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    Temple Entry Movement

    • October 31, 2021
    • Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
    • Category: DPN Topics
    No Comments

     

     

    Temple Entry Movement

    Subject – History

    Context – Brutal attack on Dalits as they turned up for the installation ceremony at a temple

    Concept –

    • Vaikom, in the northern part of Travancore, became a centre of agitation for temple entry.
    • In 1924, the Vaikom Satyagraha led by P. Kesava, was launched in Kerala demanding the throwing open of Hindu temples and roads to the untouchables.
    • The satyagraha was reinforced by jathas from Punjab and Madurai.
    • Gandhi undertook a tour of Kerala in support of the movement.
    • Significant work in this direction had already been done by reformers and intellectuals like Sree Narayana Guru and Kumaran Asan.
    • K. Madhavan, a prominent social reformer and editor of Deshabhimani, took up the issue of temple entry with the Travancore administration.
    • Again in 1931 when the Civil Disobedience Movement was suspended, temple entry movement was organised in Kerala. Inspired by Kelappan, poet SubramaniyamTirumambu (the ‘singing sword of Kerala’) led a group of sixteen volunteers to Guruvayur.
    • Leaders like Krishna Pillai and A.K. Gopalan were among the satyagrahis.
    • Finally, on November 12, 1936, the Maharaja of Travancore issued a proclamation throwing open all government-controlled temples to all Hindus.
    • A similar step was taken by the Rajagopalachari administration in Madras in 1938.
    History Temple Entry Movement
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