Pune’s Powerful Response: HJS Drives Support for Legal Safeguards in Interfaith Relationships

A large-scale signature campaign across Pune district, organised by Hindu Janajagruti Samiti (HJS), mobilised citizens in support of state-level legal safeguards addressing coercion and deception in interfaith relationshipsan issue the organisers described using the term “Love Jihad.” Reports from the ground indicate an overwhelming response, with participation spanning diverse age groups, professions, and communities.

Conversations during the campaign consistently highlighted a shared aspiration for religious harmony and social cohesion. Many participants articulated that any prospective law should protect individual freedom of choice, ensure informed consent, and prevent coercion, while avoiding the stigmatization of any faith. The emphasis was on clarity in definitions, due process, gender-sensitive support services, and rights-based implementation that is neutral and evidence-driven.

Engagement at collection points revealed lived experiences that made the issue relatable: parents spoke about safeguarding young adults’ autonomy, students sought better campus awareness, and social workers called for accessible counseling and helplines. Several participants expressed that well-designed legal frameworkspaired with “CommunityEngagement,” “Legal Awareness,” and “Interfaith Dialogue”could reduce anxiety, prevent misuse, and strengthen trust among communities.

From a civic perspective, the breadth of participation in Pune signals a broader demand for safety, dignity, and transparency in intimate relationships, irrespective of religious background. In policy terms, respondents frequently proposed multi-stakeholder mechanisms: training for law enforcement, independent oversight to prevent misuse, transparent data practices, community mediation options, and inclusive public messaging that advances interfaith harmony and social stability.

Across dialogues, dharmic principles such as ahimsa (non-violence), satya (truth), and mutual respect were repeatedly invoked by Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, and Sikhs to frame the issue as one of consent, integrity, and non-discrimination. This shared ethical vocabulary underscores that robust protections from coercion can and should coexist with a firm rejection of prejudiceadvancing unity in diversity and reinforcing a culture of Religious harmony.

As deliberations progress at the state level, the Pune experience illustrates how community-led initiatives can elevate “Interfaith Dialogue,” deepen “Legal Awareness,” and model constructive, rights-affirming discourse. By translating public sentiment into balanced safeguards, stakeholders can protect individual rights, build interfaith trust, and strengthen societal cohesion across dharmic traditions.


Inspired by this post on Hindu Jagruti Samiti.


Graphic with an orange DONATE button and heart icons on a dark mandala background. Overlay text asks to support dharma-renaissance.org in reviving and sharing dharmic wisdom. Cultural Insights, Personal Reflections.

FAQs

What was the Pune signature campaign about?

The campaign, organised by Hindu Janajagruti Samiti, mobilised citizens across Pune district in support of state-level legal safeguards addressing coercion and deception in interfaith relationships. The article says participation spanned diverse age groups, professions, and communities.

What safeguards did participants want in any proposed law?

Participants emphasized individual freedom of choice, informed consent, prevention of coercion, and avoidance of faith-based stigmatization. They also called for clear definitions, due process, gender-sensitive support, and evidence-driven implementation.

How did the campaign connect legal awareness with interfaith dialogue?

The article says participants linked legal awareness, community engagement, and interfaith dialogue with reducing anxiety, preventing misuse, and strengthening trust. The emphasis was on rights-affirming safeguards that support religious harmony and social cohesion.

Which community concerns were reported during the campaign?

Parents spoke about safeguarding young adults’ autonomy, students asked for better campus awareness, and social workers called for accessible counseling and helplines. These field interactions framed the issue around safety, dignity, and transparency in relationships.

What policy suggestions were raised by respondents?

Respondents proposed trained law enforcement, independent oversight, transparent data practices, community mediation options, and inclusive public messaging. The article presents these as ways to prevent misuse while supporting interfaith harmony.

How were dharmic principles used in the discussion?

Participants invoked ahimsa, satya, and mutual respect to frame the discussion around consent, integrity, and non-discrimination. The article says these principles were shared across Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, and Sikh voices.