Making India a Place of Worship
Authored by: Sugandh Saxena B.A. (Hons.) Economics, Delhi University Pursuing PGDM–
HRM, Management Development Institute (MDI), Gurgaon Email: sugandhsxn@gmail.com
Submitted to: Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai
Transforming Faith-Based Resources into Social Action
A Policy Proposal for National Implementation
India’s 30 lakh places of worship collectively hold an estimated Rs.4–5 lakh crore in
accumulated assets and generate Rs.8,800–16,600 crore in annual inflows. Yet less than
3% of these resources are currently deployed toward social welfare or community
development.
While several religious institutions across India already use donations for public
welfare—supporting schools, hospitals, and food distribution—the overall scale of such
efforts remains limited. This proposal recommends expanding that share so that at least
50% of both corpus funds and annual revenues are voluntarily directed toward measurable
social and environmental welfare programs.
The objective is to integrate India’s vast faith-based wealth with its national development
goals, fostering inclusive growth while upholding constitutional values of pluralism and
voluntarism.
If implemented, the initiative can generate transformative outcomes within a decade:
- Poverty Reduction (20–30%) – A cumulative welfare injection of Rs.7 lakh crore (Rs.2
lakh crore from corpus + Rs.50,000 crore annual spending) can sustainably lift 70–100
million citizens above the poverty line through direct support and livelihood creation. - Economic Growth (+1–2% annually) – Welfare expenditure targeted at low-income
households has a high fiscal multiplier (~1.8), stimulating demand and productivity, and
adding up to 2% to annual GDP growth. - Human Capital Development – Establishment of 1,000 hospitals, 2,000 schools, and
5,000 vocational centers will directly benefit 150 million citizens, strengthening India’s
health, education, and employment base. - Environmental Renewal – Launch of a Rs.15,000 crore National Religious Green
Mission will enable large-scale afforestation, renewable energy installations in religious
precincts, and river–lake rejuvenation. - Governance and Accountability – Allocation of Rs.5,000 crore for digital transparency
tools, independent audits, and compliance mechanisms will ensure credibility, trust, and
public participation.
By systematically channeling faith-driven generosity toward sustainable welfare, India can
pioneer a new global model of faith-based nation-building — where spiritual wealth
becomes a force for poverty eradication, environmental protection, and social harmony.
If implemented, the impact will be Transformational
Metric Mechanism 10-Year Outcome (Projected)
Poverty Reduction (20–30%) Direct transfer of welfare spending (~Rs.2 lakh crore corpus +
Rs.5,000–8,000 crore/year), plus job creation through schools, hospitals, and rural
works. Each Rs.1 lakh crore of welfare spending has been shown (per NITI Aayog data)
to lift 20–25 million people above the poverty line. 70–100 million people lifted out of
poverty.
GDP Growth (Add 1–2% annually) Increased demand from welfare recipients
(consumption multiplier 1.8) and higher productivity from educated & healthy citizens.
Welfare injection of ~Rs.50,000 crore/year yields ~Rs.90,000 crore GDP stimulus.
Sustained GDP growth +1–2% yearly for a decade.
Healthcare & Education for 150 million Citizens Building 1,000 hospitals, 2,000 schools,
and 5,000 vocational centers nationwide, plus community food banks. 150 million directly
benefit within 10 years.
Allocation Framework (Illustrative)
- Initial Corpus (One-Time Rs.2–2.5 Lakh Crore)
Sector Allocation Purpose
Healthcare – Rs.60,000 crore Hospitals, mobile clinics, medical supplies
Education & Vocational Training – Rs.70,000 crore Schools, teacher salaries, skill Center’s
Food Security & Livelihoods – Rs.30,000 crore Community kitchens, Annadanam,
self-employment
Rural Economy & Irrigation – Rs.25,000 crore Water systems, farm infrastructure
Environment & Climate Fund – Rs.15,000 crore (new) Forest restoration, river cleaning,
renewable energy projects, waste management. - Governance, Audit & Transparency – Rs.5,000 crore Digital dashboards, audits, compliance
- Annual Allocation (Rs.4,200–Rs.8,400 Crore)
- Sector Annual % Annual Fund Range (Rs. Crore)
- Education & Healthcare – 45% 1,900–3,800
- Poverty Alleviation & Food Banks – 20% 840–1,680
- Rural Economy & Irrigation – 15% 630–1,260
- Environment & Sustainability (new) – 10% 420–840
- Governance & Transparency – 10% 420–840
- Environmental Commitment
- Environmental degradation affects both rich and poor — through air pollution, loss of
- green cover, and water scarcity. Therefore:
- Start-Up Allocation: Rs.15,000 crore from the corpus will launch a National Religious
Green Mission — funding afforestation, renewable energy in temples, and river/lake
rejuvenation near religious clusters. - Annual Commitment: 10% of annual welfare inflow (Rs.420–Rs.840 crore) will maintain
continuous ecological programs — tree plantations, community solar projects, and waste
recycling.
This not only reduces pollution and carbon footprint but creates green jobs in rural and
peri-urban India. - Expected Socio-Economic Impact (Quantified)
- A. Poverty Reduction (20–30% in a Decade) : Rs.2 lakh crore corpus + Rs.50,000 crore
- annual spending = Rs.7 lakh crore total welfare injection over 10 years. • Using an
- established Rs.70,000 per capita uplift cost (NITI Aayog basis), ~100 million poor
- citizens can be sustainably raised above poverty.
