15 Women, Who Helped Draft The Indian Constitution
The Constitution of India was adopted by the elected Constituent Assembly on 26 November 1949 and came into effect on 26 January 1950. The total membership of the Constituent Assembly was 389. While we all remember Dr. B R Ambedkar as the Father of the Constitution and other pioneering male members who helped draft the Indian Constitution, the contribution of the fifteen female members of the Constituent Assembly is easily forgotten. On this Republic Day, let’s take a look at the powerful women who helped draft our Constitution.
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The Constitution of India was adopted by the elected Constituent Assembly on 26 November 1949 and came into effect on 26 January 1950. The total membership of the Constituent Assembly was 389. While we all remember Dr. B R Ambedkar as the Father of the Constitution and other pioneering male members who helped draft the Indian Constitution, the contribution of the fifteen female members of the Constituent Assembly is easily forgotten. On this Republic Day, let’s take a look at the powerful women who helped draft our Constitution.
1. Ammu Swaminathan
Image Credit: The Indian Express
Ammu Swaminathan was
born into an upper caste Hindu family in Anakkara of Palghat district, Kerala.
She formed the Women’s India Association in
1917 in Madras, along with Annie Besant, Margaret Cousins, Malathi Patwardhan,
Mrs Dadabhoy and Mrs Ambujammal. She became a part of the Constituent Assembly from the Madras
Constituency in 1946.
In a speech during the discussion on the motion by Dr B R Ambedkar
to pass the draft Constitution on November 24, 1949, an optimistic and
confident Ammu said, “People outside have been
saying that India did not give equal rights to her women. Now we can say that
when the Indian people themselves framed their Constitution they have given
rights to women equal with every other citizen of the country.”
She was elected to the Lok Sabha in
1952 and Rajya Sabha in
1954. In 1959, an avid film buff, Ammu became the Vice President of
the Federation of Film
Societies with Satyajit Ray as President. She also presided over
the Bharat Scouts and Guides (1960-65)
and the Censor Board.
2. Dakshayani Velayudhan
Dakshayani Velayudhan was born on July 4, 1912, on
the island of Bolgatty in Cochin. She was the leader of the
(then titled) Depressed Classes. Belonging to the Pulaya
community who were severely discriminated against, she was among the first
generation of people to be educated from the community and the first woman to
wear an upper cloth.
In 1945, Dakshayani was nominated to the Cochin Legislative Council by the State
Government.She was the first and only Dalit woman to be elected to the
Constituent Assembly in 1946. Dakshayani sided with B R
Ambedkar on many issues related to the Scheduled Caste community during
the Constituent Assembly debates.
3. Begum Aizaz Rasul
Image Credit: NDTV
Born into the princely family of Malerkotla, she was married
to the young landowner Nawaab Aizaz Rasul. She was the only Muslim woman
member of the Constituent Assembly. With
the enactment of the Government of India Act 1935, Begum and her
husband joined the Muslim League and
entered electoral politics. In the 1937 elections, she was elected to the U.P. Legislative Assembly.
In 1950, the Muslim
League in India dissolved and Begum Aizaz Rasul joined Congress.
She was elected to the Rajya Sabha in 1952 and was a member of
the Uttar Pradesh Legislative
Assembly from 1969 to 1990. Between, 1969 and 1971, she was the
Minister for Social Welfare and Minorities. In 2000, she was awarded a Padma Bhushan for her contribution to social work.
4. Durgabai Deshmukh
Image Source: Women’s Web
Durgabai Deshmukh was born in Rajahmundry on 15 July
1909. At twelve years of age, she participated in the Non-Co-operation Movement and along
with Andhra Kesari T. Prakasam, she participated in the Salt Satyagraha movement in Madras city in May 1930.
In 1936, she established the Andhra
Mahila Sabha, which within a decade became a great institution of
education and social welfare in the city of Madras.
She was the Chairwoman of several central organizations like Central Social Welfare Board, National Council for Women’s
Education and National Committee On
Girls’ and Women’s Education. She was a Member of Parliament and the Planning Commission.
