Explain two examples of intervention by the indian state to ensure secularism
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The Indian Constitution mandates that the Indian State be secular and that one religious community does not dominate and the State neither enforce any specific eligion nor take away the individuals' religious freedom
Explanation:
- The Indian State tries to prevent this exploitation in various ways. One such way wherein Indian secularism works to avoid the domination of any one religion and promote secularism is through a strategy of intervention.
- For example, where a majority religion dominates a minority religion, the Indian Constitution prohibits religion-based exclusion and discrimination against 'lower castes.' In this situation, in order to avoid a social practices that believes to exclude and discriminates, and breaches the basic rights of "lower castes," who are citizens of that nation the state interferes in religion. The State will therefore need to interfere in the religiously oriented 'personal laws' of communities to ensure that legislation pertaining to the protection of inheritance is upheld.
- The intervention of the State can also be in the form of support. . The Indian Constitution reserves the freedom to establish their own schools and colleges for religious groups. It offers them non-preferential financial assistance as well.
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