In Kerala’s Malappuram district, the dawn Suprabhatham would float gently beyond temple walls for generations. However, one victory procession last week turned that sacred sound into a target. Slogans demanded that the Hindu devotional chant fall silent outside the Mahavishnu Temple at Malappuram.
What began as a celebration suddenly exposed a deeper political Fatwa against the Hindu form of worship. In a state whose existence is linked to Dashavatar, Hindus now fear that their spaces alone face scrutiny.
A Panchayat Win Turns Into a Fatwa for Temple Rituals
I had posted way back in 2017 : Mallapuram is FUBAR (lost)
A “Fatwa” has been given in Edavanna, Mallapuram by Muslim League
Suprabhatham Bhajan from temples should not be heard outside & if hear they will stop it
Mallapuram had 70% muslims in 2011
— Sameer (@BesuraTaansane) December 18, 2025
The flashpoint began after a local ward victory. United Democratic Front (UDF) workers marched past the Mahavishnu Temple at Kolappad, waving flags of the Muslim League and the Congress. Amid cheers came slogans demanding that Suprabhatham not be heard outside the compound and threats that “it will be stopped.” The Hindu Residents were stunned.
A new FATWA from Muslim League IN KERALA; Suprabhatham Bhajan from temples should not be heard outside.🚨🚨
This shocking slogan was raised during congress victory celebrations in Edavanna, Malappuram. Muslim League workers openly shouted provocative slogans saying that temple… pic.twitter.com/rPCFkh0EmM
— MAHARATHI (@MahaRathii) December 17, 2025
The temple has long played early-morning devotional songs at around 5 AM, following the standard practice seen across Kerala.
Police permission existed. Volume limits are honoured. Moreover, there had never been formal complaints. Thus, the threat did not arise from nuisance or social laws. Instead, it emerged from a show of political muscle in a district with 70% Muslim population, according to the 2011 Census.
The message travelled fast: religious practices of Hindu temples could be policed by political sentiment, not law.
Selective Outrage and the Unequal Soundscape of Kerala
തെരഞ്ഞെടുപ്പ് കഴിഞ്ഞ്UDF ൻ്റെ ആഹ്ളാദ പ്രകടനം – പ്രദേശത്ത് ക്ഷേത്രത്തിൽ രാവിലെ വെയ്ക്കുന്ന സുപ്രഭാതം നിർത്തണമെന്ന
ആവശ്യത്തിൽ മുദ്യവാക്യം – ഇത് മതേതര കേരളം – UDF ന് വോട്ട് ചെയ്ത എല്ലാ വോട്ടർമാർക്കും അഭിനന്ദനങ്ങൾ –@INCKerala @kcvenugopalmp @vdsatheesan pic.twitter.com/Zp36uICVdY— Tom Mathews Moolamattom (@TMoolamattom) December 14, 2025
Observers immediately noted a stark asymmetry. Loudspeakers in mosques broadcast the azan five times a day, even in Hindu-majority areas elsewhere. Religious gatherings use amplification late into the night. No party procession in Malappuram has ever demanded a halt to these longstanding practices.
Regulating the temple’s morning worship is not a noise issue, but targeted interference cloaked as a secular concern.
In Malappuram district of Kerala which is the Heartland of peacefuls and one of the hotbeds of radicalization, Miscreants dumped fish in the Hundial of a Mahadeva temple..😡.
Temple committee is cleaning fish waste from hundial.
Secularism is not an one way traffic. Dont forget. pic.twitter.com/gxwCC9KMhb— Pratheesh Viswanath (@pratheesh_Hind) September 2, 2020
After all, the chants were followed by “UDF Zindabad” slogans – not environmental appeals. Temple representatives insist they follow norms and hold documentation. Residents say the sound has never disturbed the neighbourhood. Therefore, the Fatwas and UDF rallies’ demand is the reality of the life of Hindus under the political dominance of Islamists. The police and state apparatus may spout tolerance and law, but the Hindus know the Fatwa is just the beginning of things to come!
Kerala’s Fragile Coexistence Faces New Strains
In Malappuram, Congress-backed Muslim League cadres tried to bully a temple into silence for playing Suprabhatham.
A lawful devotional chant is suddenly labelled a “problem”; not by the law, but by intimidation.
This is a warning about who gets to express faith publicly and who… pic.twitter.com/lADNaLdR5J
— Vishnu Vardhan Reddy (@SVishnuReddy) December 17, 2025
Kerala seems to pride itself on harmonious plurality. They reject the truth of The Kerala Story. They hate the increasing footprint of NDA in the state. And they oppose the RSS’s existence in the state. But Malappuram’s chants and fatwa reopen fears of selective intolerance toward Hindu customs.
Midnight RSS band at Calicut opposite PFI,SDPI Headquarters. A rare & fearless sight @ Kerala. pic.twitter.com/iZPjPEjFNa
— Alagesh Chelliah (@AlageshChelliah) August 19, 2022
Opposition to temple loudspeakers here seems less about decibels and more about redefining public space.
This is the power of Hindu unity. Malappuram is a district in Kerala that has a 70 per cent muslim population. Recently, during the Malappuram Revenue District School Youth Festival, a play, Veeranatyam, was staged, which insulted the Hindu mythology. Further, this very play was… pic.twitter.com/oJI5kqMDhC
— The Pamphlet (@Pamphlet_in) November 28, 2025
Religious sound regulations already exist, yet their enforcement must remain uniform. Hindu groups now fear a slippery slope in which temples face curbs while others operate freely. This is not alarmism – it is caution. If the early-morning Suprabhatham, played lawfully for years, becomes negotiable political Muslim territory, the integrity of worship and equal citizenship itself stands challenged.
The temple loudspeaker continues today in Kerala, but Malappuram’s Fatwas are already indicating who shall decide the fate of Hindus in Kerala!


