"I measure the progress of a community by the degree of progress which women have achieved." ~ Dr B.R Ambedkar. The Hindu code bill was introduced in the Constituent Assembly on 11 April 1947 and was referred by a select committee on 9 April 1948, after 4 years of deliberations, it remained inconclusive. This was probably the longest debate on any single bill in the independent Indian Parliament. The Congress was not eager to clarify the Hindu Code bill and because of this Ambedkar resigned from the cabinet on 27 September 1951 What was the need of a codified bill? The bill itself was an immense exodus from Hinduism and its humiliating set of gender laws. Until then, "Hindu law" was also casually interpreted through the oral reading of various contents from the Vedas, Smritis and Puranas. There was no real codification or uniformity, and women's lives were often in the hands of Hindu male interpreters. It can be said that in Hinduism there were two laws regar...
Iโm an advocate who overthinksโturning tangled thoughts into words, hoping they pass for poetry. Writing is both my escape and my way of making sense of the world, where logic meets emotion in the rhythm of a line. Poetry is important to me because it gives structure to chaos, voice to the unspoken, and meaning to moments that might otherwise slip away. Through poetry, I navigate advocacy, introspection, and the ever-complicated human experience, one verse at a time.