As we enter the Amrit Kaal, it’s time India revisited its ‘borrowed’, ‘colonial’ and ‘compromised’ Constitution. – Yuvraj Pokharna
The historic ‘Purna Swaraj’ proclamation was officially proclaimed on 26 January 1930, ushering in the final phase of India’s liberation movement with the goal of complete independence from British rule. As a result, 26 January 1950 was chosen as our Republic Day because it was the day India’s Constitution came into effect.
According to Wikipedia, “A constitution is an aggregate of fundamental principles or established precedents that constitute the legal basis of a polity, organisation or other types of entity and commonly determine how that entity is to be governed.” It’s an interesting choice of words, especially the “fundamental principles or established precedents” that, more or less, subdue what we call the “Dharma”. It is the innate universal principle that not only governs and guides humans but also celestial bodies, which we inherit by virtue of being Hindus born in Bharat. We owe this to our civilisation and culture. Of course, this predates the Constitution and doesn’t even warrant any legitimacy because it is so well-known and an established fact! No written legal documentation can subdue Dharma
A constitution is meant to embody the country’s cultural ethos and values, which it attempts to strengthen through its written words. In an article, senior advocate Satyajeet Desai of the Gujarat High Court noted that “constitutional supremacy is and has to be the bedrock upon which the edifice of a democracy rests.” And, the very sacrosanct Indian Constitution begins with the preamble stating: “We, the people of India, hereby adopt, enact, and give ourselves this Constitution.” This only corroborates the fact that we, the citizens of India, that is, Bharat, are higher up in the system, so to speak.
In 1938, Jawaharlal Nehru, on behalf of the Indian National Congress (INC), declared that “the Constitution of free India must be framed, without outside interference, by a Constituent Assembly elected on the basis of adult franchise.” The fact that the Indian Republic’s Constitution is the result of deliberation and codification by a body of unelected representatives of the people means that the drafting committee, in itself, necessitates a retrospective in order to fully comprehend the document and its significance for the Indians. About a third of the members of the drafting committee were appointed by princely states. Members of provincial assemblies elected the rest. Finally, even when the Congress was in full swing, Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, the revered and enshrined father of the Constitution, failed to gain a seat in the Lok Sabha in the very first elections held in 1952.
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