Indian Republic Day : 26 facts you need to know about 26th January

  1. On 29 August, 1947, the constituent assembly set up a drafting committee under the Chairmanship of  Dr. B.R. Ambedkar to prepare a draft constitution for India. While deliberating upon the draft constitution, the assembly moved, discussed and disposed of as many as 2,473 amendments out of a total of 7,635 tabled.

  2. The assembly met in sessions open to the public, for 166 days, spread over a period of 2 years, 11 months and 18 days before adopting the Constitution, the 308 members of the Assembly signed two copies of the document (one each in Hindi and English) on 24 January 1950.

  3. Dr. Ambedkar was one of the very few Indian statesmen-politicians who actively participated in the discussions on Constitutional matters from the Monsford Reforms (1919) to the Cabinet Mission (1946) proposals.

  4. 26th January is the real independence day of Dalits because on this day Manusmriti/Vedic laws came to end.

  5. Dalit-Bahujans got human rights on this day. It is the real Independence Day for Dalits, otherwise on 15th August there was just a power transfer from British to so called upper caste people of India.

  6. Indian constitution is the longest written constitution of any sovereign country in the world, containing 448 articles in 25 parts, 12 schedules, 5 appendices and 98 amendments.

  7. At the time of commencement, the constitution had 395 articles in 22 parts and 8 schedules.

  8. As of December 2014, 98 amendments have been made to the Constitution of India since it was first enacted in 1950.

  9. It consists of almost 80,000 words and took 2 years 11 months and 18 days to build. Main work was done by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar only.

  10. Dr. B R Ambedkar is regarded as the architect of the Indian Constitution. Dr. B R. Ambedkar was an untouchable, who was denied access to education but he struggled and educated himself and became the first law minister of India.

  11. The Constitution came into a legal circulation at 10:18am IST on the 26th of January, 1950.

  12. There are just two original copies of the Constitution in the country written in Hindi and English.

  13. Indian constitution was all hand-written and it was on the 26th of January that marked the celebration of Independence in its true sense.

  14. The Indian emblem is adapted from the Ashoka Pillar at Sarnath, dating back to 250 BC.

  15. The original book of our Constitution is a 479 page calligraphic edition signed by all our framers and

  16. The original book of our Constitution is preserved in a helium filled case in the Library of Parliament.

  17. Parliamentary system was borrowed from Buddhism. 





  18. Dr. Ambedkar said on constitution that ‘I feel that the constitution is workable, it is flexible and it is strong enough to hold the country together both in peacetime and in wartime. Indeed, if I may say so, if things go wrong under the new Constitution, the reason will not be that we had a bad Constitution. What we will have to say is that Man was vile.’

  19. Granville Austin described the Indian Constitution drafted by Dr. Ambedkar as ‘first and foremost a social document’. … ‘The majority of India’s constitutional provisions are either directly arrived at furthering the aim of social revolution or attempt to foster this revolution by establishing conditions necessary for its achievement.

  20. In India, Republic Day means the day honours the date on which the Constitution of India came into force on 26 January 1950 replacing the Government of India Act (1935), Dr B R Ambedkar was the Drafting committee chairmen of constitution of India. Therefore, this day is remember the contributions of Dr B. R. Ambedkar.

  21. The date 26 January, as everyone knows, was when the Constitution of India came into force. This date was, later on, chosen to honour the memory of the “Declaration of Independence of 1930” from the British Rule.

  22. Dr Ambedkar – On 26th January 1950, we are going to enter into a life of contradictions. In politics, we will have equality and in social and economic structure, continue to deny the principle of one man one value. How long shall we continue to live this life of contradictions? How long shall we continue to deny equality in our social and economic life? If we continue to deny it for long, we will do so only by putting our political democracy in peril. We must remove this contradiction at the earliest possible moment else those who suffer from inequality will blow up the structure of democracy which this Constituent Assembly has so laboriously built up.

  23. Dr Ambedkar was criticized for giving more powers to centre government. In the draft Constitution Dr. Ambedkar offered more powers to the Centre and made it strong. Some members of the constituent assembly criticised him on the ground that since Dr. Ambedkar postulated – the rights and values of each individual and the development of each province and each–village, it was contradictory of his part to make the Centre strong.

  24. Justifying the provisions for a strong Central authority Dr. Ambedkar said that he made the centre strong not only to ‘save minorities from the misrule of majority’ but also “for it is only the centre which can work for a common end and for the general interests of the country as a whole.”

