The Supreme Court on Wednesday, while insisting that
restrictions in the “Agama sastras” did not violate the right to
equality enshrined in Article 14 of the Constitution, made it clear that
appointment of priests should conform to the Agama practices prevalent
in a particular temple, even if it meant that archakas (priests) were
appointed from a given “denomination, sect or a group” in the State.
The
Tamil Nadu government had, in 2002, announced that temple priests would
be appointed from people belonging to all castes, and had even launched
Agama training schools in several temples, to impart the required
training and qualifications to become archakas in Hindu temples.
The
bench led by Justice Ranjan Gogoi has clearly said that the appointment
of archakas in temples should follow the Ágama sastras followed in
individual temples.
Agamas in Sanskrit mean “that
which has come to us.” There are two kinds of Agama texts, Agama and
Tantra, the former practised in Saivite and Vaishnavite temples, and the
latter in Sakthi temples.
Agamas expound a variety of subjects and they are really the stylebook, on which Hindu rituals are based.
While
some Saivite temples practise Tamil Agamas too, rituals in Vaishnavite
temples are based on Vaikhanasa Agamas and the Pancharathra Agamas, or
the Five Nights. Pancharathra Agamas, considered an esoteric subject, is
believed to have been taught by Lord Vishnu himself to the sages over
five nights.
The total number of works, generally
called the samhitas, exceeds 200, according to lists available in
several works, though only a few are available in print.
Mr. Parthasarathy, head priest of Sri Parthasarathy Temple in Triplicane, Chennai, welcomed the verdict.
While
anybody could become priests, priests practising Vaikhanasa Agamas got
the right by birth and anybody who did not wish for material wealth, and
sacrificed his life for the purpose of the Agamas could be a priest, he
said. A.M. Rajagopalan, astrologer, said the focus of any temple
worship was on the agamas, not the idols.
Idols were just the medium between the worshippers and the agamas.
Not all Brahmins could be priests or were allowed inside the
sanctum sanctorum
of temples, and only those who had mastered the Agamas could become archakas, he said.
Data that may be helpful:
Important Points:-
- Article 14 in The Constitution Of India 1949 :- Equality before law The State shall not deny to any person equality before the law or the equal protection of the laws within the territory of India Prohibition of discrimination on grounds of religion, race, caste, sex or place of birth
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