
CHENNAI: In an era when India is consciously reclaiming its civilisational selfhood, the Madras High Court has delivered a judgment that quietly but firmly restores intellectual balance to the Indian legal discourse. By holding that the teaching of the Bhagavad Gita does not make a trust “religious” so as to deny registration under the Foreign Contribution (Regulation) Act, 2010, the Court has reaffirmed a truth deeply embedded in Bharat’s consciousness: the Gita is not sectarian dogma, but civilisational wisdom.
The case arose from the rejection of an FCRA application by a public charitable trust engaged in teaching Vedanta, Sanskrit, Yoga, and the Bhagavad Gita, as well as in preserving ancient manuscripts. The Ministry of Home Affairs rejected the application on the assumption that such activities were “religious” in nature. This bureaucratic reasoning, rooted more in colonial-era misunderstanding than constitutional clarity, was decisively set aside by the Madras High Court.
Justice G.R. Swaminathan’s observation that the Bhagavad Gita is not a religious book but a work of moral science and a part of Bharatiya civilisation is not merely a legal finding; it is a civilisational assertion. The Gita is not a text of worship, ritual, or ecclesiastical authority. It is a philosophical dialogue that addresses duty, action, leadership, ethics, detachment, and the inner discipline required to act righteously in complex circumstances. Its setting a battlefield rather than a shrine symbolises life’s moral conflicts, not religious instruction.
For thousands of years, the Bhagavad Gita has served as India’s ethical compass. Its doctrine of Nishkama Karma laid the foundation for selfless public service. Its concept of Svadharma emphasised responsibility over entitlement. Its emphasis on equanimity amidst action shaped the Indian understanding of governance, warfare, justice, and personal conduct. That is why leaders from Mahatma Gandhi to Lokmanya Tilak, from Sri Aurobindo to modern management thinkers, have drawn inspiration from it. The Gita has always been a guide for living, not a mechanism for religious exclusion.
The High Court’s ruling exposes a long-standing contradiction in Indian governance. Western philosophical traditions Aristotle, Plato, Kant are treated as secular knowledge, while Indian philosophical systems are instinctively branded as religious. Yoga is celebrated globally as a wellness discipline, yet within India it is often viewed with ideological suspicion. Sanskrit is one of the world’s most refined linguistic systems, yet its teaching is frequently mischaracterised as sectarian. Vedanta is a metaphysical inquiry into consciousness and reality, yet it is rarely acknowledged as philosophy on par with European schools of thought. This asymmetry is not secularism; it is civilisational bias.
Constitutionally, the judgment is unassailable. Article 14 of the Constitution guarantees equality before the law and forbids arbitrary classification. Teaching Indian philosophy cannot be treated differently from teaching Western philosophy merely because of its cultural origin. Articles 25 and 26 protect religious freedom, but they do not require that every aspect of Bharatiya knowledge be confined to a narrow definition of religion. India’s Constitution does not require the State to be hostile to civilisation; it requires the State to be fair.
Equally important is the Court’s emphasis on procedural discipline under the FCRA regime. The rejection order was based on tentative assumptions rather than definitive findings, and past technical violations already compounded under the law were improperly revived as disqualifying factors. Regulation is necessary in matters of foreign funding, but regulation cannot become ideological gatekeeping. The Court rightly restored the principle that national security and transparency must coexist with fairness, clarity, and constitutional restraint.
This judgment must also be seen in the larger national context. Under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India has begun to assert its civilisational identity without apology. Yoga has been recognised globally. India’s ancient knowledge systems are being studied anew. The G20 presidency highlighted India’s philosophical approach to global challenges. In this environment, treating the Bhagavad Gita as a regulatory liability would have been an act of cultural self-sabotage.
True secularism, as Bharat understands it, does not mean the erasure of heritage. It means respect for all paths while denying special privilege to none. It means recognising that civilisational texts can offer universal ethics without imposing belief. The Bhagavad Gita does precisely that. It teaches action without attachment, leadership without arrogance, duty without hatred. These values strengthen society; they do not divide it.
The Madras High Court’s judgment, therefore, goes beyond the immediate question of FCRA registration. It draws a constitutional boundary against the mischaracterisation of Bharatiya wisdom. It reminds the Republic that modern governance must not be built on intellectual amnesia. By recognising the Gita as moral science rather than sectarian religion, the Court has aligned constitutional interpretation with civilisational reality.
In reaffirming that teaching the Bhagavad Gita is an act of education and ethical transmission, not religious propagation, the Madras High Court has rendered a quiet but historic service to the Indian nation. It has ensured that Bharat’s soul is not treated as a bureaucratic inconvenience, but as a source of strength.
Credit : Organiser Weekly
Matribhumi Samachar English

