The Kerala High Court (HC) has ruled that the appointment of temple priests is a secular activity, and therefore subject to constitutional principles of equality and non-discrimination under Articles 14, 15, 25, and 26. The judgment dismissed a petition filed by the Akhila Kerala Thanthri Samajam and upheld the 2022 rules of the Travancore Devaswom Board (TDB), which require institutional training and certification for the appointment of priests.
Background of the Case
The Dispute
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Traditionally, priesthood in TDB temples was passed through hereditary Brahmin lineages, where training occurred under a senior Thanthri (chief priest).
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A certificate from this guru was considered the main qualification, limiting priesthood to specific caste groups.
Introduction of New Rules (2022)
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The TDB mandated that aspiring priests must obtain certification from a Thanthra Vidyalayam—a formal, accredited institution teaching temple rituals.
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Accreditation is provided by the Kerala Devaswom Recruitment Board (KDRB).
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Objective: Standardize training, make recruitment merit-based, and open priesthood to all qualified individuals.
Challenge by the Thanthri Samajam
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The Samajam argued:
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KDRB had no authority to accredit institutions imparting sacred knowledge.
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The reform undermined their spiritual authority.
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Restricting certification to such institutions interfered with essential religious practices under Articles 25–26.
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Kerala Government’s Stand
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Priest appointments are secular administrative functions, not religious rituals themselves.
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The reform promotes:
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Social justice
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Constitutional morality
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Equality and non-discrimination
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It ends caste-based and hereditary exclusion in temple priest appointments.
Kerala High Court’s Ruling
Qualifications over Caste
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The Court upheld the 2022 rules, holding that eligibility must be based on training and objective qualifications, not caste or lineage.
Not an Essential Religious Practice
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Restricting priesthood to a specific caste or family is not an essential religious practice protected under Article 25 or 26.
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Essential religious practice must be:
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Fundamental to the religion
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Based on doctrine or integral tradition
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Not rooted in social discrimination
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Customs Cannot Override Constitution
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Discriminatory, oppressive, or exclusionary customs are not protected by the Constitution.
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The Court reiterated that constitutional morality prevails over social or caste-based traditions.
Authority of the TDB
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As a statutory body, the TDB has the power to prescribe objective, secular qualifications for appointments.
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Regulating appointments does not interfere with religious rituals themselves.
Significance of the Judgment
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Promotes inclusivity in temple priesthood—open to all castes and communities.
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Reinforces that state-managed religious institutions must comply with constitutional principles.
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Continues the reform trend similar to earlier Supreme Court rulings promoting non-discriminatory access to religious spaces.
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Strengthens the separation between secular administration and religious rituals, a key feature of Indian constitutional law.