Hindu students appearing for the Karnataka Common Entrance Test (KCET) reportedly found themselves forced to choose between educational opportunity and civilizational identity. Several students wearing the Janeu (Yajnopaveetha) — the sacred thread central to Hindu samskara and spiritual discipline — were denied entry unless they removed it, despite the absence of any official examination rule prohibiting it. What should have been a routine examination procedure quickly escalated into a national debate, reigniting concerns regarding the treatment of Hindu religious symbols within public institutions.
Competitive examinations undoubtedly require reasonable security measures to prevent malpractice and preserve fairness. Yet the Karnataka CET controversy exposed a disturbing institutional pattern in which Hindu students are repeatedly subjected to restrictions for adhering to their dharmic traditions. Across multiple states, sacred Hindu symbols such as the Janeu, Mangalsutra, Kalava, toe rings and tilaks have increasingly been treated as objects of suspicion or administrative inconvenience, while institutions often display far greater caution and accommodation toward the religious practices of other communities.
The issue therefore extends far beyond examination protocol. It raises serious constitutional, cultural, and civilizational questions concerning religious freedom, equality before law, selective secularism, and the place of Hindu identity within contemporary institutional spaces.
Recent Karnataka CET controversy
The incident took place at an examination center in Bengaluru during the Karnataka Common Entrance Test, conducted for admission into professional courses. Several Hindu students appearing for the CET were asked to remove their Janivara/Janeu before entering the examination hall. Some students further alleged that the invigilators also removed the red-and-yellow sacred wrist thread commonly known as Kalava, Mauli or Raksha Sutra.
The incident triggered immediate outrage among students, parents, community members and Hindu organizations. Complaints were filed, protests emerged, and widespread criticism followed across Karnataka and beyond. Concerned state authorities subsequently clarified that no such directive existed in the official examination guidelines, raising serious concerns about arbitrary procedural overreach at the ground level.
The college administration suspended certain staff members, police complaints were registered, and the Karnataka government ordered an inquiry into the incident. The Karnataka government reportedly described the incident as a violation of human rights and privacy.
The controversy eventually reached the Karnataka High Court through a Public Interest Litigation (PIL), highlighting the growing constitutional dimensions of the issue.
The sacred significance of the Janeu and other hindu symbols
The Janeu, also known as Yajnopaveetha, is not merely a cotton thread casually worn around the body. It is one of the oldest surviving symbols of the Sanatan Dharma and holds deep spiritual, philosophical and cultural significance within Hindu tradition. The wearing of the Janeu is an intrinsic part of the Upanayana samskara – one of the sixteen fundamental samskaras in Hindu tradition – marking the formal beginning of a child’s spiritual and educational journey. During the ceremony, the child receives the Gayatri Mantra from his father or guru and symbolically commits to a life guided by discipline, learning, self-restraint, ethical conduct and dharma.
In Sanatan tradition, the Upanayana ceremony represented initiation into formal disciplined educational and social responsibility, making the Janeu inseparable from the Hindu conception of education itself. It serves as a lifelong reminder that the person would remain dedicated to knowledge and disciplined learning, and that he will keep his mind free from distraction. The sacredness of the Janeu is reflected even in the Hanuman Chalisa where Bhagwan Hanuman is reverentially depicted as “kandhe munj janeu saje” — ‘adorned with the sacred thread upon His shoulder’. The phrase reflects the deep reverence traditionally attached to the Janeu within Sanatan Dharma.
It is also believed in Hindu traditions that the Janeu should not be casually removed. Forcing Hindu students to remove the Janeu moments before entering the examination centres therefore carries consequences far beyond procedural inconvenience. It becomes an experience of emotional injury, religious humiliation and symbolic erasure of identity. Treating such a sacred symbol as a prohibited object at examination centres therefore reflects not merely administrative insensitivity, but a profound ignorance of Hindu civilizational practices and dharmic consciousness.
The same restrictions apply to other Hindu symbols such as the Mangalsutra, Kalava and toe rings. These are not merely ornaments or aesthetic choices. They are sacred markers of marriage, spirituality, protection, continuity and identity deeply embedded within Hindu cultural and spiritual consciousness. Reducing such sacred symbols to “security concerns” reflects not merely ignorance of Hindu traditions, but a deeper institutional insensitivity toward Sanatan practices themselves.
Similar incidents across Bharat: A disturbing pattern
The Karnataka CET controversy is not an isolated incident. Over the past few years, similar controversies have repeatedly surfaced across multiple states, revealing a disturbing pattern in which Hindu students are subjected to restrictions for adhering to their religious traditions.
In Rajasthan in March, 2025, a candidate appearing for a recruitment examination was compelled to remove his Janeu. Similarly, in May, 2024 in Assam’s Barpeta district, Hindu students were reportedly forced to remove their sacred threads and kalava before an entrance examination. Comparable incidents emerged during NEET and KCET examinations in Karnataka last year, where Hindu students faced restrictions for wearing the Janeu. Hindu candidates have also been asked to remove Mangalsutras, toe rings, and other traditional Hindu markers before entering the examination halls in Karnataka and Telangana.
