Rahul Gandhi said this on Constitution Day
Rahul Gandhi, the head of the Congress and the leader of the Lok Sabha, referred to the Constitution as the book of “truth and non-violence” on Tuesday. It includes the social empowerment theories of Mahatma Gandhi, Lord Buddha, Dr. Bhimrao Ambedkar, and social reformer Jyotirao Phule.
“This (referring to the Constitution) contains the concept of social empowerment of Dr. Ambedkar, Jyotirao Phule, Lord Buddha, and Gandhi ji. Would you please tell me whether this is Savarkar ji’s voice? Does it say that people should be murdered, that violence should be employed, or that falsehoods should be used to rule the government? While speaking at a Constitution Day event at Talkatora Stadium in this city, Rahul Gandhi said, “This is a book of truth and non-violence.”
He said that Prime Minister Narendra Modi must not have read the Constitution, and that he can “guarantee” that.
“To commemorate Constitution Day, Narendra Modi ji and the BJP government held an event in the Parliament. I can assure you that Narendra Modi ji has not read the Constitution of India. He said, “He wouldn’t be doing what he has been doing every day if he had read this book.
The LoP said that Telangana’s caste census is a historic move and that they would follow suit wherever we establish a government.
“The Telangana caste census, which we began a few days ago, is not a bureaucratic process. In Telangana, the caste census has been made public for the first time. The questions are not selected by ten to fifteen individuals in a private room; instead, the census was created by the people of Telangana and involves thousands of people, including Dalits, Tribes, members of the backward classes, the destitute, members of general castes, and members of minority groups.We will conduct caste censuses wherever our administration goes in the future,” he said.
Rahul Gandhi had a technical issue at the Constitution Day event at Talkatora Stadium when his microphone malfunctioned in the middle of his address.
LoP then said that he would keep discussing the problems regardless of how many times he turned off his microphone.
“Anyone who discusses Dalits, tribal people, the backward classes, or the impoverished has had their microphone turned off in our nation for the last 3,000 years. Many others arrived and urged me to go sit when the microphone was turned off. I stated I would stand instead of sit, turn off the microphone as often as I wanted, and say anything I wanted to say. This is a picture of Rohith Vemula behind it. He claimed, “I wanted to talk, but my voice was taken away.”
As part of the ‘Samvidhan Diwas’ festivities at the Samvidhan Sadan of Parliament earlier today, President Droupadi Murmu unveiled a commemorative coin and stamp to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the adoption of the Indian Constitution.
Among the politicians who attended the Constitution Day commemoration event at Samvidhan Sadan were Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Vice President Jagdeep Dhankhar, and Rahul Gandhi.
The occasion marks the 75th anniversary of the Constituent Assembly’s November 26, 1949, adoption of the Constitution. Officially, the Constitution went into force on January 26, 1950.