Vice President underlines the centrality of the judiciary in securing the Constitutional rights of citizens
Vice President underlines the centrality of the judiciary in securing the Constitutional rights of citizens
Addresses the 16th Convocation of University of Jammu
Addresses the 16th Convocation of University of Jammu
The Vice President, Shri M. Hamid Ansari has underlined the centrality
of the judiciary in securing the Constitutional rights of citizens. He was
addressing the 16th Convocation of University of Jammu, in Jammu today, which
was attended by the Governor of Jammu & Kashmir, Shri N.N. Vohra, the Chief
Justice of India, Justice T.S. Thakur, the Vice Chancellor of University of
Jammu, Prof. R.D. Sharma, other Dignitaries, Faculty Members and Students.
The Vice President said that people increasingly turn to the
judiciary for solving social problems due to its accessibility, affordability
and confidence that justice will be dispensed speedily. He further said that
any discussion of the constitutional ideal of India being a ‘secular’ republic
having a ‘composite culture’ has to be premised on the existential reality of
the society which is characterised by heterogeneity.
The Vice President questioned how the Indian State, in
principle and practice, has given shape to the essential ingredients of the
secular principle and composite culture. Apart from the principles enshrined in
the constitutional text, the policy pronouncements of public figures, often
nuanced to suit the occasion and judicial pronouncements shed useful light on
the matter, he added.
Quoting eminent jurists, the Vice President said, that unless
the Court strives in every possible way to assure that the Constitution, the
law, applies fairly to all citizens, the Court cannot be said to have fulfilled
its custodial responsibility. The Vice President added that Indian secularism
has been described as ameliorative whose spiritual core is incrementalism and
that a citizen could well hope that this incremental approach is used to
enhance social cohesion and social peace.
Following is the text of the Vice President’s
address:
“This is indeed a special occasion. The university is
honouring one the most eminent sons of the State of Jammu & Kashmir whose
achievement is but a rarity and worthy of celebration. After all, it is only
the chosen few in the calling of law who climb the ladder to the very top in
the highest court of the Republic to join the galaxy of men who have presided
over the Supreme Court of India.
Our founding fathers gave us a Constitution that
encapsulates in its text the ideals and values of People of India. The first
among these is Justice and, as John Rawls put it, ‘rights secured by justice
are not subject to political bargaining or to the calculus of social
interests.’ To ensure this, Article 32 of the Constitution gives us the right
to move the Supreme Court which has the power to take corrective measures for
the enforcement of these rights. A similar power is conferred, within their
area of competence, on the High Courts, under Article 226.
From this emanates the centrality of the judiciary in
securing for citizens the rights bestowed by the Constitution. In our own
times, as an eminent judge elsewhere noted some years back, ‘people
increasingly turn to the judiciary hoping it can solve pressing social
problems.’
An essential concomitant of this is accessibility of the
judiciary; another is affordability; a third is the confidence that justice
will be dispensed speedily. The latter is contingent not only on the
technicalities of the law but also on the unstated major premise underlying the
thought process. It is said that the judiciary is above but not beyond the
issues of the day. ‘We may try,’ said the American judge Cardozo, ‘to see
things as objectively as we please; none the less, we can never see them with
any eyes except our own.’ And yet, he continued, ‘the training of the judge, if
coupled with what is styled the judicial temperament, will help to broaden the
group to which his subconscious loyalties are due.’ Hence arises the need ‘of
constant checking and testing of philosophy by justice and of justice by
philosophy.’ To this may be added Lord Bingham’s caution about the need for
judges to ‘neutralize any extraneous considerations which might bias their
judgement,’ or else decline to make the decision in question.
Judge Albie Sachs of South Africa expressed the needed
balance differently. The required approach is ‘neither purely libertarian one,
nor simply communitarian. It was dignitarian. Respect for human dignity united
the right to be autonomous with the need to recognise that we all live in communities.’
This is precisely what is prescribed in the last part of the
Preamble of the Constitution of India. The operative principles are fraternity,
dignity, and unity to be sought through Justice, Liberty and
Equality.
One of the matters in the societal domain that figure
prominently in public discourse relate to the constitutional ideal of India
being a ‘secular’ republic having a ‘composite culture.’ The former expression
is in the Preamble and the latter in Article 51A(f).
