Un-Casted by Conversion?: Why Supreme Court’s Chinthada Anand Judgment Misses the Entire Point
By missing to apply a purposive and intersectional interpretation to the SC/ST Act’s application, the Supreme Court has robbed millions of Dalit Christians and Dalit Muslims of remedy against caste atrocities.
Aditya Krishna
1 April 2026

THE RECOGNITION OF CASTE in the Constitution of India, 1950 was not an accident. It was a well-deliberated exercise of recognising what the Hindu, Brahminical order had cemented in Indian society through centuries of brokering power, status, and resources. While the institution of caste predates most faiths and belief systems that exist on the face of earth today, it is noteworthy that the institution itself is not a time-capsule, frozen in time. It keeps shaping and getting shaped by other belief systems that interact with caste— which can be seen in many interesting examples throughout the subcontinent. Be it the Roman Catholic Brahmins (the RCBs), or the Jatt Sikh and Mazhabi/Ravidassia Sikh binary— a faith unfamiliar with caste (Roman Catholicism) and a faith built upon the claim of egalitarianism (Sikhism) both show elements of caste when it comes to practice.
The Indian Constitution recognised the discrimination experienced by the Dalits, and classified the Dalit castes into a Schedule: thus the identity being called “Scheduled Castes (‘SC’)”. A similar exercise was done for the indigenous tribes in India, leading to their identification as “Scheduled Tribe (‘ST’)”. This was not merely an exercise in classification, but an exercise in recognition of a pattern which was common across the country, and hence required additional remedial measures. The measures began with the prohibition of untouchability, and further allowed the state to make laws for the benefit of, inter alia, these protected identities.
However, the Constitution (Scheduled Castes) Order, 1950, issued under Article 341, contains a categorical religious bar: it restricts SC status exclusively to Hindus, with subsequent amendments in 1956 and 1990 adding Sikhs and Buddhists respectively. The law presumes that only these “Hindu and Hindu-adjacent” faiths retain the stigma of untouchability.
The legal assumption that conversion provides an escape from caste is a fiction contradicted by centuries of Indian social history.