- B. GDP Growth (+1–2% per year): • Rs.50,000 crore annual welfare spending × multiplier of
- 1.8 = Rs.90,000 crore GDP boost/year. • Over a decade, adds 1–2% annual GDP growth
- through increased demand, health, and skill-based productivity.
- C. Healthcare & Education Reach: 1,000 new hospitals @ Rs.200 crore = Rs.2 lakh
- crore impact (public-private synergy). • 2,000 new schools/vocational centers = 100 lakh
- new student capacity. • 5,000 skill centers = 10 lakh trained youth per year.
- Why People Follow Religion: Historical Lessons
- Understanding why religions historically attracted followers helps design practical,
- non-coercive strategies for faith-based institutions to expand their social role. Key drivers
- across traditions include social services, education and scholarship, adaptability to local
- cultures, trade and community-building, and spiritual appeal.
- Catholicism — Social Services and Community Integration The Catholic Church expanded
- worldwide in large part because it built dense networks of social institutions — hospitals,
- schools, orphanages, and charities — that served local needs. Missionary education and
- healthcare created deep community ties, making the Church an integral part of daily life.
- Modern missionary work, by combining evangelization with demonstrable social benefit,
- attracted converts and consolidated communities.
- Buddhism — Flexibility, Scholarship, and Accessibility Buddhism spread through its
- intellectual appeal and its capacity to adapt to local customs without requiring wholesale
- abandonment of existing practices. Centers of learning and monasteries (for example,
- Nalanda) acted as hubs of scholarship, debate, and teacher-training, amplifying the faith’s
- reach. The bodhisattva ideal and Mahayana emphasis on universal salvation made the
- teachings accessible to a broad social base, including marginalized groups.
- Role of Scholarly Institutions — Nalanda as a Case Study Nalanda University exemplifies
- how institutions of learning promote religious and cultural influence. Its libraries, teachers,
- and students transmitted Buddhist thought across Asia. Scholarly prestige and translation
- work helped institutionalize and spread ideas peacefully through education, debate, and
- teacher networks.
- Islam (Sufism) — Trade, Syncretism, and Community Building In Southeast Asia and parts
- of the Indian subcontinent, Islam spread largely via trade networks and Sufi missionaries.
- Traders built reputations for trust and economic partnership, while Sufis emphasized
- mystical, tolerant teachings that easily syncretized with local practices. Sufi khanqahs and
- missionary centers provided food, shelter, spiritual guidance, and education — forming the
- social infrastructure that encouraged voluntary adoption of the faith.
- Implications for the “Making India a Place of Worship” Proposal
- The historical lessons above show that religions often grew when they addressed tangible
- human needs: healthcare, education, economic opportunity, and community support. If
- India’s places of worship systematically allocate a larger share of funds (for example, 50%
- as proposed) to social welfare, the likely outcomes include: * Increased social capital and
- trust: Visible, well-run welfare projects build goodwill across communities and generations.
- Broader appeal and voluntary affiliation: Service-oriented institutions become more.
- attractive to people seeking practical support and moral leadership. * Higher donations
- and sustainability: As communities see the impact of their offerings, donations and
- voluntary contributions are likely to rise, improving institutional sustainability. *
- Strengthening pluralism through service: When welfare is delivered inclusively and
- transparently, it can foster interfaith harmony rather than division.
- Important ethical note: any expansion of service must be voluntary, non-coercive, and
- respectful of India’s pluralist constitution. The aim should be to enhance social welfare and
- civic solidarity — not to pressure or manipulate religious conversion. Robust safeguards
- (transparent reporting, independent audits, and legal compliance) must accompany any
- movement to ensure respect for individual freedom of belief and equal treatment of all
- communities.
- Recommendations
- Prioritize service-first outreach: Frame temple and faith-based activity around clearly
measurable welfare outputs (schools, clinics, shelters). 2. Measure and publish impact:
Use an NRSR Index to track welfare spend and outcomes. 3. Respect pluralism: Explicitly
prohibit coercive or incentivized conversion practices in pilot programs. 4. Engage
scholars and practitioners: Invite TISS and other academic partners to evaluate pilots and
publish findings.
Historical & Inspirational Note
“A Second Abolition: From Poverty to Prosperity”
In the 19th century, Abraham Lincoln freed the enslaved — changing the moral course of a
nation. In the 21st century, those who champion this policy — converting India’s
faith-based wealth into social capital — will be remembered as the liberators of economic
slavery.
Just as freed African Americans later became major contributors to America’s cultural and
economic strength — in sports, music, film, and enterprise — so too will India’s
underprivileged, once empowered through education, healthcare, and livelihood, rise to
become pillars of India’s prosperity.
Future generations will say:
“These were the leaders who transformed faith into freedom — who turned prayers into
progress “ - Implementing this policy will not only transform millions of lives but also redefine India’s spiritual legacy as a global model where faith funds the future. Conclusion This proposal bridges spiritual wealth and social welfare. It empowers temples, mosques, churches, and gurdwaras to become custodians of hope, health, and harmony. It brings measurable social change — poverty reduction, GDP acceleration, and environmental renewal — while uniting India’s faiths under one purpose: service to humanity. Those who enable this transformation will not just be remembered in policy archives — they will be immortalized in history, as the visionaries who redefined worship into nation-building.