Embodied Pluralism: Religious Liberty and Cultural Identity in  Urban South India

Authors

  • Mala Ravikumar Post-Doctoral Fellow (ICSSR), Department of Anthropology, University of Hyderabad- 500046, Hyderabad, India.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48165/sajssh.2026.7101

Keywords:

Cosmopolitan, Durga Puja, Identity, Liberty, Pluralism, Culture, Region

Abstract

Hyderabad, one of India’s most historically cosmopolitan cities, is a laboratory for practising  religious liberty and cultural identity sustenance. Hyderabad, a cosmopolitan city since its  inception, has characteristics that accommodate all communities in all regions without  discrimination. Hyderabad has long been marked by a deep-rooted tradition of religious  pluralism and the kingdoms that encouraged interfaith tolerance and peaceful coexistence.  Freedom of religion is enacted through the interaction of historical traditions, constitutional  safeguards, and the everyday practices of migrant communities. Drawing on ethnographic  research with Bengali and Bihari groups, the study analyses Durga Puja and Chhath Puja as  arenas of migrants who reproduce their traditional rituals and practices in a cosmopolitan city.  The study shows that religious freedom in India is not a static right but a lived, place-based  phenomenon. It highlights how migrants preserve their traditions and regional identities while  participating in a shared civic culture, emphasizing the strength of pluralism in contemporary  South Asia.

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Published

2026-02-07

How to Cite

Ravikumar, M. (2026). Embodied Pluralism: Religious Liberty and Cultural Identity in  Urban South India. South Asian Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities, 7(1), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.48165/sajssh.2026.7101