Lenskart Controversy Erupts: BJP Leader Nazia Elahi Khan Storms Mumbai Store, Applies Tilak to Staff Over Alleged Hindu Symbols Ban
By State Correspondents News Desk | April 21, 2026
In a dramatic escalation of the ongoing Lenskart controversy, BJP Minority Morcha leader Nazia Elahi Khan led a group of activists into a Lenskart showroom in Mumbai, confronting staff over an alleged grooming policy that reportedly prohibited Hindu religious symbols like tilak, bindi, mangalsutra, and sacred threads while permitting hijabs and turbans. The viral video of the confrontation has ignited a nationwide debate on workplace religious freedom and sparked a massive boycott Lenskart campaign on social media.
The Confrontation Unfolds: From Questions to Tilak Ceremony
The incident, captured in multiple videos circulating on platforms like X (formerly Twitter) and Instagram, shows Khan entering the store and directly questioning floor manager Mohsin Khan. “Sharia lagu karwana hai kya?” (Are you trying to impose Sharia?), she reportedly asked, accusing the management of discriminatory practices favoring certain communities. Supporters chanted “Jai Shri Ram” and “Har Har Mahadev” as they applied saffron tilak to the foreheads of Hindu employees and tied kalawa (sacred threads) on their wrists.
• Khan demands manager’s identity and challenges policy enforcement.
• Activists adorn staff with traditional Hindu symbols amid cheers.
• Calls for investigation into Lenskart’s hiring practices and alleged “anti-Hindu bias.”
Nazia Elahi Khan, a prominent Muslim face in BJP’s minority wing, emphasized her intervention as a stand for all faiths, stating on social media that such policies undermine India’s secular fabric. She tagged high-profile leaders including Union Home Minister Amit Shah and Maharashtra CM, demanding arrests and probes into potential extremist links. This bold move by a minority leader has amplified the story’s reach, positioning it as a symbol of interfaith solidarity against perceived corporate overreach.
Roots of the Lenskart Controversy: The Viral Grooming Guide
The firestorm began earlier last week when an internal Lenskart training document surfaced online. Titled “In-Store Style Guide,” it explicitly stated: “Religious tikka/tilak and Bindi/Sticker is not allowed,” while seemingly allowing other faith-based attire. Critics highlighted the double standards, noting permissions for hijabs but restrictions on bindis – a staple for Hindu women – and tilaks for both genders. The policy’s timing, amid similar rows at companies like TCS and Emcure Pharma, fueled accusations of a broader “anti-Hindu” trend in corporate India.
Lenskart CEO Peyush Bansal, known from Shark Tank India, quickly distanced the company, calling the document “outdated” and issuing apologies. “We heard you,” he posted on X, sharing a revised guide that now “unambiguously welcomes all symbols of faith – bindi, tilak, sindoor, janeu, hijab, turban, and more.” Shares dipped initially but recovered, reflecting market sensitivity to such PR crises.
Public Outrage and Boycott Wave Sweeps Social Media
The #BoycottLenskart hashtag trended nationwide, with users sharing personal stories of workplace discrimination. In Surat and other cities, parallel protests echoed Mumbai’s. Hindu organizations like Bajrang Dal joined calls for accountability, while online warriors debated private companies’ rights versus constitutional freedoms under Article 25. “New India won’t tolerate faith policing,” one viral post read, garnering lakhs of views.
Defenders argued for professional grooming standards, but the optics of selective enforcement – no bans on beards or skullcaps – undermined those claims. Lenskart’s clarification, while prompt, drew mixed reactions: some praised the pivot, others demanded stricter oversight on listed firms.
Broader Implications: Workplace Faith in Modern India
This Lenskart controversy spotlights escalating tensions around religious expression in professional spaces. Similar incidents at TCS (Nashik arrests over conversions) and Emcure (Namaz promotion video) suggest a pattern, prompting questions on HR policies’ alignment with India’s diverse ethos. Legal experts note potential violations of equality clauses, with PILs rumored in courts.
For consumers, it raises trust issues: should brands dictate personal faith? Lenskart, valued at billions, now navigates a PR minefield, with competitors like Titan Eye+ gaining from the fallout. Bansal’s team promises inclusivity training, but skeptics await action.
Reactions from Political Spectrum and Corporate World
BJP leaders hailed Khan’s “courageous stand,” while opposition voices labeled it “stunt politics.” Maharashtra BJP units plan awareness drives. Corporates watch warily, revising guides preemptively. As protests subside, the episode underscores social media’s power in holding giants accountable.
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