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(This is the first of a two-part series on the Indian Constitution by Sudheendra Kulkarni. You can read part 2 here.)
We are living in times when it has become hazardous to extol the greatness of our first prime minister who provided leadership to a free India for the longest stint in its history ─ 17 years. Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru began steering the ship of the nation in tempestuous times, when India had been partitioned and the division was accompanied by communal killings, destruction, and trans-border migration on a horrendous scale.
He led the process of building new institutions of democratic governance, a new culture of parliamentary democracy, also a new policy platform for the reconstruction of a poor and backward economy wholly incapable of meeting the aspirations of a newly liberated nation.
He was also the paramount guide to establishing independent India’s relations with the rest of the world on the principles of peace and universal brotherhood, because of which India’s prestige in the comity of nations rose enormously. All this earned him the honorific of ‘Architect of Modern India’.
Only his mistakes are being highlighted. Yes, he committed some big blunders but which great leader in any country hasn’t? However, what stands out incontrovertibly in any objective scrutiny of Nehru’s role in India’s freedom movement and as India’s first premier is that his positive contributions far outshine his missteps.
Since this article is being written on the occasion of Constitution Day – 26 November, 1949 was when the Constituent Assembly adopted the Constitution of India; it came into force on 26 January, 1950 – I would like to highlight how Nehru’s pre-eminent role in its making is sought to be falsified. In contrast, a myth has been created that Dr B R Ambedkar was the sole author and architect of the Indian Constitution.
A successful attempt has been made to raise, in popular consciousness, Ambedkar’s place in Indian history far above that of Nehru.
Disconcertingly, even the Congress party and the large body of its supporters among the intelligentsia have followed the bandwagon.
In the process, Nehru’s decisive philosophical and practical contribution to the making of the Indian Constitution – quite apart from his foundational contribution to the making of modern India – seems to be headed towards oblivion.
An important caveat here:
Indeed, as the head of the Drafting Committee of the Constitution, he certainly stands tall among the luminaries who were part of the Constituent Assembly.
However, it helps to know that members of the Drafting Committee – much less its chairman – did not have the sole or overriding power to prepare the document on their own, or the way they like. They had to draft the Constitution as per the views and recommendations of various subject committees, and the draft itself was discussed, amended and ultimately adopted by the larger Constituent Assembly.
In this entire process, no leader played a more pivotal role than Nehru. How could it have been otherwise? He was, after all, and after Mahatma Gandhi, the tallest leader of the freedom movement and the Congress. He was the prime minister in the interim government of India, formed on 2 September 1946.
It was Mahatma Gandhi who asked Nehru, the Prime Minister of the new Congress-led government, to invite Ambedkar to join the council of ministers.
Again, it was on account of Mahatma’s suggestion, and also in recognition of Ambedkar’s well-known scholarship in legal and constitutional matters, that the Congress party, which had an overwhelming majority in the Constituent Assembly, decided to appoint him as Chairman of the Drafting Committee.
Ambedkar was not a member of the Congress. Indeed, he was its bitter critic. He was not one of the front-ranking leaders in the anti-British struggle, which was led, principally, by the Congress. Therefore, it is unreasonable to think that, when the time came to create a Constitution for the soon-to-be-independent India, the Congress and its leaders would play a role subservient to that of Ambedkar.
All of us today know that the Preamble to the Indian Constitution is its heart and soul. As stated by Ambedkar’s own Drafting Committee, the Preamble is based on the ‘Resolution on the Aims and Objects of the Constitution’ (which came to be known as the ‘Objective Resolution’), which Nehru moved on 13 December 1946, and it was adopted by the Constituent Assembly on 22 January 1947.
Also Read: Father of the Indian Constitution, Dr Ambedkar, Wanted to Burn It
The Supreme Court of India, in its landmark 1973 judgment in the Kesavananda Bharati case, held that the objectives enshrined in the Preamble contain the Basic Structure of the Constitution.
