Mahua Moitra Questions Lok Sabha Bulletin on Religious Rituals
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
TMC MP Mahua Moitra on Wednesday, 15 July 2026 challenged a Lok Sabha secretariat bulletin cautioning members against holding religious rituals inside the Parliament complex, asking whether the 2023 inauguration of the new Parliament building by Prime Minister Narendra Modi — which featured bare-chested priests and the installation of a Sengol — should itself be classified as a religious act.
Context
Moitra posted directly in response to what she described as a Lok Sabha bulletin cautioning MPs against holding religious rituals on Parliament premises. Her pointed question: 'Was inauguration of new building by PM sahib complete with bare chested seers and a Sengol not a religious act?' The post frames the advisory as selectively applied, given what occurred at the highest-profile event held in the complex in recent memory.
The new Parliament building, part of the Central Vista redevelopment project, was inaugurated on 28 May 2023. The ceremony included Vedic rituals performed by priests, and the installation of the Sengol — a Tamil Nadu sceptre — inside the Lok Sabha chamber, presented by the government as a symbol of transfer of power from colonial rule.
Policy Backdrop
Constitutional convention since 1950 has held that Parliament precincts function as secular spaces, free from official religious ceremonies. The 2023 inauguration was the most prominent instance in recent decades where Vedic rituals were performed as part of a formal state event inside the parliamentary complex.
The Sengol's installation was defended by the government as a cultural and historical symbol rather than a religious one. Opposition parties, including the Trinamool Congress, disputed that framing at the time, arguing the ceremony blurred the line between state function and religious observance.
Stakeholders and Impact
Members of Parliament across parties are directly affected by any advisory on conduct within the Parliament complex. For opposition MPs, the bulletin provides a fresh opening to revisit the 2023 inauguration controversy and press the question of consistency in the application of secular norms.
Moitra, known for sharp parliamentary interventions on institutional norms, has previously raised questions around secularism and the conduct of state functions. Her post is likely to amplify calls from opposition benches for clarity on what constitutes a 'religious ritual' under Parliament's internal rules.
What's Next
Enforcement of the bulletin during the ongoing or upcoming Parliament session will be closely watched. If any privilege notice is filed — either citing the advisory or challenging its selective application — the matter could come before the Lok Sabha Speaker for adjudication.
The broader question Moitra raises — whether the state can draw a consistent line between cultural ceremony and religious ritual inside constitutional institutions — is unlikely to be resolved quickly. It feeds into a wider political contestation over the place of Hindu ritual symbols in public and state spaces that has intensified since 2014.