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How temples deal with donations

Why in the News?

Allegations of embezzlement of offerings and donations at the Ram Janmabhoomi Temple in Ayodhya have brought temple donation-handling systems under scrutiny. The episode has revealed that the Ram Temple trust operates without the statutory audit and oversight structures that govern India’s other major temples. The Ram Temple Construction Committee has sought a professional CEO while the Vishwa Hindu Parishad has demanded that temples across India be freed from government control.

Why has the Ram Temple donations controversy exposed a broader gap in temple financial oversight?

  1. Trigger: Allegations of embezzlement of offerings and donations surfaced at the Ram Janmabhoomi Temple in Ayodhya. The allegations brought the temple’s donation-handling process into public scrutiny.
  2. Scale of the sector: India has no official count of Hindu temples. Estimates put the number at around 10 lakh.
  3. Common donation chain: Most major temples follow a similar process. Offerings are removed from donation boxes. They are then moved to counting centres for segregation, counting, and recording. Verified collections are deposited into designated bank accounts under CCTV surveillance.
  4. Unaccounted donations: Most temples are small shrines maintained by local communities or hereditary priests. A large share of cash and in-kind donations at these temples remains unaccounted for.
  5. Scale of major temple donations: Tirupati received ₹1,880 crore in annual donations, followed by Vaishno Devi at ₹230 crore, the Ram Temple at ₹150 crore, Siddhivinayak at ₹100 crore, Kashi Vishwanath at ₹80 crore, and Puri Jagannath at ₹18 crore.

How does the Ram Temple’s donation-handling and governance framework differ institutionally from India’s other major temples?

  1. Ram Temple: The Shri Ram Janmabhoomi Teerth Kshetra Trust manages donations through a trust deed, a private legal instrument creating and governing a trust, without dedicated statutory backing. No dedicated state statute governs the temple’s administration.
  2. Tirupati: The Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams operates under the Andhra Pradesh Charitable and Hindu Religious Institutions and Endowments Act. Its ‘Parakamani‘ system segregates finance, vigilance, and banking functions among separate personnel groups.
  3. Puri Jagannath: The Shri Jagannath Temple Act governs the temple. Hundis are sealed before and after opening, and entries are recorded in statutory forms.
  4. Vaishno Devi: The Jammu and Kashmir Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Shrine Act governs the shrine. A Shrine Board, not individual trustees, opens donation boxes through dedicated finance and security departments.
  5. Siddhivinayak: A Maharashtra law governs the temple’s trust. The main hundi is opened weekly in the presence of an executive officer, a trustee, a bank representative, and an auditor.
  6. Kashi Vishwanath: The Uttar Pradesh Shri Kashi Vishwanath Temple Act governs the temple. A Sub-Divisional Magistrate supervises the opening of its 56 donation boxes.
  7. Key distinction: Unlike these temples, the Ram Temple trust is not subject to mandatory financial audit by the state or central government. Several of its key office-bearers have long-standing associations with the RSS or its affiliates.

Does statutory governance guarantee that temple donations remain free of controversy?

  1. Tirupati: The temple has tightened access controls, vigilance, and surveillance over the years after instances of theft involving employees and volunteers.
  2. Puri Jagannath: The Ratna Bhandar dispute centred on the custody and inventory of temple valuables. It led to court-directed scrutiny and fresh inventories.
  3. Kashi Vishwanath: Efforts have increasingly focused on routing donations through official channels. This shifts donations away from direct offerings to priests.
  4. Siddhivinayak: The temple has periodically faced scrutiny over governance and financial management.
  5. Implication: Institutional safeguards at older temples were built over time, not overnight. The Ram Temple’s current gap reflects its early stage of institutional development, not a unique failure.

What traditions of temple management operate independent of statutory government frameworks?

  1. Family management: Temples are often managed by hereditary priest lineages known as pandas or pujaris. Offerings, donations, and ritual responsibilities traditionally belong to these families. Control rotates when multiple families are involved.
  2. Family management example: The Udupi Sri Krishna Mutt in Karnataka is administered by eight monasteries called the Ashta Mathas, founded by the 13th-century saint Madhvacharya. Each matha manages the mutt for two years. The next cycle for a matha comes only after 16 years.
  3. Mahant system: A single spiritual head, called a mahant, a spiritual head holding administrative and successor-nominating authority over a math, holds prime authority over temple assets, offerings, and administration. He typically appoints or nominates his successor.
  4. Mahant system example: The Gorakhnath Math in Gorakhpur is headed by Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath. He was appointed by the late Mahant Avaidyanath. Similar successor-based systems operate in the Shankaracharya mathas.
  5. Akhada system: Akhadas are autonomous organisations of sadhus that function as collective bodies with elected or consensus-based heads. They are also called Panchayati Akhadas, self-governing collectives of sadhus functioning through elected or consensus-based heads.
  6. Akhada system role: Akhadas appoint priests, oversee rituals, and control donations. They are prioritised for the holy dip at the Mahakumbh according to their relative status.

Why has the Ram Temple donations controversy revived the debate over the extent of state control over religious institutions?

  1. Colonial origin of state control: The British introduced the Religious Endowments Act in 1863. It handed control of temples to committees set up under the Act, but the government retained influence through other legal provisions.
  2. Statutory blueprint: The Madras Hindu Religious Endowments Act, 1925 empowered provincial governments to legislate on endowments. Its powers expanded over time to include oversight and takeover of temple management. It became the blueprint for later state laws after Independence.
  3. Constitutional basis: Article 25(2) (The constitutional provision allowing the state to regulate secular activities linked to religious practice) empowers the state to regulate or restrict any economic, financial, political, or other secular activity associated with religious practice. This provision is the basis for state legislation governing temple endowments.
  4. Asymmetry across religions: Muslim and Christian institutions are managed through community-run boards or trusts. Statutory government-linked frameworks of the kind that govern major Hindu temples do not apply to them in the same way.
  5. Rival demands: The Ram Temple Construction Committee has proposed appointing a CEO to manage trust affairs. The Vishwa Hindu Parishad has instead called for temples across the country to be freed from government control.

Conclusion

The Ram Temple donations controversy stems from a specific institutional gap. The temple is governed by a trust deed, not a dedicated statute, and is not subject to mandatory financial audit. Bringing it under a statutory or audit framework similar to other major temples would close this specific gap. It would not by itself guarantee immunity from future controversy, since statutorily governed temples such as Tirupati, Puri, Kashi Vishwanath, and Siddhivinayak have all faced their own governance disputes. The unresolved question is political: whether India moves toward greater statutory oversight of temples or toward the Vishwa Hindu Parishad’s demand to free them from government control altogether.

PYQ Relevance

[UPSC 2024] Public charitable trusts have the potential to make India’s development more inclusive as they relate to certain vital public issues. Comment.

Relevance: The PYQ tests the role of religious and charitable trusts in governance, public welfare, accountability, and inclusive development. The article examines how major temple trusts manage donations, institutional governance, transparency mechanisms, and the extent of state regulation, making it a direct case study of public charitable trusts in India.


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