The then Chief Justice, S S Sikri, observed:
In other words, the ‘Basic Structure Doctrine’, which has given our Constitution its permanent, stable and guiding character, owes mostly to Nehru’s vision as he had articulated it in the Constituent Assembly, much before Ambedkar was made the chairman of the Constitution Drafting Committee.
Besides the Preamble, Nehru’s intellectual fingerprints can be seen all over the Constitution. Most of the defining ideals, principles and guarantees in the Constitution, for which it is globally acclaimed, had found passionate expression in Nehru’s speech while introducing the ‘Objective Resolution’.
These include: people as the source of all power and authority of the independent and sovereign India; guarantees of social, economic and political justice to the people of India without any discrimination; equality before the law; freedom of thought, expression, faith; safeguards to backward and tribal areas, and historically discriminated sections of society; and an obligation on the government to promote world peace, international friendship and cooperation.
Also Read: What the Constitution Says on the Curious Case of the ‘Holy Cow’
Furthermore, Nehru was chairman of two important committees ─ Union Powers Committee and Union Constitution Committee. The deliberations of these committees helped in ensuring the centrality of the Union government over State governments, a principle that has greatly protected the political unity of India and kept a check on fissiparous forces.
He upheld the principle of an independent judiciary as the protector of citizens’ rights and also to check the transgressions of the State institutions. Guaranteeing protection to minorities (on which Nehru and Ambedkar had similar views) was his other important contribution.
On the rights of the President, Nehru ensured a fine working relationship between the Head of State and Head of Government, even as the Constitution makes it amply clear that Parliament is the supreme law-making authority and the Prime Minister is the supreme executive authority.
This constitutional wisdom has been respected by all the presidents ─ from Rajendra Prasad to Ramnath Kovind ─ and has given all the prime ministers ─ from Nehru to Narendra Modi ─ the necessary space and powers to translate people’s mandate into governance.
Also Read: Rahul Says PM, RSS Want to “Mutilate Constitution”, BJP Retaliates
Anyone who reads the Constituent Assembly debates would assert that the star performer was Nehru, not Ambedkar. Every time he spoke in the Constituent Assembly, his voice and words carried the gravitas and stamp of authority of the future leader of the nation.
Nowhere is it more evident than in the all-important ‘Objective Resolution’ speech. He, indeed, spoke twice on this resolution. Even by the Nehruvian standards of brilliant oration, the two speeches excel in idealism enriched by lyricism. They are comparable to his ‘Tryst With Destiny’ oration, on the midnight of freedom, eight months later.
Nehru reminded his audience that the most important leader of the freedom movement, Mahatma Gandhi, was absent in the Constituent Assembly, since he was not its member. More a saint than a political leader, the Mahatma was busy dousing the flames of communal hatred and violence in different parts of the country.
Nevertheless, Nehru rightly affirmed:
We should note here that Mahatma Gandhi, and not Ambedkar, is being credited with being “the architect of the Constituent Assembly”. This is not surprising, since Gandhiji provided overarching moral and practical leadership to India’s freedom movement, whereas Ambedkar was the champion of a partial (albeit highly important) message of this movement.
Then, using an expression that belongs more to the language of mystics than of rationalists (Nehru, contrary to popular perception, was a deeply spiritual person), he added:
Nehru reminded the Constituent Assembly that as India stood at the end of an era and embarked upon a new age, “our forebears and future generations are watching this undertaking of Constitution-making and possibly blessing it, if we moved right.”
The expression “Eyes of the past” and “Eyes of the future” contains a powerful message to both the politicians and people of today’s India. As we observe another ‘Constitution Day’, do we all feel, as Nehru felt at the time of Constitution-making, that the generations before us and the generations after us are watching our actions today? Are we aware of our responsibility as “trustees of the future” and as “inheritors of a great past”?
(The writer, who was an aide to India’s former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, is chairman of the Observer Research Foundation, Mumbai. He can be reached @SudheenKulkarni . This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same.)
(This article was first published on 25 November 2017 and has been reposted from The Quint’s archives to on the occasion of Republic Day.)
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Published: 25 Nov 2017,10:29 PM IST