Madras HC rules on issuance of inter-caste marriage certificates
The Hindu
The Madras High Court has held that a person will not be entitled to an inter-caste marriage certificate if he actually belonged to a Scheduled Caste but had obtained a Backward Class certificate afte
The Madras High Court has held that a person will not be entitled to an inter-caste marriage certificate if he actually belonged to a Scheduled Caste but had obtained a Backward Class certificate after converting to Christianity and then married a Scheduled Caste woman.
Justice S.M. Subramaniam held so, while dismissing a writ petition filed by an engineer against the refusal of the Mettur Tahsildar to issue an inter- caste marriage certificate, though he had married a woman belonging to the Scheduled Caste (Arunthathiyar) community.
The judge said, the object behind issuance of inter-caste marriage certificates was to provide certain welfare schemes. In such circumstances, when both the husband and wife belong to the same caste, they would not be entitled to the certificate for the purpose of availing of the benefits under various schemes.
Unfurling the zine handed to us at the start of the walk, we use brightly-coloured markers to draw squiggly cables across the page, starting from a sepia-toned vintage photograph of the telegraph office. Iz, who goes by the pronouns they/them, explains, “This building is still standing, though it shut down in 2013,” they say, pointing out that telegraphy, which started in Bengaluru in 1854, was an instrument of colonial power and control. “The British colonised lands via telegraph cables, something known as the All Red Line.”
The festival in Bengaluru is happening at various locations, including ATREE in Jakkur, Bangalore Creative Circus in Yeshwantpur, Courtyard Koota in Kengeri, and Medai the Stage in Koramangala. The festival will also take place in various cities across Karnataka including Tumakuru, Ramanagara, Mandya, Kolar, Chikkaballapura, Hassan, Chitradurga, Davangere, Chamarajanagar and Mysuru.