But, thereafter, things start to go wrong and our real-life experiences are often at complete variance with what our Constitution’s founding fathers envisaged. Inequalities abound and injustices prevail. Securing justice for many is a long shot, short-circuited among others by a judicial system that is an unnavigable maze, needlessly time-consuming, prohibitively expensive and undeniably opaque. Nothing illustrates the opacity better than the Ayodhya verdict. True, the case had dragged for decades and needed a closure, which came last November. But in a country croaking under a backlog of more than three crore cases—including about 59,000 cases in the Supreme Court—one wonders why the previous Chief Justice, Ranjan Gogoi, decided to focus on Ayodhya alone, holding expeditious hearings for days as if nothing else mattered to clear the decks for its judgment just days before his retirement.