Every year on 26 November, India pauses to celebrate Samvidhan Divas — the day in 1949 when the Constituent Assembly adopted the Constitution of India. This year, Constitution Day has taken on a special vibrancy, with more than 1.5 million schools across the country actively participating in special activities aligned with the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020.
The focus? Making children understand that the Constitution is not just a 72-year-old document gathering dust in libraries, but a living promise that guarantees their fundamental rights — starting with the Right to Education itself.
Inserted by the 86th Constitutional Amendment in 2002 and operationalised through the Right of Children to Free and Compulsory Education (RTE) Act 2009, Article 21A declares:
“The State shall provide free and compulsory education to all children of the age of six to fourteen years in such manner as the State may, by law, determine.”
This single sentence has transformed Indian childhood. It shifted education from a privilege to a justiciable fundamental right, placing a constitutional duty on the state — and a constitutional power in the hands of every child.
Schools this Constitution Day are driving that message home in creative, age-appropriate ways.
Under the guidance of the Ministry of Education and NCERT, schools are rolling out a rich menu of NEP 2020-aligned activities:
Many schools are also integrating digital tools — creating reels, podcasts, and animated videos explaining Articles 14–32 in child-friendly language.
One heartwarming example comes from Trinity Matriculation Higher Secondary School in Vellore, Tamil Nadu. During their Constitution Day program, the school management and students collectively described education as a “constitutional power” that every child now holds.
A Class 10 student, addressing the assembly, said:
“Article 21A doesn’t just give us the right to go to school — it gives us the power to build the nation. An educated child today is tomorrow’s responsible citizen.”
The school organized a symbolic “Power Transfer Ceremony” where senior students handed over copies of the Constitution to Class 6 students (the age when RTE kicks in), signifying the passing of this constitutional power to the next generation.
The scale — 1.5 million+ schools — is staggering. But more than the numbers, it’s the shift in tone that stands out. Children are no longer passive recipients of constitutional knowledge; they are active participants who see the Constitution as a document that belongs to them.
When a 12-year-old in a government school in rural Maharashtra stands up and says, “My Fundamental Right to Education means nobody can stop me from dreaming big,” the Constitution ceases to be history. It becomes a movement.
As adults, we often debate the Constitution in courtrooms and news studios. On Constitution Day 2025, over 1.5 million classrooms reminded us that its purest celebration happens when a child discovers that this magnificent document has reserved a seat for her future — and handed her the key.
Jai Hind. Jai Constitution!
Happy Constitution Day 2025!
Let us all — children and grown-ups alike — renew our promise to protect, preserve, and practice the values of our extraordinary Constitution.
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