As India celebrates its 77th Republic Day, the occasion invites reflection not only on ceremonial grandeur but on the deeper constitutional commitments made on 26 January 1950. On that day, India did more than formally end colonial rule. By adopting its Constitution, the country declared itself a republic and made a set of deliberate, legally binding promises to its citizens—promises intended to transform everyday life in a society emerging from empire, inequality, and the trauma of Partition.
At the heart of the Republic was the promise of equal citizenship. Under British rule, Indians were subjects of the Crown, governed but not equal before the law. Political rights were restricted by property, education, gender, and race. The Constitution decisively rejected this legacy. Article 14 guaranteed equality before the law, while Articles 15 and 16 prohibited discrimination on grounds of religion, caste, sex, or place of birth. Most significantly, India adopted universal adult franchise from the outset. Every adult citizen, regardless of wealth or literacy, was given an equal vote. As constitutional scholar Granville Austin noted, this amounted to a “social revolution,” using political equality to challenge entrenched hierarchies. The Republic also promised that state power itself would be limited. Part III of the Constitution enshrined Fundamental Rights, protecting citizens from arbitrary authority. These included freedoms of speech, expression, assembly, and association; safeguards in criminal law; and the right to religious freedom. Fundamentally, Article 32 allowed citizens to approach the Supreme Court directly if their rights were violated. Dr B.R. Ambedkar famously described this provision as the “heart and soul” of the Constitution. For ordinary Indians, this meant that the state could be questioned, laws could be challenged, and liberty was no longer dependent on executive discretion.
Beyond political freedoms, the Constitution made a powerful commitment to human dignity. This was especially significant in a society marked by caste discrimination and forced labour. Article 17 abolished untouchability and made its practice a punishable offence, while Article 23 prohibited begar and other forms of forced labour. Article 21, guaranteeing the right to life and personal liberty, was later interpreted by the Supreme Court to include dignity, livelihood, health, and privacy. These provisions sought to reshape everyday social relations by ensuring that dignity was not a privilege but a constitutional right. Along with human dignity, the Constitution affirmed a secular vision, shaping India’s approach to religion in line with its plural social fabric. The Constitution did not establish a theocratic state, nor did it exclude religion from public life. Instead, Articles 25 to 28 guaranteed freedom of conscience and the right to profess, practice, and propagate religion, subject to public order and constitutional values. All religions were to be treated with equal respect.
The framers of the constitution also recognised that political equality would be hollow without addressing deep social and economic inequalities. The Preamble promised social and economic justice, while the Directive Principles of State Policy urged the state to provide education, healthcare, fair wages, and protection for vulnerable groups. Though not enforceable in courts, these principles were declared fundamental to governance and shaped land reforms, labour legislation, affirmative action, and welfare policies. The underlying message was clear: democracy could not endure alongside extreme inequality. Equally important was the promise of unity without uniformity. India adopted a federal structure, recognised linguistic and cultural diversity, and protected minority rights through Articles 29 and 30. The Constitution sought to create a shared national identity without erasing regional, linguistic, or cultural differences—an essential commitment in a country of immense plurality.
These constitutional promises are recalled each year on Republic Day. As India marks its 77th Republic Day on 26 January 2026 the celebrations will feature a grand parade at Kartavya Path in New Delhi, with a theme commemorating 150 years of “Vande Mataram.” Composed by Bankim Chandra Chatterjee, This was first published in the literary journal Bangadarshan on 7 November 1875, and later incorporated into his novel Anandamath (published in 1882). Vande Mataram was first sung publicly by Rabindranath Tagore at the 1896 session of the Indian National Congress in Calcutta, and it emerged as a powerful political slogan during the Swadeshi movement, first used in this form on 7 August 1905. Recognising its historic role in the freedom struggle, the Constituent Assembly adopted Vande Mataram as India’s National Song in 1950.
Republic Day serves as an annual reminder of the constitutional foundations of the Indian state. Beyond ceremonial displays, it marks the moment when India committed itself to equality before law, individual rights, dignity, secularism, and social justice through a written Constitution. As the country marks its 77th Republic Day, these principles continue to shape public life, institutions, and democratic practice. Reflecting on them is not merely an act of remembrance, but a way of assessing how the Republic has evolved and how its constitutional promises remain relevant to contemporary India.
The writer is a member of Faculty in History, Govt College VKB, Hyderabad. Sheikhzahid001@gmail.com
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