Hijab Ban- Supreme Court Hearing-DAY-6- Live Updates
LIVELAW NEWS NETWORK
15 Sept 2022 10:50 AM IST
Live Updates
- 15 Sept 2022 4:08 PM IST
Arguments over for the day. Hearing to resume at 2 PM on Monday (Sep 19).
Bench to Dave : Try not to repeat.
Dave : Some amount of repetition is bound to be there.Different lawyers emphasise different things. There are different ways.
Justice Gupta : But the point is one.
Dave : Its like God, one God but different religions.
- 15 Sept 2022 3:57 PM IST
Raj : The essential motivation seems to be that there is a prejudice that #hijab is patriarchal. This assumption is not correct. State action cannot be prejudiced nature of gender stereotypes. The assumption that women wearing hijab is subordinate or subservient is not correct.
- 15 Sept 2022 3:56 PM IST
Another lawyer now argues to give the Shia perspective
Counsel : In Catholic faith, there is a Pope. In Shia context, there could be more than one scholars. In Shia, the sources of law are the same. But somewhat like Catholic faith, for the purposes of a follower, my religion tells me to consult scholars, Ayattollahs
Counsel : Islamic scholarship developed over decades. Historically, it is in Iran and Iraq. In India, Shias are in minority.
Justice Gupta : You are saying HC judgment is incorrect?
Counsel : Yes, because Shia perspective has not been taken.
- 15 Sept 2022 3:38 PM IST
Bhushan : Over the years, it has acquired a religious identity, and that is protected under Article 25. It may not be prescribed as an essential practice by Quran. But if it is a bona fide practice followed by several women, then it cannot be proscribed.
Bhushan : The religious practice can be proscribed only if it is against the grounds of public order, health or morality and these three rights are absent in the case of hijab.
Bhushan concludes.
- 15 Sept 2022 3:36 PM IST
Bhushan : If the rationale is to erase religious markers from school, then you have to proscribe all religious expressions.
Bhushan : I don't have to say it's essential, it's enough to say that it's something people from a particular religion like to wear to express their religious identity.