  25. On the night of January 25, 1999 – on the eve of Republic Day – around 100 armed Ranvir Sena activists raided a Dalit hamlet at Shankar Bigha village in central Bihar’s Jehanabad district and gunned down at least 23 villagers in cold blood while they were asleep in their mud-built houses and huts. The marauders had also set afire their houses before fleeing the scene. Of the dead, five were women and seven children — the youngest being six months old.
  26. These are the opening words of the preamble to the Indian Constitution

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§  Open the official website of department
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Total Jobs Open:

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Category: 

Railway Recruitment 2017 in Gorakhpur (Uttar Pradesh)


Official Website of Zone: www.ner.indianrailways.gov.in

LAST DATE TO APPLY : 

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North Eastern Railway Recruitment 2017







Govt Organization Name: Railway Recruitment Cell North Eastern Railway (RRC NER) 


Total Jobs Open:

 426 (four hundred twenty six)


Post Name: 

Ticket Collector (TC) 
Commercial Clerk 
Technician 
Assistant Loco Pilot
Assistant Station Master 
Junior Engineer (JE) 
Goods Guard


Educational Qualification:

10th | 12th | Graduate

Category: 

Railway Recruitment 2017 in Gorakhpur (Uttar Pradesh)


Official Website of Zone: www.ner.indianrailways.gov.in

LAST DATE TO APPLY : 

10-February-2017

Rahul Gandhi's Holiday Cheer Has Opposite Effect On Congress



India's grand old party has become truly federal in the 132nd year of its existence. With the senior leadership of the Congress out of town or planning to travel soon, the legislative party units of several of the five states going to the polls over the next few weeks have virtually seceded from the Congress High Command in Delhi.

It no longer matters very much whether Congress Vice-President and apparent heir-apparent Rahul Gandhi was holidaying for the first nine days of the year (he was back in Delhi yesterday). Or, according to party officials, if he has planned to take another week off touring Shanghai and Beijing on the invitation of the Communist Party of China (CPC) from January 15-22. After all, party-to-party ties, comes the pat Congress argument, especially with the most powerful political party in the world, cannot be ignored.

As for campaigning in the five states, yes, that will also definitely take place -  before China and after. All is well, assure the party's permanently optimistic yea-sayers.

But dig a little deeper and it's clear that full-time fatalism has set in. Congress party workers in Punjab, which has the best chance of returning to power after ten years, point out that their Chief Minister-hopeful Amarinder Singh has also been camping in Delhi these last few weeks, ostensibly because he is waiting for the powers-that-be to advise him om how to allocate the last 40 of 117 tickets-for-seats that will be up for grabs on February 4.

So Rahul Gandhi has been on holiday and Amarinder Singh has been away from home. And yet, Punjab's Congressmen are folding their hands and giving thanks to the Almighty in the hope that their luck will hold - besides being thrilled to bits that veteran political strategist Prashant Kishor has probably given them a winning formula that will help tip them over to the winning side. It's called "ghar-ghar rozgar," and it promises one job per household if the Congress party wins. If not, it promises Rs. 2,500 per month in the form of an unemployment allowance. But what has really charged up the crowd is a gimmicky procedure in which every job-seeker fills up a form on which an ATM card-lookalike is pasted. The person fills the form and punches the code given on the ATM card on his mobile phone, upon which a PIN number is revealed. That's when the phone gets a call back with a voice saying, "You have now been registered!"

Congress party workers are fighting back enthusiastic Punjabis - Jat Sikhs and Mazhabi Sikhs as well as Hindus and Muslims across the Doaba, Majha and Malwa regions - wanting to fill up the form and win the job lucky draw.

The party's second-rung leaders also give kudos to Kishor for making Amarinder campaign in the state for at least the first few months - give and take a few weeks in Delhi - and battle it out with cheesy schemes such as "Koffee with Kaptan" as well as imbuing the phalanxes with courage and confidence to fight the ruling Shiromani Akali Dal-BJP alliance and rank outsider, the Aam Admi Party (AAP).

To be sure, the Congress was in real jitters about six months ago. AAP looked very strong, Modi's demonetisation drive hadn't set in and Navjot Singh Sidhu's penchant to play spoiler was very real. Today, AAP seems to be beset with infighting, while the Punjabi farmer is said to be furious that the kharif has bombed because there isn't enough cash in the market and the rabi will be at the mercy of the money-lender. The Akali Dal's alleged links to the drugs mafia have gained much credibility.