These repeated incidents raise serious constitutional concerns under Articles 14, 21, and 25 of the Constitution. More particularly, what intensified public anger during many of these controversies was/are the unequal treatment. Institutions frequently conduct reasonable checking procedures while accommodating the religious or cultural practices of one community but Hindu students are often compelled to remove their sacred symbols altogether before being permitted entry.
Students often ask – if hijab-wearing candidates can be accommodated through appropriate security checks, then why not Janeu-wearing students? Equality before law cannot operate selectively. A secular constitutional framework cannot extend accommodation for one faith while treating Hindu practices and traditions as disposable inconveniences. Also, forcing anxious students appearing for high-stakes examinations to remove their dharmic identity moments before entry causes not only emotional distress but also spiritual humiliation.
Political appeasement and institutional hostility towards hindu identity
The controversy also exposes the contradictions embedded within contemporary vote-bank politics and the growing institutional hostility towards Hindu identity. Political parties frequently engage in symbolic outreach toward Hindu communities during elections, yet often remain conspicuously silent when their dharmic traditions encounter discrimination in public spaces.
The silence of the Congress leadership during the Karnataka CET controversy became particularly striking in this regard. Critics point out that symbolic displays of Hindu identity and Janeu frequently become prominent during election campaigns and public outreach efforts aimed at Hindu voters. Yet, when Hindu students in Congress-ruled Karnataka were forced to remove the very same sacred thread before entering examination centers, no significant condemnation emerged from the party’s central leadership or from its prominent national figures.
Had strong public condemnation emerged from the party’s central leadership, it would likely have exerted immediate pressure upon the Karnataka administration to ensure exemplary accountability and prevent recurrence of similar incidents. Instead, the response largely remained confined to temporary suspensions, inquiries, and assurances after public outrage had already escalated. These measures may calm immediate public anger momentarily, but the recurring nature of such incidents suggests that administrative correction alone is insufficient without clear political willingness to address the issue decisively. When symbolic Hindu outreach during elections is not matched by equal willingness to defend Hindu traditions within public institutions, accusations of political appeasement inevitably gain greater force.
The civilizational cost of undermining hindu identity
The consequences of these incidents extend far beyond examination centres. When Hindu students repeatedly encounter hostility toward their sacred dharmic traditions during formative educational experiences, the psychological and cultural consequences become increasingly severe. A generation of Hindu students is gradually internalizing the message that dharmic symbols invite stigma, outward expressions of dharma are institutional inconveniences, and professional advancement demands symbolic surrender.
This is how civilizational weakening gradually begins. Not through overt destruction alone, but through normalization of humiliation, concealment, and cultural surrender.
A Hindu student forced to remove the Janeu learns an unspoken lesson: your dharma has no legitimate place within public institutions. A Hindu woman compelled to remove her Mangalsutra receives another message: your sacred traditions are secondary to bureaucratic comfort. Over time, such repeated humiliations create cultural alienation and historical disconnect. Students begin to perceive their religious practices not as sources of pride, continuity, and civilizational identity but as obstacles requiring concealment or abandonment within institutional life.
The damage becomes especially severe when educational spaces — institutions supposedly devoted to knowledge, dignity, and constitutional equality — themselves become sites where Hindu students feel pressured to suppress their faith.
A civilization does not collapse only when its temples are destroyed. It also weakens when its children are conditioned to view the sacred traditions preserved by the ancestors for thousands of years as obstacles to be concealed rather than upheld with pride. These incidents are therefore not minor administrative errors. They shape civilizational confidence itself.
Faith, dignity and constitutional equality
The repeated targeting of the Janeu, Kalava and other dharmic markers is not merely a controversy about examination protocols. It reflects a deeper crisis concerning the place of visible Hindu identity within contemporary educational institutions and administrative culture.
These incidents reveal how pseudo-secular administrative culture increasingly treats Hindu civilizational markers as negotiable, inconvenient, and institutionally problematic. Under the guise of examination protocol and security, Hindu students are repeatedly subjected to humiliation that no constitutional democracy committed to genuine equality should tolerate.
The Janeu is not merely a thread, nor is the Kalava merely a coloured band. They are living embodiments of Sanatan Dharma, sacred continuity, and historical memory. These Hindu traditions survived invasions, colonization, forced conversions and centuries of cultural assault. It would be a tragic irony if, in independent Bharat itself, Hindu students are increasingly conditioned to believe that these symbols must be hidden, removed or abandoned in order to access education and opportunity.
A nation that compels its children to leave their dharma outside institutional gates risks severing itself from the very civilizational foundations that gave the nation its soul.


















