Excommunication of Parsi Women Who Marry Non-Parsis Is Discriminatory: Supreme Court’s Landmark Observation in Sabarimala Reference

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⚖️ Constitutional Law & Gender Rights

Excommunication of Parsi Women Who Marry Non-Parsis Is Discriminatory: Supreme Court's Landmark Observation in Sabarimala Reference

Parsi Excommunication Sabarimala Reference Supreme Court 2026 Article 25 Article 26 Religious Freedom India Interfaith Marriage Constitutional Morality Zoroastrian Women Rights Gender Discrimination Religion

The Parsi Women Excommunication Supreme Court case has reached a decisive moment. India's Supreme Court — sitting as a historic nine-judge Constitution Bench — declared that excommunicating Parsi Zoroastrian women solely because they marry outside their faith is prima facie discriminatory and violates constitutional guarantees under Articles 14, 15, 21, and 25 of the Indian Constitution.

Parsi Women Excommunication Supreme Court Sabarimala Reference 2026

Parsi Women Excommunication Supreme Court: The Sabarimala Reference and Its Broader Canvas

The Sabarimala case traces its origins to a 2006 writ petition filed by the Indian Young Lawyers Association before the Supreme Court, challenging the constitutionality of Rule 3(b) of the Kerala Hindu Places of Public Worship (Authorisation of Entry) Rules, 1965 — a rule that barred women of menstruating age (10–50 years) from entering the Sabarimala temple in Kerala.

On 28 September 2018, a 5-judge Constitution Bench, by a majority of 4:1, allowed the writ petition. It held that the devotees of Lord Ayyappa do not constitute a separate religious denomination and therefore the temple's exclusionary practice cannot be shielded under Article 26 of the Constitution. The Court further held that barring women of a certain age violated Article 25(1).

Dozens of review petitions followed. In November 2019, a 5-judge bench, by a 3:2 majority, referred seven broader constitutional questions to a 9-judge bench — effectively expanding the case far beyond Sabarimala into a comprehensive examination of religious freedom in India.

The 9-judge bench — led by Chief Justice of India Surya Kant along with Justices BV Nagarathna, MM Sundresh, Ahsanuddin Amanullah, Aravind Kumar, Augustine George Masih, Prasanna B Varale, R Mahadevan, and Joymalya Bagchi — began hearing submissions on April 7, 2026. As of May 7, 2026, hearings have concluded twelve days of arguments, with submissions still ongoing.

The Parsi Excommunication Issue Before the Court

Among the several sub-issues before the 9-judge bench is a long-pending challenge to the practice of excommunicating Parsi Zoroastrian women who marry outside the community. The Parsi Women Excommunication Supreme Court case consolidates the Goolrokh Gupta petition with the larger religious freedom reference as it raises identical constitutional questions.

Who is Dina Budhraja?

One of the petitioners in the broader challenge is Dina Budhraja, who was denied entry to an Agiary (Zoroastrian fire temple) in 2024 to attend her grandmother's funeral. She had married a Hindu man in 2009 under the Special Marriage Act, 1954 and never converted to Hinduism. Yet the Nagpur Parsi Panchayat Rules deemed her to have lost her Parsi identity by the mere act of interfaith marriage.

What Parsi Panchayat rules prescribe

Parsi Panchayats — community trusts that regulate religious and social affairs — enforce rules in many regions (notably Gujarat and Maharashtra) that exclude women who marry non-Parsis from:

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Fire Temples (Agiaries)
Entry to the most sacred Zoroastrian places of worship is denied to inter-married women entirely.
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Towers of Silence (Dokhmas)
Women cannot attend the funeral rites of their own Parsi parents at the Tower of Silence.
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Community Events
Exclusion from religious and social gatherings maintained by Panchayat trusts.
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Parsi Identity
The woman is deemed to have ceased to be a Parsi — religious identity stripped by marriage alone.

Critically, this rule does not apply to Parsi men who marry outside the community. A Parsi man's non-Parsi wife and their children are, in some Panchayat interpretations, afforded community privileges — while a Parsi woman marrying out faces excommunication. This asymmetry is at the heart of the gender discrimination challenge.

