Hindu Janajagruti Samiti (HJS) has submitted a memorandum to senior ministers, legislators, and state officials in Chhattisgarh urging three policy priorities: strengthening the state’s anti-conversion framework, introducing safeguards against coercion and deception in interfaith relationships (often debated in public discourse as “love jihad”), and undertaking evidence-based reforms to the educational curriculum.
The recommendations center on constitutional valuesreligious freedom, dignity, and equalitywhile calling for targeted legal clarity against coercion and fraud. The approach emphasizes that robust protections against forced or deceptive religious conversion must coexist with the non-negotiable right of individuals to freely choose and practice their faith. In this framing, policy precision, due process, and impartial enforcement become essential to advance interfaith trust and social cohesion.
Regarding anti-conversion law, the memorandum seeks stronger anti-coercion safeguards focused on misrepresentation, undue influence, trafficking-linked exploitation, and organized inducementspaired with clear definitions, victim-centric support, and judicially reviewable procedures. Such a pathway is consistent with best practices that prioritize consent, transparency, and data-backed oversight without stigmatizing voluntary religious choice. Calibrated implementation can deter unlawful practices while safeguarding civil liberties.
On interfaith relationships, the submission advocates protective mechanisms against deception or coercion while affirming adult autonomy and the legitimacy of interfaith marriages. Practical measuressuch as voluntary pre-marital counseling, accessible legal aid, confidential helplines, and rapid redress mechanismscan strengthen informed consent and safety. Framed this way, reform avoids communal polarization, protects vulnerable individuals, and reinforces interfaith dialogue grounded in trust.
The call for curriculum reform highlights the need for pedagogical accuracy, critical thinking, and inclusive representation. A balanced syllabus that presents the civilizational contributions of Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, and Sikhismalongside India’s broader plural traditionscan nurture civic ethics, constitutional literacy, and respect for diversity. Teacher training, transparent review processes, and updated learning resources are crucial to ensure scholarly rigor and cultural sensitivity.
Process integrity is integral to policy acceptance. The memorandum’s submission to state leadership can be a starting point for structured public consultation involving scholars, educators, legal experts, women’s groups, youth representatives, and leaders from multiple faiths. Time-bound reviews, published draft bills, and clear feedback loops can improve legitimacy, reduce misinformation, and align reforms with ground realities in Chhattisgarh.
If implemented with care, these proposals may foster religious harmony, reduce rights violations, and enhance institutional trust. The balance to strike is firm action against coercion and fraud alongside strong protections for freedom of conscience and interfaith relationships. Success metrics could include improved victim support outcomes, reduced rights-related litigation, teacher upskilling rates, and measurable gains in student civic literacy.
At its core, the policy direction outlined here aligns with the shared dharmic ethos of pluralism, compassion, and responsibility. By anchoring legal and educational reforms in constitutional principles and a unity-first outlook, Chhattisgarh can model a governance pathway that strengthens societal resilience and celebrates India’s diverse spiritual tapestry.
Inspired by this post on Hindu Jagruti Samiti.











