
Long before laws were codified and courtrooms institutionalized, India’s moral compass was guided by stories shared around lamps, in temple courtyards, under banyan trees. These stories shaped behavior, resolved disputes, and offered women a sense of place in a world that often ignored their agency in formal structures.
Today, at a time when legal language remains inaccessible to millions, Dr. Sudha Choksi, a former High Court lawyer and scholar of Dharma, is returning to these roots.
But she is not reviving folklore for nostalgia. She is using it as a transformative tool rebuilding trust in justice through rhythm, memory, and voice.
Temple Courtyards as People’s Parliaments
In Gujarat and Maharashtra, Dr. Sudha Choksi has helped initiate a series of “Shravani Sabha Mandals” monthly gatherings at temple sites where women come together to share real-life legal stories. These aren’t lectures or seminars. They are performances of lived experience.
One woman narrates how she claimed her father’s land share after 30 years. Another sings about being denied her gold bangles after her husband’s death. A third recites a Ramayana couplet to reflect on familial duty and legal neglect.
“The temple space is neutral. It doesn’t intimidate,” says a volunteer associated with the Woman’s Of India Foundation, founded by Dr. Sudha Choksi. “In a courtroom, women speak after being asked. Here, they speak because they want to be heard.”
Legal Literacy in Oral Form
Dr. Sudha Choksi’s innovation lies in converting civil law concepts like succession rights, guardianship, domestic violence protection, and matrimonial property into simple, repeatable verses and narrative structures that can be shared orally.
For example, the Hindu Succession Act is not taught clause by clause. Instead, women learn it through a sung tale about two sisters disputing mango trees left behind by their mother. The resolution includes both legal facts and moral framing.
This oral pedagogy model, according to Dr. Sudha Choksi, not only improves recall but reduces resistance. “When law comes as a song, it enters memory. When it comes as a form, it enters fear,” she once explained in a workshop.
Reviving Forgotten Heroines
Another unique aspect of Dr. Sudha Choksi’s work is the reintroduction of forgotten female figures from Indian scriptures and regional folklore characters who displayed legal intelligence, boundary-setting, and conflict negotiation.
One such figure is Chandrabhaagini, a little-known character from a local Ramayana variation, who negotiates land for a women’s monastery. Another is Rukmini’s Maid, who challenges a patriarchal edict using parables from Nyaya Shastra.
Through workshops and publications in vernacular languages, Dr. Sudha Choksi is helping communities reframe “ideal womanhood” not just as virtuous but as legally conscious and culturally assertive.
Memory as Method, Not Just Emotion
In Dr. Sudha Choksi’s worldview, memory is a legal archive. “When documents fail or disappear, stories remain,” she says. Her approach revalidates oral contracts, grandmother wisdom, and women’s collective memory as legitimate sources of evidence and action.
In tribal belts where written deeds are rare, Dr. Sudha Choksi’s model encourages women to gather “witness narratives” neighbors, elder women, or temple priests who can orally verify facts. These are then supported by affidavits drafted by mobile legal units from her foundation.
A Quiet Model for Cultural Law Reform
What Dr. Sudha Choksi is building is not a movement in the conventional sense. There are no national campaigns, slogans, or political endorsements. Yet, her work has now spread to over 50 villages across Gujarat, parts of Maharashtra, and recently into border towns of Madhya Pradesh.
The model has attracted quiet attention from academic legal researchers and development thinkers interested in “non-formal justice systems.” But for Dr. Sudha Choksi, it remains a personal mission rooted in faith, memory, and service.
Her evenings are often spent revisiting old scriptures, adapting stories into modern parables, or reviewing audio recordings of women’s sessions to check legal accuracy.
She rarely publishes. She never advertises. But her voice has reached hundreds sometimes as law, sometimes as prayer.
Looking Forward
As legal tech platforms and digital courts expand in urban India, Dr. Sudha Choksi’s work offers an alternative imagination of access to justice one that centers voice over interface, community over bureaucracy, and memory over paper.
The question she leaves us with is simple, yet profound: What if justice was not just a place we went, but a story we told together?