Why is November 26 Celebrated?
- Origin: The Government of India officially designated November 26 as Constitution Day in 2015 to commemorate the 125th birth anniversary year of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar.
- Historical Context: It marks the adoption of the Constitution by the Constituent Assembly in 1949.
- Previous Status: Prior to 2015, this day was observed informally as National Law Day by the legal fraternity.
- Differentiation: While Constitution Day marks the adoption (November 26, 1949), Republic Day marks the enforcement (January 26, 1950).
2. Theme & Key Initiatives (2025)
- Theme: “Hamara Samvidhan – Hamara Swabhiman” (Our Constitution, Our Pride). It focuses on the Constitution as a source of national dignity rather than just a legal text.
- Linguistic Inclusion: To address accessibility gaps, the Constitution has been released digitally in nine additional regional languages:
- Malayalam, Marathi, Nepali, Punjabi, Bodo, Kashmiri, Telugu, Odia, and Assamese.
- Nodal Agency: This digitization project was executed by the Legislative Department of the Union Law Ministry.
3. Making of the Constitution: A Statistical Snapshot
- Drafting Time: The process spanned 2 years, 11 months, and 17 days.
- The Scale: It resulted in the world’s longest written constitution.
- Deliberation: Over 7,600 amendments were proposed, with roughly 2,400 discussed extensively, showcasing democratic rigor.
- Leadership: The Drafting Committee was chaired by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar.
4. Chronology of Events: From Assembly to Adoption
| Date | Key Event |
| Dec 9, 1946 | First meeting of the Constituent Assembly. |
| Dec 11, 1946 | Dr. Rajendra Prasad elected as President. |
| Dec 13, 1946 | Objectives Resolution moved by J.L. Nehru. |
| Aug 29, 1947 | Drafting Committee appointed (Chair: Dr. B.R. Ambedkar). |
| Nov 4, 1948 | Final Draft introduced in the Assembly. |
| Nov 26, 1949 | Adoption of the Constitution (Constitution Day). |
| Jan 24, 1950 | Last session; Constitution signed by members. |
| Jan 26, 1950 | Commencement of the Constitution (Republic Day). |
5. Philosophical Underpinnings: Key Preamble Values
- Justice: Social, economic, and political fairness.
- Liberty: Freedom of thought, expression, belief, faith, and worship.
- Equality: Absence of special privileges and provision of adequate opportunities for all.
- Fraternity: Promoting the dignity of the individual and the unity/integrity of the nation.