Secularism was one of the most elaborately debated issues by the framers of the Indian Constitution. They were concerned about the impact of Partition and the possible ways of protecting the fundamental rights of religious minorities. The meanings of secularism oscillated between procedural justice to religious minorities to ‘principled distance’ between religion and politics. Secularism was burdened by the imperatives of protecting religious and cultural identities, on the one hand, and carrying out necessary ‘social reform’, on the other. Secularism was a double-edged sword that attempted to strike a balance between the majority and the minority and between tradition and modernity.