Sarna Religion
The demand for a separate Sarna Religion Code is a recurring and significant theme in Indian tribal politics, particularly in the Chota Nagpur plateau region (Jharkhand, Odisha, and Chhattisgarh).
Here is a detailed breakdown of the Sarna Code issue:
1. Understanding Sarnaism
Sarna is a religious faith followed by indigenous communities such as the Munda, Ho, Santhal, and Oraon.
Core Belief: It is a nature-worshipping faith.
Adherents believe in a "Sacred Grove" (Sarna) where the village deity resides. Key Principles: * No idol worship or priestly hierarchy (unlike the Varna system).
Deep ecological connection: Protection of Jal, Jungle, Zameen (Water, Forest, Land).
Major Festival: Sarhul, celebrating the blooming of Sal trees.
Demographics: In the 2011 Census, despite no separate code, approximately 50 lakh (5 million) people wrote "Sarna" in the "Others" column.
2. The Current Census Context (Census 2027)
The Census in India currently recognizes only six distinct religions: Hinduism, Islam, Christianity, Sikhism, Buddhism, and Jainism.
The Problem: Tribals who do not identify with these six are often forced to choose "Others" or are categorized under Hinduism or Christianity.
The Demand: Jharkhand CM Hemant Soren is advocating for a separate Code 7 for Sarna to ensure their unique identity is not "swallowed" by larger religious blocs.
Central Government Stand (as of March 2026): The Ministry of Home Affairs stated that enumerators will record religions as declared by respondents, but no separate column/code for "Tribal Religion" will be added to the 2027 Census schedule to avoid operational complexity.
3. Why the Code Matters (UPSC Perspectives)
A. Constitutional & Legal Identity
Article 25: Guarantees freedom of conscience and the right to profess, practice, and propagate religion.
Proponents argue that denying a code infringes on this right. Article 29: Protects the interests of minorities and gives them the right to conserve their distinct language, script, or culture.
Fifth & Sixth Schedules: These provide for the administration of Scheduled Areas.
Accurate data on religious identity helps in fine-tuning the administrative nuances of these regions.
B. Prevention of "Religious Erosion"
There is a concern among tribal leaders about the "Christianization" or "Saffronization" of Adivasis. A separate code is seen as a legal shield to protect their original cultural fabric from conversion or assimilation.
C. Policy Formulation
Fact-based Budgeting: As CM Soren noted, accurate data is the bedrock of targeted welfare.
If a large chunk of the population is misclassified, the socio-economic indicators for those specific groups become skewed. Tribal Rights: Identification as Sarna is often linked to the demand for better implementation of the PESA Act, 1996, and the Forest Rights Act (FRA), 2006.
4. Key Challenges for the Government
Administrative Complexity: Adding a seventh code could trigger similar demands from other groups (e.g., Lingayats in Karnataka or Gondi followers in Central India).
Fragmenting the ST Category: Some fear that religious classification might lead to internal divisions within the Scheduled Tribe status, which is currently an ethnic/socio-economic classification, not a religious one.
Data Consistency: The government prefers a "write-in" approach to maintain continuity with historical census formats.
5. Summary for Mains Answer Writing
| Feature | Details |
| Issue | Inclusion of Sarna Code in Census 2027. |
| Significance | Preservation of indigenous culture; Ecological "Eco-Nationalism." |
| Constitutional Links | Articles 15(4), 25, 29, 342, and the Fifth Schedule. |
| Impact | More accurate socio-economic data for tribal-centric planning. |
| Obstacle | Risk of administrative precedent for other sub-identities. |
Follow-up Question for Study:
Would recognizing religious sub-identities within Scheduled Tribes strengthen their constitutional protections or dilute the unified socio-economic struggle of Adivasis?