The Constituent Assembly of India, indirectly elected by the members of the provincial assemblies that existed under the British administration, met for the first time on December 9, 1946, and over the course of the next three years, the CA had the tough job of nation building in front of them. Following over two centuries of imperial rule, on the eve of independence, the leaders of the freedom movement as well as the members of the CA were faced with multiple challenges - poverty, hunger, unemployment, illiteracy, political factionalism and communal tensions following a bloody Partition. But perhaps the biggest problem that underlined and interlinked most of these challenges was the problem of caste. How to ensure that historically marginalised sections of Indian society receive the benefits of this newly independent nation? The years between 1946 and 1950 saw intense debates about the issue, culminating in the adoption of reservations for marginalised communities in key sectors like employment, education, governance etc.