Every time we stay silent, something sacred slips away. Every time we speak, the Constitution remembers its soul.
Recently, the Karnataka High Court ruled that distributing religious pamphlets near a temple does not amount to an offence unless conversion actually takes place.
Must conversion happen first before dharm can be protected?
When Law Fails Dharma, Citizens Must Speak
Every time we stay silent, something sacred slips away.
Every time we speak, the Constitution remembers its soul.
NDV’s Public Right Response is a living citizens’ platform, where voices rise in defense of dharma, culture, and constitutional integrity.
Recently, the Karnataka High Court ruled that distributing religious pamphlets near a temple does not amount to an offence unless conversion actually takes place.
👉 Read the Judgment: Mustafa & Others vs. State of Karnataka, High Court of Karnataka, 17 July 2025 (PDF) mustafa-and-others-vs-state-and-another-karnataka-high-court-2071541 (1).pdf
This has raised a simple question:
Must conversion happen first before dharma can be protected?
NDV is launching a Continuous Public Response Drive, a living civic record of what India’s citizens feel about such issues.
This is not a one-time petition.
It’s an ongoing national response, a continuous reflection of how citizens see justice, faith, and the civilizational spirit of India’s Constitution.
NDV is documenting your voices as part of its Civilizational Rights & Legal Integrity program, shaping research reports, model frameworks, and policy recommendations for sacred space protection.
Speak. Respond. Be counted.
When citizens act, law must listen.
NDV’s Public Right Response is a living citizens’ platform where voices rise in defense of dharm, culture, and constitutional integrity.
This is not a one-time petition. It is an ongoing national response, a continuous reflection of how citizens see justice, faith, and the civilizational spirit of India’s Constitution.
NDV is documenting your voices as part of its Civilizational Rights & Legal Integrity program, which feeds into research reports, model frameworks, and policy recommendations for sacred space protection.
NDV invites every citizen to share their perspective. Your submission will be part of a living civic record that informs legal research, policy recommendations, and the protection of sacred spaces
A civilizational legal-policy think tank advancing Bharat’s legal, cultural & constitutional sovereignty.
राष्ट्रीय विकास स्वयंसेवक
(Rashtriya Vikas Swayamsevak)
© 2025 National Development Volunteers. All rights reserved.
NDV (National Development Volunteers) wants a Bharat where constitutional laws, public policies, and civilisational ethics are so interrelated that one cannot exist without the other. Our initiatives are based on the knowledge that Dharm is not just a religious concept, but it is a universal framework of justice, rights, and the common good.
By rigorous research, doctrinal clarity, and legal scholarship that is reflective of the profundity of our heritage, we intend to re-civilise India with the confidence of her civilisation again. For us, national development is not limited to economic or administrative aspects; it also encompasses the intellectual, cultural, and spiritual. It involves bringing back the principles that have supported this civilisation for thousands of years.
This recognition of Bharat as something beyond a political entity – a sacred geography, a shared civilisation, and a living continuum of ideas – is at the core of this dream.
“A Hindu means a person who regards this land of Bharatvarsha, from the Indus to the seas, as his Father-land as well as his Holy-land, that is, the cradle land of his religion.”
— Vinayak Damodar Savarkar