Arguments of Senior Advocate Darius Khambata

Senior Advocate Darius Khambata, appearing for the excommunicated Parsi woman, advanced a multi-pronged challenge during Days 11 and 12 of the hearings (May 6–7, 2026):

"I am a devotee, I have not forsaken my religion, I am a believer. Just because I have married [a Hindu man], that is not a crime. This is a man-made imposition on an otherwise progressive and great religion."

— Senior Advocate Darius Khambata, Supreme Court, May 2026

Khambata further argued that even the Gujarat High Court had recorded — as a finding of fact — that nothing in the Zoroastrian religion prohibits, ostracises, or excommunicates a Parsi woman who inter-marries. The Parsi Trust produced no material to establish that such exclusion is rooted in genuine religious doctrine. He also contended that Article 26 rights of a denomination cannot be wider than individual rights under Article 25(1), and that a river cannot rise higher than its source.

Key Supreme Court Observations

The Parsi Women Excommunication Supreme Court observation came on Day 11 of the Sabarimala reference hearings. The bench's oral remarks during the proceedings were pointed and constitutionally significant. While these are oral observations and not binding judgments, they strongly indicate the bench's thinking.

"The right of conscience under Article 25(1) is a right by birth and cannot be taken away by marriage. In this case, marriage as a basis of classification is discriminatory against women."

— Justice BV Nagarathna, Sabarimala Reference, Day 11 (May 6, 2026)

Justice Nagarathna further observed that children of Parsi fathers retain the benefit of the Zoroastrian religion by birth — and the same principle should logically extend to a Parsi wife. Religion by birth cannot be extinguished by the act of marriage.

Chief Justice Surya Kant remarked that the excommunication is "prima facie discriminatory" and appears to have a selective, gender-based effect. The bench also questioned whether this practice is even a religious matter at all — given that no Zoroastrian scripture or religious authority mandates it. Justice Nagarathna pointedly asked: if it is not a matter of religion, should the petitioner not simply file a civil suit?

"A river cannot rise higher than its source — Article 26 rights cannot rise higher than an Article 25(1) right."

— Senior Advocate Darius Khambata, encapsulating the constitutional argument

Understanding Articles 25 and 26: The Constitutional Clash

ArticleConstitutional GuaranteeWho Holds the RightKey Limitation
Article 25(1)Freedom of conscience and right to profess, practice, and propagate religionEvery individual (citizen and non-citizen)Subject to public order, morality, health, and other fundamental rights
Article 26Right of every religious denomination to manage its own affairs in matters of religionReligious denominations / institutionsSubject to public order, morality, and health
Articles 14 & 15Right to equality; prohibition of discrimination based on religion, race, caste, sex, or place of birthAll personsPrimarily applies to State action; courts have examined private discriminatory practices too
Article 21Right to life and personal liberty, interpreted to include dignity, identity, and freedom of choice in marriageAll personsCannot be deprived except by procedure established by law

The constitutional tension in the Parsi case is whether a denomination's right to regulate its affairs (Article 26) can strip an individual of her constitutionally guaranteed right to practice her religion (Article 25), simply because of whom she married. The petitioners argue the answer is a clear no — Article 26 is a derivative, institutional right and cannot override Article 25, which is the foundational individual right.

Timeline of the Case

1962
The Supreme Court upholds excommunication power in Sardar Saifuddin v. State of Bombay, striking down the Bombay Prevention of Excommunication Act, 1949. This becomes the key precedent that the Sabarimala reference may now revisit.
2006
Indian Young Lawyers Association files a writ petition challenging women's exclusion from Sabarimala. Separately, Goolrokh Gupta files a petition in Gujarat High Court seeking to attend her Parsi parents' funeral despite her interfaith marriage.
2011
Bombay High Court in the Jamshed Kanga case holds that excommunication has no place in Zoroastrianism — offering a reformist judicial reading that is later contradicted by the Gujarat HC majority.
2017
The Gujarat High Court's majority applies the colonial doctrine of coverture to hold that Goolrokh Gupta, having married a Hindu under the Special Marriage Act, should be treated as having ceased to be Parsi — a ruling now under challenge before the 9-judge bench.
September 2018
Supreme Court's 5-judge bench allows women of all ages into Sabarimala by 4:1. The majority holds the restriction violates Articles 14 and 25. Justice Indu Malhotra dissents, arguing courts should not interfere with matters of religious faith.
November 2019
Supreme Court refers the Sabarimala review to a 9-judge bench and frames seven broader constitutional questions on religious freedoms. The Goolrokh Gupta (Parsi excommunication) case is consolidated with this reference.
April–May 2026
Nine-judge bench begins full hearing from April 7, 2026. On Day 11 (May 6), the bench terms excommunication of Parsi women as prima facie discriminatory and questions whether it is even a matter of religion at all.

