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Indian women form 620 km human chain in support of temple equality

India's Supreme Court ruled in September that the centuries-old ban on women deemed to be of menstrual age -- defined as from 10 to 50 -- was unconstitutional. But religious protesters have so far made it difficult to enforce the ruling.
The state government organized the so-called "women's wall" Tuesday, according to CNN affiliate CNN News 18. The chains were formed for about 15 minutes.
Photos from the protests showed Pinarayi Vijayan, the chief minister of Kerala, and Health Minister KK Shylaja in attendance. Thousands of women could be seen raising hands and fists while forming the wall.
Women raise their hands to take a pledge to fight gender discrimination as they form part of a hundreds kilometer long "women's wall."
The judgment allowing women inside the Sabarimala Temple was the culmination of a decades-long battle to overturn the ban.
The prohibition was first challenged before the Kerala High Court in August 1991, with the high court ruling that only a priest could make the decision on allowing women access to the temple, a golden-roofed structure thought to be more than 800 years old.
Indian women stand in a line to take part the "women's wall" in Kochi.
It is considered the spiritual home of Lord Ayyappa, a Hindu god of growth.
Nestled atop a steep mountain amid a lush green tiger reserve, it's the site of one of the world's largest annual pilgrimages, with millions of Hindu devotees making the journey each year.
Sabarimala had previously been off-limits to women of menstrual age on religious grounds, with proponents of the ban arguing that since Ayyappa is considered celibate, allowing "impure" women into the shrine would be disrespectful. Others have maintained that women cannot complete the 41 days of penances, a condition required to undertake the pilgrimage.

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