Any discussion of these constitutional values has to be
premised on the existential reality of our society. It is characterised by
heterogeneity; a population of 1.3 billion comprising of over 4,635 communities
78 percent of whom are not only linguistic and cultural but social categories.
Religious minorities constitute 19.4 percent of the total. The poet Pandit
Kailash Narain Kaul Bedil Dehlavi expressed it finely in a couplet:
Ilahi lutf kya aata jo sub mai-khwar hi
hote
Teri dunya ki raonaq barh gai sheikh o
barahman se
Our democratic polity and its secular State structure were
put in place in full awareness of this plurality. There was no suggestion to
erase identities and homogenise them.
Political scientists and sociologists have written a good
deal on the Indian perception of secularism. The three generally accepted
characteristics of a secular state, namely liberty to practice religion,
equality between religions as far as state practice is concerned, and neutrality
or a fence of separation between the state and religion, have been invoked
but ‘their application has been contradictory and has led to major anomalies.’
Commenting on the debate on secularism, Amartya Sen observed that ‘secularism
is basically a demand for symmetric political treatment of different religious
communities’ but that leaves open ‘the choice between the forms that symmetry
can legitimately take’; he added that ‘there is a real difference between
achieving symmetry through the sum-total of the collective intolerances of the
different communities rather than through the union of their respective
tolerances.’ Very recently, Soli Sorabjee has reminded us of the Emmanuel v.
State of Kerala and of Justice Chinappa Reddy’s remarks on the subject of
tolerance.
The challenge, then, is to reduce if not eliminate these
anomalies.
This leads us to the question: how has the Indian Sate, in
principle and practice, given shape to the essential ingredients of the secular
principle and composite culture?
Apart from the principles enshrined in the constitutional
text and policy pronouncements of public figures, often nuanced to suit the
occasion, judicial pronouncements shed useful light on the matter.
The Basic Structure doctrine relating to our Constitution is
now settled law. One of its ingredients is secularism. This is accepted
in principle by most segments of opinion (barring advocates of some version of
theocracy). It is more than a passive attitude of religious tolerance; it is a
positive concept of equal treatment. Its most emphatic assertion in a
pronouncement came in the set of judgements in the Bommai case:
‘Secularism
has both positive and negative contents. The Constitution struck a balance
between temporal parts confining it to the person professing a particular
religious faith or belief and allows him to practice profess and propagate his
religion, subject to public order, morality and health. The positive part of
secularism has been entrusted to the State to regulate by law or by an executive
order. The State is prohibited to patronise any particular religion as State
religion and is enjoined to observe neutrality. The State strikes a balance to
ensue an atmosphere of full faith and confidence among its people to realise
full growth of personality and to make him a rational being on secular lines,
to improve individual excellence, regional growth, progress and national
integrity… Religious tolerance and fraternity are basic features and postulates
of the Constitution as a scheme for national integration and sectional or
religious unity. Programmes or principles evolved by political parties based on
religion amount to recognizing religion as a part of the political governance
which the Constitution expressly prohibits. It violates the basic features of
the Constitution. Positive secularism negates such a policy and any action in
furtherance thereof would be violative of the basic features of the
Constitution.’
The principle so laid down is emphatic. Despite its clarity,
however, different interpretations were placed on it and ‘there is no real
consensus within the Court on what secularism entails.’ It has been opined that
what the Court said is different from what it did. Observers
have noted that subsequent pronouncements of the Supreme Court have
‘effectively vindicated the profoundly anti-secular vision of secularism’ of
some quarters. For this reason, it has been argued ‘whether a more complete
separation of religion and politics might not better serve Indian democracy.’
The difficulty lies in delineating, for purposes of public
policy and practice, the line that separates them from religion. For this
religion per se, and each individual religion figuring in the discourse, has to
be defined in terms of its stated tenets. The ‘way of life’ argument, used in
philosophical texts and some judicial pronouncements, does not help the process
of identifying common principles of equity in a multi-religious society. Since
a wall of separation is not possible under Indian conditions, the challenge is to
develop a formula for equidistance and minimum involvement. For this purpose,
principles of faith need to be segregated from contours of culture since
a conflation of the two obfuscates the boundaries of both and creates space to
equivocalness. Furthermore, such an argument could be availed of by other
faiths in the land since all claim a cultural sphere and a historical
justification for it.
