Owing to its historical significance, the Constituent Assembly chose 26 January 1950 as the day on which the Constitution would come to life. During the freedom struggle, the nationalist movement had demanded that India be granted ‘Purna Swaraj’ (complete independence) by 26 January 1930. From then onwards, 26 January had been referred to as ‘Independence Day’ and annually, people across India would take the ‘independence pledge’. The day had attained a special meaning in the public imagination, and it was considered ‘fitting that the new republic should come into being on that day.’Undoubtedly, the Constituent Assembly had performed a remarkable and unprecedented exercise in the constitutional making, overcoming numerous obstacles before it finally gave to free India her Constitution.