinks is correct after its own investigation.
There is not much point in your suggesting that your evidence has value, or that the opinions of the ulema have value. Those opinions are not considered.That is the reality.
That is how it is, that the interpretation is the exclusive territory of the courts of law.
Then should the khap panchayats also be summoned on matters relating to the Jats? Or Deoband's fatwa that a daughter should not massage her father's legs be considered binding in law?
Only the courts can decide.