Within the same ambit, but distinct from it, is the
constitutional principle of equality of status and opportunity, amplified
through Articles 14, 15, and 16. This equality has to be substantive rather
than merely formal and has to be given shape through requisite measures of
affirmative action needed in each case so that the journey on the path to
development has a common starting point. The Kundu Report on Diversity Index in
2008 had drawn attention to the ‘Inequality Traps’ that prevent the
marginalised and work in favour of the dominant groups in a society and had
concluded that ‘unequal economic opportunities lead to unequal outcomes which
in turn lead to unequal access to political power. This creates a vicious
circle since unequal power structure determines the nature and functioning of
the institutions and their policies. All these result in persistence of initial
conditions.’
The same absence of homogeneity holds good for ‘composite
culture.’ The freedom movement recognised this existential reality of immense
diversity on the ground. The Bommai judgement said that ‘this cultural
heritage in India shaped that people of all religious faiths, living in
different parts of the country are to tolerate each other’s religious faiths or
beliefs and each religion made its contribution to enrich the composite Indian
culture as a happy blend or synthesis.’ Thus secularism and composite culture
are two sides of the same coin. A historian has analysed it in some detail:
The ‘social and cultural life in India incorporated
within it a multi-regional and multi-religious form and content. This
interpretation of cultural influences was neither uniform nor equally intense
in all regions. Yet their presence is marked all over. As a result, although
historically cultural transactions and social negotiations embraced the entire
subcontinent, they led to variety and plurality rather than to homogeneity. In
almost all realms of cultural production – music, drama, painting,
architecture, and so on - as well as religion, different influences made their
mark, imparting to them a composite character. As a result, historically India
developed as a colourful cultural mosaic and not as the manifestation of
cultural practices inspired by a single source. The dynamism of Indian culture
is derived from this diversity, which moulded the cultural practices of the
people. It is in this sense that culture was embedded in national identity.
Furthermore, and to revert to the same author, ‘the
cultural implication of this historical process is not limited to diversity and
plurality at the national level, but within each region itself as well…The
coming together of people of diverse cultural moorings and traditions had
several cultural consequences. These have been variously conceived as
synthesis, assimilation, acculturation, and eclecticism…Whether India developed
as a melting pot of cultures, or only remained a salad bowl is no more the
issue. The crucial question is whether Indian culture is conceived as a static
phenomenon, tracing its identity to a single unchanging source, or a dynamic
phenomenon, critically and creatively interrogating all that is new.’
To Jawaharlal Nehru, India was a palimpsest on which many
had written their contribution and none were to be disowned. The poet Ragupati
Rai Firaq expressed the process in a couplet:
Sar zamin-e-Hind par aqwam-e-aalam ke Firaq
Karwaan aate gaye, Hindostan banta gaya
It is evident from the foregoing that despite the clarity of
enunciation in some of the Bommai pronouncements, political perceptions
have sought to interpret its intended meaning for their own purposes.
Some years back in a volume published on the occasion of the
Golden Jubilee of the Supreme Court, two eminent jurists had observed that ‘as
we transit into the next millennium, the Supreme Court has a lot to reflect
upon, and not least on how to protect the minorities and their ilk from the
onslaught of majoritarianism.’ So, as an acknowledged authority on the
Constitution put it, ‘unless the Court strives in every possible way to assure
that the Constitution, the law, applies fairly to all citizens, the
Court cannot be said to have fulfilled its custodial responsibility.’
Is it therefore bold to expect that the Supreme Court may
consider, in its wisdom, to clarify the contours within which the principles of
secularism and composite culture should operate with a view to strengthen their
functional modality and remove ambiguities that have crept in?
Indian secularism has been described as ameliorative whose
spiritual core is incrementalism. A citizen could well hope that this
incremental approach is used to enhance social cohesion and social peace.
I felicitate Chief Justice Thakur on this very happy
occasion and thank the Chancellor of the University, Hon’ble Governor Narendra
Vohra sahib, for inviting me today.
Jai Hind.”
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