The recent contretemps over donations to the Ram Temple in Ayodhya has exposed a fissure between Indian piety and British regulatory rectitude. A UK-based charity, the Hindu Temple of London, found itself under scrutiny by the Charity Commission for failing to disclose the destination of funds raised for the Ram Mandir. The Commission’s ruling, upholding transparency standards, has been met with a mixture of indignation and bewilderment in certain quarters. Yet, to those of us who view the contemporary world through the prism of historical cycles, this is merely another skirmish in the eternal war between faith and bureaucracy.
Let us not mince words. The Charity Commission’s intervention is a textbook example of the British passion for process over passion. It is the same spirit that gave us the Morant Bay Rebellion, the Opium Wars, and the meticulous filing of the Domesday Book. India, a nation that has always understood the raw, unvarnished power of belief, now finds itself having to answer to the cool, dispassionate gaze of a London-based regulator. The irony is as rich as it is predictable.
Consider the broader context. The Ram Temple is not merely a place of worship. It is the physical manifestation of a civilisational renaissance, a bold statement that India’s ancient soul will not be buried under the debris of secularist pieties. To demand donor transparency from a temple fund is akin to requiring a lover to itemise his compliments. It misses the point entirely. Faith is not a ledger entry. It is a leap into the unknown, a gesture of trust that defies the spreadsheet logic of modern governance.
And yet, the British charity regime has its champions, even in India. They argue that transparency curbs corruption and builds trust. They are not entirely wrong. But in their zeal for order, they forget that the Ram Temple movement was born out of a deep, visceral need for identity. It is a cry against the atomisation of modern life, a reclaiming of collective memory. To reduce that to a question of accounting is to miss the forest for the trees.
The row also highlights the peculiar predicament of the Indian diaspora. They live in two worlds: one of ancient rituals and one of modern regulations. They want to contribute to the homeland’s spiritual revival but must do so under the gaze of the host country’s legal system. This is not a comfortable position. It forces them to choose between their hearts and their tax returns.
What would the Victorians have made of this? They would have laughed at the very idea of a temple open about its finances. The British Empire was built on faith: faith in the mission, faith in the race, faith in the balance sheet. The latter always trumped the former. The Church of England, for all its moral posturing, never subjected its donations to public scrutiny in the way that modern charities are forced to do. The double standard is almost comical.
But let us not be too harsh on the Charity Commission. They are merely doing their job, enforcing a system that values process over substance. That system is the inheritance of a society that has lost its faith, a society that now prides itself on transparency because it no longer believes in anything worth hiding. India, still young and vibrant, must resist the temptation to emulate this exhausted model. It must preserve its soul, even if that means a little opacity.
In the end, the Ram Temple will be built. Donations will flow. The charity commissioners will return to their tea and their spreadsheets. But the row will linger as a reminder that the clash between ancient faith and modern bureaucracy is far from over. It is, in fact, the defining struggle of our age. And I, for one, know which side I am on.
Arthur Penhaligon