She was also associated with the Andhra
Educational Society, New Delhi. Durgabai was awarded the fourth Nehru Literary Award in 1971 for her
outstanding contribution to the promotion of literacy in India. In 1975, she
was awarded the Padma Vibhushan.
5. Hansa Jivraj Mehta
Image Credit: The Indian Express
Born on July 3, 1897, to the Dewan of Baroda Manubhai Nandshankar
Mehta, Hansa Mehta studied
journalism and sociology in England. Along with being a reformer and social
activist, she was also an educator and writer.
She wrote many books for children in Gujarati and also
translated many English stories including the Gulliver’s Travels. She was elected to
the Bombay Schools Committee in
1926 and became president of All India
Women’s Conference in 1945–46.
In her presidential address at the All India Women’s Conference convention held
in Hyderabad, she proposed a Charter of Women’s Rights. She held different
posts in India from 1945 to 1960, such as the vice-chancellor of SNDT Women’s University, member of the All India Secondary Board of Education, president
of Inter-University Board of
India and vice-chancellor of Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda, among
others.
6. Kamla Chaudhary
Kamla Chaudhary was
born in an affluent family of Lucknow, however, it was still a struggle for her
to continue her education. Moving away from her family’s loyalty to the
imperial government, she joined the nationalists and was an active participant
in the Civil Disobedience Movement launched
by Gandhi in 1930.
She was vice-president of the All India Congress Committee in its fifty-fourth
session and was elected as a member of the Lok Sabha in the late seventies.
Chaudhary was also a celebrated fiction writer and her stories usually dealt
with women’s inner worlds or the emergence of India as a modern nation.
7. Leela Roy
Image Credit: Wikipedia
Leela Roy was born in Goalpara, Assam in October
1900. Her father was a deputy magistrate and sympathised with the Nationalist Movement. She graduated from Bethune College in 1921 and became assistant secretary to
the All Bengal Women’s Suffrage
Committee and arranged meetings to demand women’s rights.
In 1923, with her friends, she founded the Dipali Sangha and established schools which became
centres of political discussion in which noted leaders participated. Later, in
1926, the Chhatri Sangha, an
association of women students in Dacca and Kolkata, was founded. She was
instrumental in forming the Dacca
Mahila Satyagraha Sangha, which played an active role in the anti-salt
tax movement. She became the editor of a journal, Jayashree, which had the blessing of Rabindranath Tagore.
In 1937, she joined the Congress and
in the next year, founded the Bengal
Provincial Congress Women’s Organisation. She became a member of
the women’s subcommittee formed by Subash Chandra Bose and when Bose went to
jail in 1940, she was nominated the editor of the Forward Bloc Weekly.
Before leaving India, Netaji gave complete charge of party
activities to Leela Roy and her husband. In 1947, she founded the Jatiya Mahila Sanghati, a women’s organisation in
West Bengal. In 1960, she became the chairwoman of the new party formed with
the merger of the Forward Bloc (Subhasist) and
the Praja Socialist Party but
was disappointed with its working.
8. Malati Choudhury
Image Credit: Woman Odisha
Malati Choudhury was
born in 1904 to a distinguished family in East Bengal (now Bangladesh). In the
year 1921, at the age of 16, Malati Choudhury was sent to Santiniketan where she got admitted to Viswa-Bharati.
She married Nabakrushna Choudhuri, who later became the Chief
Minister of Odisha and shifted to Odisha in 1927. During the Salt Satyagraha, Malati Choudhury,
accompanied by her husband joined the Indian
National Congress and participated in the movement. They educated and
communicated with the people to create a favourable environment for Satyagraha.
In 1933, she formed Utkal
Congress Samajvadi Karmi Sangh along with her husband
which later came to be known as the Orissa Provincial Branch of the All India Congress Socialist Party. In
1934, she joined Gandhiji in his famous “padayatra” in Orissa. She set up
several organisations such as the Bajiraut
Chhatravas for the upliftment of vulnerable communities in Odisha. She
protested against the proclamation of Emergency by Indira Gandhi and was
eventually imprisoned.
9. Purnima Banerjee
Purnima Banerjee was the secretary of the Indian National Congress committee
in Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh. She was one among a radical network of women
from Uttar Pradesh who stood at the forefront of the freedom movement in late
1930’s and 40’s.
