Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer
indian law

The Hidden Cost of Faith: Why Indian Law Penalizes the Hindu Majority

summary

  • This detailed narrative exposes how “secularism” in post-independence India has been used as a facade to institutionalize hundreds of legal disparities that treat Hindu society as second-class citizens.
  • Through discriminatory provisions such as tax-free “Oral Hiba” for property transfers, the lopsided mandates of the RTE Act, unchecked powers of the Waqf Board, and state control over Hindu temples, the majority community is being systematically exploited.
  • This argues that the only solution to these deep-seated inequities is a decisive political mandate for the leadership of PM Modi, the BJP, and the RSS to implement a Uniform Civil Code (UCC) and dismantle the “appeasement ecosystem.”

A Tale of Two Citizens: Institutionalized Property Divide

  • Imagine two lifelong friends, Mr. Adhikari and Mr. Khan, neighbors in a middle-class locality in Delhi. Both have worked hard to purchase a flat and now, in their retirement, wish to gift these homes to their children.
  • On paper, both are equal citizens of India, but the moment they initiate the legal process, the law treats them with a shocking disparity.
  • Mr. Adhikari, a Hindu, discovers that the state views his act of parental love as a taxable event. Under Section 123 of the Transfer of Property Act (TPA), he must execute a formal “Gift Deed,” visit the Registrar’s office with witnesses, and pay a hefty “Stamp Duty” ranging from 7% to 8% of the property’s market value. For a flat worth ₹1 Crore, Mr. Adhikari must cough up nearly ₹8 Lakhs to the government. If he fails to pay, his child will have no legal standing or ownership of the home.
  • Meanwhile, his neighbor Mr. Khan enjoys a special privilege under “Mohammadan Law” known as “Oral Hiba.” He requires no written document, no stamp paper, and no registration. By simply declaring the gift in front of witnesses and handing over possession, the transfer is legally complete. He pays zero Stamp Duty and zero tax to the state.
  • This is not just a legal technicality; it is “secular dacoity” on the pockets of millions of Hindus. In the same country, one individual is granted a tax exemption based on religious identity, while the other is crushed under a massive financial burden.

Hundreds of Hidden Disparities: A Web of Systemic Bias

The property tax loophole is merely one example. If we peel back the layers of Indian law, we find hundreds of such disparities designed to systematically weaken Hindu society.

1. The RTE Act: A Tax on Hindu Education

  • The Right to Education (RTE) Act of 2009 is a major tool of discrimination. Under this law, only Hindu-run (non-minority) schools are mandated to reserve 25% of their seats for economically backward children, often at their own cost.
  • Minority institutions—even those receiving massive government aid—are completely exempt. Consequently, thousands of small Hindu schools have shut down or faced bankruptcy, while minority schools flourish without any such social obligation.

2. The Waqf Board: Medieval Feudalism in Modern India

  • The Waqf Act of 1995 is perhaps the most discriminatory law in the world. It grants the Waqf Board the power to claim almost any private or public land. Once a claim is made, the owner must prove their ownership in a Waqf Tribunal—a lopsided process where the board acts as judge and jury.
  • The Waqf Board has become the third-largest landowner in India after the Army and Railways, often illegally encroaching on ancient temple lands. Hindus have no such “super-powered” institution to protect their heritage.

3. State Control of Temples vs. Autonomous Mosques and Churches

  • Thousands of prominent Hindu temples—such as Tirupati, Padmanabhaswamy, and Jagannath Puri—are under direct state government control. Their hundi collections are diverted to the general state treasury and often spent on non-Hindu activities.
  • In contrast, Mosques and Churches are entirely autonomous, and their funds are used exclusively for their own religious propagation. Is this not a mockery of “secularism”?

The Statutory Shield of Appeasement: The Truth of Section 129

  • Section 129 of the Transfer of Property Act is the “black provision” that validates this discrimination. It explicitly states that the rules regarding gifts do not apply to Muslims.
  • When the Constitution was written, there was much talk of modernity, yet Hindus were bound by new restrictive rules while a specific class was left with medieval privileges. This was the seed of “vote bank” politics that has grown into a poisonous tree.

The 1947 Irony: Rewarding the Partition Mindset

  • History is witness that the ideology which supported the “Two-Nation Theory” and demanded the Partition of India in the 1940s was rewarded with special concessions after independence instead of being integrated.
  • The post-1947 leadership created an “artificial secularism” where Hindu society was made to feel a sense of guilt for its culture and rights.
  • The very community that chose to keep the nation united is now forced to struggle for resources and equality in its own home.

The Judicial Dead-End of 2026 and the Political Solution

  • In March 2026, when the validity of Section 129 was challenged in the Supreme Court, the judiciary once again sided with the “status quo.”
  • While the Court acknowledged the loss of revenue and the inherent inequality, it passed the responsibility to the Law Commission and Parliament. This proves that the judiciary alone cannot clean this decades-old rot.
  • Hindu society must understand that pleading for justice is no longer enough. The only path to resolving these disparities is through legislative power.

The Call for Absolute Majority: A Time for Civilizational Resurgence

  • The “Anti-National Ecosystem” active in the country today survives on these very disparities. They do not want a conscious or united Hindu society.
  • Under the leadership of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, India is rediscovering its civilizational consciousness. However, to complete this task, they need a profound and absolute majority in both the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha.

Only a government with an unbreakable majority can take these bold steps:

  • Repeal Section 129 and Reform the Waqf Act: Ensure “One Nation, One Law” for land and property rights.
  • Freedom for Temples: Ensure temple funds are used exclusively for Hindus and the upliftment of Sanatan culture.
  • Pass the Uniform Civil Code (UCC): Eliminate religion-based laws for marriage, inheritance, and gifts to create a single code for all Indian citizens.

Equal Rights for a Developed India

  • If India is to become a developed nation and a global superpower by 2047, it must shed the burden of legal discrimination.
  •  No country can be great as long as its laws continue to treat its majority with injustice.
  • Under the guidance of the Modi Team, the BJP, and the RSS, we are moving toward an India where no one is “special” and no one is “marginalized.”

True patriotism lies in raising our voices against this injustice and building a system where the law sees justice, not faith. It is time for Hindu society to show its unity and uproot this discriminatory system.

🇮🇳 Jai Bharat, Vandematram 🇮🇳

Read our previous blogs 👉 Click here

Join us on Arattai 👉 Click here

👉Join Our Channels👈

Share Post

Leave a comment

from the blog

Latest Posts and Articles

We have undertaken a focused initiative to raise awareness among Hindus regarding the challenges currently confronting us as a community, our Hindu religion, and our Hindu nation, and to deeply understand the potential consequences of these issues. Through this awareness, Hindus will come to realize the underlying causes of these problems, identify the factors and entities contributing to them, and explore the solutions available. Equally essential, they will learn the critical role they can play in actively addressing these challenges

SaveIndia © 2026. All Rights Reserved.