Samvidhan Corner

Samvidhan Corner – A Corner of Constitutional Empowerment:

A Samvidhan Corner is a dedicated public space where every citizen of India will get free access to a library housing the original calligraphed replica of the Constitution of India and other foundational legal and civic literature — across every state and union territory of the country.

INAUGURATION OF SAMVIDHAN CORNER: (A Festival of Constitutional Values)

The concept of the Samvidhan Corner was formally flagged off and inaugurated with a ribbon-cutting ceremony,in the gracious presence of Pandit Shri Ramkishan Ji —a respected freedom fighter, former parliamentarian, and renowned social activist and Hon’ble Justice Shri Ashok Kumar Jain Ji, a a distinguished legal luminary and constitutional expert, by Shri Bhuwnesh Sharma, Chairman, Bar Council of Rajasthan, and Shri K. Sunil Goud, Vice Chairman, Bar Council of Telangana,on 24th May 2025 at the Constitution Club of Rajasthan, Jaipur.

This was not just a ceremony, but a festival of the Constitution where every citizen stood equal, as envisioned by the Constitution itself.From dignitaries to students, professionals to homemakers — all were invited to witness and celebrate this historic moment.

The Constitution belongs to all of us — so does the responsibility to uphold it.

🛕 A Fundamental Duty Begins Here

The first fundamental duty enshrined in our Constitution is to understand it. These corners serve as a bridge to that responsibility.

📍 Pan-India Reach | website/App-Based AccessBy July 2025

Samvidhan Corners will be established nationwide and integrated through a dedicated mobile app/website — enabling citizens to locate nearby centers and access copies of the Constitution, especially those not widely available in the public domain.

📘 10,000 Copies | Phase-Wise Distribution

Under the Har Ghar Samvidhan initiative, we aim to distribute 10,000 replica copies of the Constitution, as soon as they are made available by the Parliament Secretariat — the custodian and publisher of this sacred document.

🏫 Call to Institutions and Citizens

We call upon the esteemed citizens, schools, colleges, panchayats, corporate establishments, NGO’sand government offices to set up Samvidhan Corners and become a torchbearer of constitutional literacy.

📢 A Public Appeal to the Government

We earnestly urge the Government of India to make these copies available at the earliest for mass distribution — for a more informed, aware, and empowered citizenry.

Join the Movement. Carry the Constitution Home.

A brief about ‘The original Calligraphed draft of the constitution of India’

“The original calligraphed draft of the Indian Constitution features illustrations reflecting artistic styles from various civilizations across the subcontinent, spanning from the prehistoric Mohenjo-daro of the Indus Valley to contemporary times.”

The illustrations represent styles from different civilizations of the subcontinent, ranging from the prehistoric Mohenjodaro, in the Indus Valley, to the present. The calligraphy in the book was done by Prem Behari Narain Raizada, using a holder and nib (No. 303 nib). It was illuminated by Nandalal Bose, known as the artist laureate of India, and his students, from Kala Bhavan (Institute of Fine Arts), Visvabharati University, including Beohar Rammanohar Sinha (credited, among other items, for the Preamble page), Dinanath Bhargava (credited for the emblem of India), Kripal Singh Shekhawat, A. Perumal, Vinayak Sivram Masoji and other artists, which included Bose’s three children: Biswarup Bose (and his wife Nibedita), Gauri Bhanja (and her daughter, Bani Patel) and Jamuna Sen. Amala Bose, later wife of ABP Group chairman Kanailal Sarkar, Jagdish Mittal (1) and Dhirendra Krishna Deb Barman were also in the team of illustrators. The illustrations were done in indigenous methods, using gold-leaf and stone colors. The name of the calligrapher is signed as Prem at bottom left of the text window on each page; the name of the illustrator is signed at bottom left of each illustrated page frame. Pictures are separately signed. The manuscript was written on microbe-resistant parchment sheets measuring 45.7 cm × 58.4 cm with a shelf life of a thousand years. The finished manuscript consisted of 234 pages and weighed ~13 kg. This manuscript was signed by the members of the Constituent Assembly on 24th January 1950.

How to setup a samvidhan corner at your residence office, school, college, panchayat bhavan, government offices, corporates, etc.

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