The Essential Religious Practices Doctrine — and Its Critics

Central to this entire litigation is the Essential Religious Practices (ERP) doctrine, first articulated by the Supreme Court in The Commissioner, Hindu Religious Endowments, Madras v. Shri Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutt (1954). The doctrine holds that courts may protect only those religious practices that are essential or integral to the religion — and may scrutinise or strike down those that are not.

The Parsi Trust argued that denial of entry to persons who have "left" the community is an essential religious practice protected under Article 26. However, Senior Advocate Khambata — and critically, the Gujarat High Court itself in its own factual findings — confirmed that no Zoroastrian scripture, tenet, or religious authority mandates the exclusion of women who marry outside the faith. If the practice is not rooted in religion, it cannot qualify as an ERP.

The Supreme Court's 9-judge bench is also expected to reconsider or fundamentally refine the ERP doctrine itself as part of this reference — potentially the most significant judicial reshaping of India's religion jurisprudence since the Shirur Mutt judgment of 1954.

The doctrine of coverture — a colonial relic

The Gujarat High Court's majority applied the English common law doctrine of coverture — under which a married woman's legal identity merged into her husband's — to conclude that a Parsi woman becomes non-Parsi upon marrying a Hindu. The Supreme Court's bench has signalled deep scepticism towards this reasoning. The right of conscience under Article 25(1) is personal to the individual, not transferable or extinguishable by the identity of one's spouse. The doctrine of coverture has been comprehensively discredited in England, its country of origin, and its application in constitutional India sits uneasily with Articles 14, 15, and 21.

Wider Implications Across Faiths

The 9-judge bench's eventual ruling in the Sabarimala reference will be binding across India and will directly impact several pending cases involving religious practices across multiple communities. Experts say the Parsi Women Excommunication Supreme Court ruling, once delivered, will be binding on all lower courts in India.

CommunityPractice Under ChallengeKey Constitutional Question
Parsi ZoroastrianExcommunication of women who marry non-Parsis; denial of fire temple and Tower of Silence accessDoes Article 26 permit gender-based religious exclusion? Can marriage extinguish Article 25 rights?
Sabarimala (Hindu)Exclusion of women of menstruating age from the hilltop shrineIs the age-based restriction an essential religious practice or unconstitutional gender discrimination?
Dawoodi Bohra (Muslim)Excommunication power of the community head (Dai al-Mutlaq)Can the 1962 precedent upholding excommunication survive a constitutional morality review?
Muslim women (general)Entry into dargahs and mosquesDoes Article 25 guarantee Muslim women the right to enter all places of worship?
Dawoodi Bohra (women)Female genital mutilation (khatna/khafz)Can a denomination's religious practice override bodily integrity under Article 21?

Legal experts note that the ruling will also reshape how Indian courts interpret constitutional morality — a concept foregrounded in the Supreme Court's landmark judgments in Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India (2018) and Joseph Shine v. Union of India (2018) — as a tool to scrutinise even private, faith-based practices that discriminate on the basis of gender, sexuality, or birth.

Related Reading from Vijay Foundation

Read our analysis of the Sabarimala 2018 Supreme Court verdict for background on this case. Also see: Article 25 and religious freedom in India — explained.

