Key Points

The Supreme Court has temporarily suspended UP's controversial ordinance taking over Mathura's Shri Bankey Bihari Temple. A retired judge-led committee will now oversee temple affairs until the Allahabad HC decides the case. The court criticized the state's "tearing hurry" in promulgating the ordinance and recalled its earlier approval for using temple funds. Petitioners argue the move violates religious rights of the Haridasi Sampraday that traditionally manages the shrine.

Key Points: Supreme Court Stays UP's Bankey Bihari Temple Takeover Ordinance

  • SC forms retired judge-led panel for temple management
  • UP govt barred from using temple funds for corridor project
  • Court questions urgency behind 2025 ordinance
  • Petitioners cite violation of religious denomination rights
3 min read

SC to temporarily suspend operation of UP's Shri Bankey Bihari Ji Temple Trust Ordinance, 2025

SC halts UP's 2025 temple ordinance, transfers petitions to Allahabad HC, appoints interim committee for Mathura's Shri Bankey Bihari Ji Temple.

"In the cloak of better management, the Ordinance... has completely taken over administration from the religious denomination – Plea by Advocate Sankalp Goswami"

New Delhi, Aug 8

The Supreme Court on Friday said it would temporarily suspend provisions of the Uttar Pradesh government's 2025 Ordinance that effectively took over the management of the revered Shri Banke Bihari Temple in Mathura-Vrindavan.

A Bench comprising Justices Surya Kant and Joymalya Bagchi added that the Apex Court will transfer the batch of petitions - challenging the Uttar Pradesh government's Shri Bankey Bihari Ji Temple Trust Ordinance, 2025 - to the Allahabad High Court.

Until the validity of the Ordinance is adjudicated, a committee headed by a retired High Court judge will supervise the temple's affairs, stated the Justice Kant-led Bench.

It hinted that the proposed management committee will include the District Collector, other state government officials, and representatives of the Haridasi Sampraday.

The Apex Court said that it would upload a detailed order by Saturday on multiple petitions challenging the Uttar Pradesh government's move to take over control of the temple's administration, which has traditionally been governed under a private management structure based on a 1939 scheme.

Further, the Supreme Court said that it will recall its May 15 judgment, which allowed the state government to utilise temple funds for the corridor development project.

In an earlier hearing, the Justice Kant-led Bench took exception to the "clandestine manner" in which the Uttar Pradesh government sought approval to use temple funds by filing an application in a pending civil dispute.

It had emphasised that temple rituals must continue in accordance with the traditions of the Haridasi denomination, and questioned the "tearing hurry" with which the Uttar Pradesh government promulgated the Shri Bankey Bihari Ji Temple Trust Ordinance, 2025.

One of the pleas contended that the recent Ordinance amounts to state interference in religious affairs, undermining the autonomy of the current temple management committee.

It argued that there was no compelling reason for the state government to issue such an Ordinance, and that the government had offered no sufficient justification for taking over control of the temple's administration.

The petition, filed by advocate Sankalp Goswami, said that the provisions of the Ordinance infringes the right of the Haridasi/Sakhi Sampraday to manage its own affairs in the matter of religion and right of members of the denomination to individually practise, profess and propagate their religion by seeking to alter the essential religious practices, rituals, customs and traditions which will have an effect of displeasing the deity and would make the entire denomination extinct.

"Section 5 (1)(i), 5 (i), 6(8) of the Ordinance directly violates Article 26(c) and (d) inasmuch as it permanently takes away the right of administration from the religious denomination altogether and vests it in non-denominational secular authority. Thus, in the cloak of better management, the Ordinance travelling beyond regulation has completely taken over the administration and management from the religious denomination and created a new body where the religious denomination has been reduced to redundancy," said a plea, adding that the temple is neither public property nor a state-owned trust.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone who visits Mathura regularly, I've seen how the current management maintains the temple beautifully. The government's sudden interest raises questions - is this really about better management or about controlling temple funds?
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Aditya G
The SC's interim solution seems balanced - a retired judge overseeing things until proper adjudication. But government must explain why they needed to take over in such haste. Temple traditions are delicate matters that need careful handling.
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Priya S
While I respect the court's decision, maybe some government oversight could help improve facilities for devotees? The queues are always so long and basic amenities need upgrade. But traditions must be preserved too - it's a tricky balance!
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Karthik V
The "tearing hurry" comment by SC says it all. UP government should focus on actual governance issues rather than meddling in religious institutions. Let devotees manage their own places of worship.
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Nisha Z
I'm glad the SC is protecting our religious rights under Article 26. The Haridasi tradition is centuries old - imagine if government officials start deciding how rituals should be performed! Bhagwan Banke Bihari's leela should remain as it always has been.
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Michael C
As an observer, I find it interesting how India balances secular governance with respect for religious autonomy. This seems like

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