Okay, let’s get real. Ambedkar being “the only one” credited for the Constitution is kinda like your favorite album being credited to the singer, when you know producers, writers, and engineers worked behind the scenes. But the singer gets the cover, right? That’s Ambedkar. Why? A few reasons: 1. HeRead more
Okay, let’s get real. Ambedkar being “the only one” credited for the Constitution is kinda like your favorite album being credited to the singer, when you know producers, writers, and engineers worked behind the scenes. But the singer gets the cover, right? That’s Ambedkar.
Why? A few reasons:
1. He wasn’t just a member—he was the Chairman of the Drafting Committee. Like, dude was basically steering the ship when others were rowing. And he did it with fire. He had that unique combo of sharp legal mind + deep social empathy + political guts. He called out caste, defended individual rights, and stood for social justice in the Constitution itself. That was radical AF in 1949.
2. Ambedkar didn’t play safe. He clashed with Nehru. He pushed for a Uniform Civil Code. He literally walked away from the Cabinet when he saw the system wasn’t walking the talk. The man burned the Manusmriti in public and then wrote the Constitution. That’s poetic justice.
3. He became the symbol because the system needed one. Politics needed a face for social justice and democracy. As caste politics became mainstream in the ’80s/’90s, Ambedkar’s legacy was “rediscovered”—not because the system suddenly woke up, but because it saw value in his image.
4. But yeah—others did a lot too. BN Rau wrote the first draft. T.T. Krishnamachari basically said in the Assembly, “Yo, Ambedkar’s doing the heavy lifting but we all have fingerprints on this.” And he’s right. It was a collab. But Ambedkar’s articulation, speeches, and symbolic power were next level.
5. The Bharat Ratna delay? Pure politics. You’re right—it came in 1990 when caste-based mobilization and Mandal politics were peaking. V.P. Singh gave it posthumously to show that the state was finally recognizing Ambedkar. But let’s be real—he was sidelined hard in post-Independence India. Congress iced him out. His economic ideas were buried. He was deliberately not made part of the mainstream narrative.
So yeah—it’s not wrong to say Ambedkar gets most of the credit now, but it’s also not wrong to say he earned that place through unmatched intellectual firepower and moral courage. What’s wrong is reducing him to just a “Dalit icon.” Dude was a national visionary. Period.
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Ambedkar was not only a freedom fighter or some ancient politician with a long name in textbooks. He was a straight-up revolution wrapped in human form. Born into a system that literally informed him he didn't belong, he turned the tables with sheer intellect—like, not only "worked hard" but "flexedRead more
Ambedkar was not only a freedom fighter or some ancient politician with a long name in textbooks. He was a straight-up revolution wrapped in human form. Born into a system that literally informed him he didn’t belong, he turned the tables with sheer intellect—like, not only “worked hard” but “flexed so hard he received several doctorates” type.
But it wasn’t degrees alone. He didn’t drive up to Oxford and Columbia just to groove. He learned about how societies function so he could dismantle what was broken in India—such as caste, inequality, and artificial social order. And then this guy returns, writes the Indian Constitution (essentially the user guide of the nation), and incorporates elements such as Article 32 so people could finally question injustice. That’s crazy.
And the best part is, he didn’t leave politics alone. He learned about power in every way—religion, law, money, knowledge. So when he became a Buddhist, it wasn’t a spiritual choice—it was a mic drop moment of declaring, “I don’t need your permission to be free.”
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