For further reading on the constitutional framework, see Indian Kanoon's full text of the Constitution of India and the SCC Online database of Supreme Court judgments.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Sabarimala reference case?
It is a set of seven constitutional questions referred to a nine-judge bench of the Supreme Court arising from review petitions against the 2018 Sabarimala verdict. The questions examine the scope of religious freedom under Articles 25 and 26, the limits of denominational autonomy, the doctrine of essential religious practices, and the meaning of constitutional morality.
Why is the Parsi excommunication issue part of the Sabarimala reference?
The Supreme Court consolidated the Goolrokh Gupta case (Parsi women's rights after interfaith marriage) with the Sabarimala reference because both raise the identical constitutional question: can denominational autonomy under Article 26 override an individual's right to practice religion under Article 25?
Does the Supreme Court's observation mean the practice is already illegal?
No. The bench's remarks during oral hearings are observations, not binding rulings. The final judgment — which will be binding on all courts in India — is yet to be delivered once all arguments are concluded and the bench deliberates.
What is the doctrine of coverture and why does it matter here?
Coverture was a 19th-century English common law doctrine under which a married woman's legal identity merged into her husband's. The Gujarat High Court applied it to conclude that a Parsi woman who marries a Hindu man loses her Parsi identity. The Supreme Court has expressed strong scepticism about applying this colonial-era doctrine in a modern constitutional framework that guarantees individual rights by birth.
Does Zoroastrian scripture mandate the excommunication of women who marry outside the faith?
According to Senior Advocate Darius Khambata and findings recorded by the Gujarat High Court itself, no Zoroastrian religious text or principle mandates the excommunication or exclusion of Parsi women who marry outside the community. The practice is described as a man-made Panchayat administrative rule, not a religious commandment.
What happens to Parsi men who marry non-Parsi women?
Parsi men who marry outside the community generally retain their Parsi identity and full access to religious institutions. The excommunicatory rules apply asymmetrically and only to women — which is at the heart of the gender discrimination challenge before the Supreme Court.

Conclusion: A Watershed Moment for Women's Constitutional Rights in Religion

The Supreme Court's nine-judge bench observations in the Sabarimala reference — particularly on the Parsi excommunication issue — mark a pivotal moment in India's constitutional jurisprudence. By firmly grounding the right to religious identity in Article 25(1) as a birth right that no marriage can extinguish, the bench has signalled a potentially transformative re-reading of the relationship between individual rights and denominational autonomy.

If the eventual judgment upholds these observations, it will not only restore the religious rights of Parsi women in interfaith marriages but will also establish a constitutional principle applicable across all faiths: that gender-based religious discrimination cannot survive the test of constitutional morality, irrespective of how long-standing or sincerely held the underlying practice may be.

The ruling is expected to revisit or fundamentally refine the Essential Religious Practices doctrine, clarify the limits of Article 26, and expound the meaning of constitutional morality — making it one of the most consequential constitutional judgments in India since independence.

Follow Bar & Bench, LiveLaw, and SCC Online for live updates as the hearings continue.


References & External Links

  1. Bar & Bench — Sabarimala Reference Day 11 live updates
  2. Bar & Bench — Sabarimala Reference Day 12 live updates
  3. Bar & Bench — SC questions plea against Dawoodi Bohra excommunication
  4. LiveLaw — How can right to conscience be taken away by marriage? SC questions Parsi excommunication
  5. SCC Online — Sabarimala Reference — SCC Times analysis
  6. LawBeat — Is excommunication of Parsi women even a matter of religion? SC asks
  7. Daily Pioneer — Excommunicating Parsi women over interfaith marriage discriminatory: SC
  8. Indian Law Live — Is excommunication of Parsi women for marrying non-Parsi unconstitutional?
  9. CALJ Blog — Excommunication of Parsi women: A legal analysis
  10. PW Only IAS — Excommunication in Parsi community: detailed analysis
  11. Indian Kanoon — Article 26, Constitution of India (full text)
  12. Indian Kanoon — Special Marriage Act, 1954 (full text)

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Legal Affairs Desk
Our legal affairs team covers constitutional law, Supreme Court proceedings, and matters of public interest with in-depth analysis and contextualised reporting. All articles are fact-checked against primary court documents and verified legal sources including Bar & Bench, LiveLaw, SCC Online, and Indian Kanoon.

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