The Hindu Editorial Vocabulary 16th December 2024 is an effective tool for regularly learning new words and their contextual meanings. Candidates can utilize this free resource daily to improve their vocabulary knowledge, especially those preparing for government exams like the IBPS PO, SBI Clerk, SSC, and Others.
Go ahead and start building your vocabulary power.
Permissive no more: on places of worship and the Supreme Court’s interim order
The Supreme Court must put an end to violations of the Places of Worship Act
The Supreme Court’s interim order halting the registration of fresh suits across the country regarding disputes of places of worship is a welcome departure from the permissive (lenient or allowing) approach of the judiciary in recent times towards such motivated litigation. A Division Bench, headed by the Chief Justice of India, Sanjiv Khanna, has done well to stop the flow of litigation and interim orders, including those that allow ‘surveys’ of such sites and structures, while it deals with the challenges to the validity of the Places of Worship (Special Provisions) Act, 1991. The order signifies a deep understanding that this is not about a set of civil disputes but the future of the country’s secular character. It is amply clear to right-thinking citizens that the law, which freezes the religious character of all places of worship in the country as they were on the day of Independence, would want this legislation to remain on the statute book as a bulwark (defensive barrier) against elements that want to perpetuate the religious divide caused by such disputes. It is unfortunate, and even condemnable, that courts of law have failed to block these suits at a nascent (early) stage by invoking the bar under this law. Instead, they have been allowing applications for surveys, either disregarding the Act and the Court’s endorsement of its necessity in past judgments or ruling that the statutory bar does not apply to them.
In the name of reclaiming religious sites lost to invaders, several groups and purported (claimed) devotees have been moving civil courts and obtaining questionable orders for surveying mosques for evidence that they may have been built on the ruins of destroyed temples. The success of the Ram Janmabhoomi movement was largely due to the political patronage (support or backing) enjoyed by its spearheads, and a final verdict from the Court, which handed over the disputed land to the Hindu litigants while condemning the demolition of the Babri Masjid mosque in December 1992. That the vandals involved in the demolition were acquitted, without any further appeal, added to the triumphalism (feeling of victory and superiority) that marks this movement for altering the status of mosques. This has given rise to further claims in Varanasi, Mathura, and, more recently, Sambhal, among other places that house mosques dating back to the 16th century. A notable feature of this permissive judicial attitude is the complete absence of any understanding of the history of the temple movement that was largely political (relating to politics) in character. That judges could entertain obviously baleful (harmful or evil) and ill-motivated cases is a great cause of concern for those rightfully invested in the secular nature of the country. The criminal imprint on the nation’s fabric left by political movements in a religious garb should not be forgotten.
Hindu Vocab Wordlist 16th December 2024
Upskill yourself and enhance your vocabulary knowledge. Candidates should begin learning new words daily with Hindu Editorial Vocabulary on 16th December 2024.
- Permissive: Allowing or tolerating something, especially behavior that some people might not approve of.
- Bulwark: A strong structure or something that protects or defends a particular thing.
- Nascent: Starting to exist or develop.
- Purported: Claimed or believed to be the case, although not proven.
- Patronage: Support given to an organization or activity, or to people who need help.
- Triumphalism: The belief or attitude that one has been victorious, especially when it involves a sense of superiority.
- Political: Relating to the activities, actions, or policies of governments or political parties.
- Baleful: Threatening harm; menacing.
- Vandal: A person who deliberately destroys or damages things, especially public property.
- Imprint: A mark or pattern made by pressure, or a strong effect or influence.
Hindu Vocab Master 16th December 2024 with Synonyms & Antonyms
Here are the synonyms and antonyms of all the difficult words in Hindu Vocab Master for 16th December 2024:
Word | Synonyms | Antonyms |
Permissive | lenient, tolerant, indulgent, liberal | strict, restrictive, rigid, harsh |
Bulwark | defense, safeguard, protection, rampart | vulnerability, weakness, exposure, hazard |
Nascent | emerging, developing, budding, incipient | mature, developed, full-grown, established |
Purported | alleged, claimed, supposed, professed | confirmed, verified, proven, substantiated |
Patronage | support, sponsorship, backing, assistance | opposition, disfavor, boycott, abandonment |
Triumphalism | pride, victory, elation, arrogance | humility, defeat, modesty, meekness |
Political | governmental, civic, state, public | apolitical, non-governmental, private, personal |
Baleful | menacing, threatening, harmful, ominous | benign, kind, harmless, auspicious |
Vandal | destroyer, iconoclast, saboteur, defacer | protector, conservator, guardian, preserver |
Imprint | mark, impression, stamp, trace | erasure, removal, obliteration, void |
- Sign Up on Practicemock for Updated Current Affairs, Free Topic Tests and Free Mini Mocks
- Sign Up Here to Download Free Study Material
Free Mock Tests for the Upcoming Exams