How how secularism of India is different from the France
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OPINION
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The future of Indian secularism

Rajeev Bhargava12 AUGUST 2020 00:02 IST
UPDATED: 12 AUGUST 2020 14:21 IST
It is premature to pronounce the end of constitutional secularism; it has only suffered a setback and can be revived
Our public discourse is resounding with triumphalism on the one hand, and lament on the other over the death or defeat of secularism. It seems as if the bhoomi pujan has burnt its bodily remains, and if anyone cares to claim it, the ashes of secularism will be buried near a dargah or immersed in the Saryu. As a child of the republic founded in 1950, one part of me wishes to join the lament. But the other part, nudging me to contemplate this moment, asks: does anything in India ever die? Silenced, yes; forced temporarily to go underground, maybe; transmigrate to another bodily form under a different name, possibly. But death? Gone forever? No!
Three years ago, on August 6, 2017, I had written, in this very paper — in the article, Constitutional or party-political secularism? — that secularism has paid a heavy price in our country for being at the centre of public and political discourse. It has been persistently misused and abused. Distinguishing it from constitutional political secularism, I called this abused entity, ‘party-political secularism’.
the hindu
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There is not so much difference in secularism in India and secularism in France and the United States but some of the differences are :- In India state have to interfere when if it feels that certain beliefs and practices are harmful for society but in US state doesn't interfere at any circumstances in any religion matter. In India people are allowed to use religious symbols but France prohibit people from displaying or using religious symbols. In India there are equal amount of Temple, churches, mosques and gurudwara but in US and France there are more amount of churches.