New Delhi: The Union Cabinet has cleared a proposal to bring Vande Mataram under the Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act, 1971, placing the national song on par with Jana Gana Mana and making disruption during its rendition a punishable offence.
Once Parliament passes the amendment Bill, any intentional disruption, disturbance or act of disrespect during the singing of Vande Mataram will attract penalties, including up to three years' imprisonment - mirroring provisions for the national anthem.
The 1971 Act prescribes strict rules for the anthem, including a fixed duration and the requirement that all present stand in attention. The proposed amendment seeks to extend similar provisions to Vande Mataram, formalising its performance protocol.
The Cabinet decision builds on a directive issued by the Union Ministry of Home Affairs earlier this year that laid down detailed guidelines for rendering the national song at official functions. It mandates that all six stanzas be sung in 3 minutes and 10 seconds at key state occasions, and clarifies that when both are played, Vande Mataram will precede Jana Gana Mana, with the audience standing in attention.
The timing is politically significant, coinciding with the Centre's year-long Vande Mataram celebrations and following the BJP's electoral win in West Bengal, the home state of Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay.
There is also an ideological dimension. Vande Mataram was a rallying cry during the anti-Partition movement of 1905, though later stanzas invoking Hindu goddesses have drawn contestation, including opposition from leaders such as Muhammad Ali Jinnah before Independence.
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The 1971 Act prescribes strict rules for the anthem, including a fixed duration and the requirement that all present stand in attention. The proposed amendment seeks to extend similar provisions to Vande Mataram, formalising its performance protocol.
The Cabinet decision builds on a directive issued by the Union Ministry of Home Affairs earlier this year that laid down detailed guidelines for rendering the national song at official functions. It mandates that all six stanzas be sung in 3 minutes and 10 seconds at key state occasions, and clarifies that when both are played, Vande Mataram will precede Jana Gana Mana, with the audience standing in attention.
The timing is politically significant, coinciding with the Centre's year-long Vande Mataram celebrations and following the BJP's electoral win in West Bengal, the home state of Bankim Chandra Chattopadhyay.
There is also an ideological dimension. Vande Mataram was a rallying cry during the anti-Partition movement of 1905, though later stanzas invoking Hindu goddesses have drawn contestation, including opposition from leaders such as Muhammad Ali Jinnah before Independence.




