While 'Santhara' was held illegal in August last year by the High Court which made it punishable under section 306 (abetment of suicide) and 309 (attempted suicide) of IPC relating to abetment of suicide, some legal experts say the practice is a "humungous canvas" covering "two cosmologies (of life and death)" which required protection under the constitutional provision.
Within days of the High Court verdict, the Supreme Court had stayed the order after several religious bodies of the Jain community approached it claiming the Rajasthan HC had not appreciated the basic philosophy and tenets of the Jain religion.
His views got the endorsement of Shiv Visvanathan, Vice Dean of JGLS, who said "the real basis of 'Santhara' is a meditation on two cosmologies" of life and death.
The High Court judgement was stayed by the Supreme Court and the matter is still sub judice, Khagesh Gautam, Associate Professor and Assistant Dean at JGLS, vouched for protection of the practice under doctrine of essential practices under Article 25 of the Constitution on the grounds that it was an important aspect of Jainism.
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Lauding Jainism for its modernity and theory of choice,
Visvanathan said "Jainism in terms of its theory of choice is a fascinatingly modern exercise, you have a choice twice over, choice first in terms of your individual decisions but choice also in terms of availability of cosmologies present to you."
Speaking on the constitutional perspective, Gautam said, "while interpreting Article 25 of Constitution, the Supreme Court has created a doctrine of essential practices, according to which all essential religious practices are afforded constitutional protection against government action."
"The way I see it, if 'santhara' can be shown to be an essential practice of Jainism, it has to be protected under the doctrine of essential practices," Gautam said.
The vow of 'Santhara' is observed by the Jain ascetics at the end their life by gradually reducing the intake of food and liquids on the ground that when all purposes of life have been served, or when the body is unable to serve any more purpose, a person can opt for it.