If only the mother-son duo of Sonia and Rahul Gandhi had allowed Kishor to articulate a political strategy for Uttar Pradesh, probably India's most important political battle-ground state with 403 seats. Kishor wanted the charismatic Priyanka Gandhi to either contest as Chief Ministerial candidate (that suggestion was turned down) or unleash a campaign across the state that hadn't been witnessed before.

But of course the Congress party was made of sterner stuff. Rahul's sister has remained in purdah and in her stead, the elderly but still spunky Sheila Dikshit who ran Delhi for 15 years was catapulted into Chief Ministerial candidate. Meanwhile, the lacklustre Raj Babbar - who remains infamous for insisting that it is possible to have a full meal for Rs. 12 in Mumbai and that there was nothing wrong for the UPA in 2013 to weave its poverty bottom-line around it - was made the Pradesh Congress Committee president. Now it seems as if an alliance between Rahul Gandhi and UP chief minister Akhilesh Yadav is in the offing - question is, crestfallen UP party workers are asking, if this alliance will be announced before Mr Gandhi leaves for China, which gives them a few more days to campaign, or after he returns.


Certainly, Akhilesh has won much kudos for standing up to the betrayal employed by his father and friends. But Akhilesh is agreed with his father, Mulayam Singh Yadav, that if the SP gives the Congress the 85-90 seats it is demanding (down from 175 seats, before the bargaining started), it will be swept out before the games begin. It seems the SP is willing to give the Congress between 55-60 seats and knows clearly the score: that it will have to carry the Congress party to the polling booth, just like with the Rashtriya Lok Dal of Ajit Singh in the case of a trilateral alliance.

As for Ghulam Nabi Azad, the man in charge of UP on behalf of the All India Congress Committee (AICC) is said to be a worried man. He is also part of the Rahul Gandhi delegation to China but remains concerned that so many of the senior leadership will be away for so long, which is why he wants to return home after two or three days in Shanghai. Azad knows the score, that BJP party president Amit Shah has been ensconced in Lucknow for some time. If the Congress whittles away precious time in a foreign country, it is nothing short of political hara-kiri.

On the other hand, if Akhilesh Yadav can pull off the impossible, the Congress party will also gain, if only from the point of view of the coat-tails.

Uttarakhand is another state where the Congress is said to have a fighting chance to return to power, even if incumbent Chief Minister Harish Rawat has been at loggerheads with some of his own MLAs, including the rival camp of state Congress chief Kishore Upadhyay. Here, too, the aforesaid Prashant Kishor is at the rescue. On New Year's Eve, he met Rawat and one week into January - while Rahul Gandhi was still on holiday - he met Upadhyay. The day after, it was decided that Kishor will create a poll strategy for the Congress in Uttarakhand for all 70 seats that go to the polls on February 15. Question is, can Kishor's wand wield magic in five weeks, when the BJP already has an edge in Uttarakhand? Unlike in UP, at least the party is in the fight in this hill-state.

Then there is Congress-run Manipur, whose 60-seat assembly goes to the polls on March 4 and 8, but which the Election Commission is watching closely because the blockade sponsored by the United Naga Council against the Congress chief minister Ibobi Singh's decision to create seven new districts is entering its 70th day. The BJP, which won Assam six months ago and persuaded legislators in Arunachal Pradesh to switch loyalties is now accusing the Congress of playing politics between the Naga-dominated hills and the Meitei-dominated valley. It is said that the Irom Sharmila-led People's Resurgence and Justice Alliance, which is contesting 20 seats - Sharmila, herself, is fighting against Chief Minister Ibobi Singh - will cut into the Congress votes, thereby helping the BJP.

As for the paradise state, Goa, the Congress is hoping against hope it will turn the tide even if it doesn't win outright. An alliance between small outfits like Goa Forward, United Goans Party and the NCP is in the offing. But it is unlikely that the incumbent BJP Chief Minister, Laxmikant Parsekar, will be ousted, even if he has given the Congress the compliment of becoming the chief opposition (rather than AAP) when polls to the 40-seat Assembly are held on February 4.

The results of the state elections will undoubtedly be a vote on Prime Minister Narendra Modi's reign; they will also be a wake-up call for Rahul Gandhi's leadership of the party. It is unlikely, though, that the Congress looks at it this way. For better or worse, the dynasty is here to stay.

HIGHLIGHT OF THE WEEK