She was arrested for her participation in the Satyagraha and Quit
India Movement. One of the more striking aspects of Purnima Banerjee’s speeches
in the Constituent Assembly was
her steadfast commitment to a socialist ideology. As secretary for the city
committee, she was responsible for engaging and organizing trade unions, kisan meetings and work towards greater rural
engagement.
10. Rajkumari Amrit Kaur
Image Credit: India Today
Amrit Kaur was
born on 2 February 1889 in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh. She was India’s
first Health Minister and she held that post for ten years. Daughter of Harnam
Singh, son of the erstwhile Maharaja of Kapurthala, she was educated at
the Sherborne School for Girls in
Dorset, England, but gave it all up to become Mahatma Gandhi’s secretary for 16
years.
She was the founder of All India
Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) and argued
for its autonomy. She was a firm believer in women’s education, their
participation in sports and their healthcare. She set up the Tuberculosis Association of India,
the Central Leprosy and
Research Institute, was vice chair of the board of governors of the League of Red Cross Societies and chair of the
executive committee of St John’s Ambulance Society. When
she died in 1964, The New York Times called
her “a princess in her nation’s
service”.
11. Renuka Ray
Image Credit: India Netzone
Renuka Ray was the daughter of Satish Chandra Mukherjee, an ICS officer,
and Charulata Mukherjee, a social worker and member of the All India Women’s Conference (AIWC).
As a young girl, Renuka lived for a while in London and completed her BA from
the London School of Economics.
In 1934. as legal secretary of the AIWC, she submitted a document
titled ‘Legal Disabilities of
Women in India; A Plea for a Commission of Enquiry’. This
articulated the AIWC’s disappointment with the treatment of the Sharda Bill and their commitment to the legal review
of the situation of women before the law in India. Renuka argued for a uniform
personal law code, saying that the position of Indian women was one of the most
iniquitous in the world.
From 1943 to 1946 she was a member of the Central Legislative Assembly, then of the Constituent Assembly and the Provisional Parliament. In 1952–57, she served on
the West Bengal Legislative
Assembly as Minister for Relief and Rehabilitation. In 1957 and again
in 1962, she was the member for Malda of the Lok Sabha.
She was also President of the AIWC in 1952, served on the Planning Commission and on the governing
body of Visva Bharati University in
Shanti Niketan. She served as a Minister for Relief and Rehabilitation. She
established the All Bengal Women’s
Union and the Women’s
Coordinating Council.
12. Sarojini Naidu
Image Credit: Famous People
Sarojini Naidu was born on
Feb 13, 1879, in Hyderabad, India. She was the first Indian woman to
be president of the Indian National Congress and
to be appointed as an Indian state governor. She is popularly called “the Nightingale of India”.
She studied at King’s
College, London, and later at Girton
College, Cambridge. After some experience in the suffragist campaign in
England, she was drawn to India’s Congress movement and
to Mahatma Gandhi’s Non-cooperation
Movement. In 1924 she travelled to Africa in the interest of Indians there
and toured North America, lecturing on the Congress movement, in
1928–29.Back in India, her anti-British activity brought her a number of prison
sentences (1930, 1932 and 1942–43). She accompanied Gandhi to London for the
inconclusive second session of the Round
Table Conference in 1931. Sarojini Naidu was also known for her literary
prowess and in 1914 she was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
13. Sucheta Kriplani
Image Credit: IndiaSucheta Kriplani was born in 1908 in present-day
Haryana’s Ambala town. She is especially remembered for
her role in the Quit India Movement of
1942. Kripalani also established the women’s wing of the Congress party in
1940.Post-independence, Kripalani’s political stint included serving as an MP
from New Delhi and then also as the Minister of Labour, Community Development
and Industry in Uttar Pradesh’s state government. She took over as the chief
minister of UP from Chandra Bhanu Gupta and occupied the top post till 1967.
She was India’s first woman Chief Minister.
14. Vijalakshami Pandit
Image Credit: Encyclopaedia
Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit was
born in Allahabad on August 18, 1900, and she was the sister of India’s first
Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. She was imprisoned by the British on
three different occasions, in 1932-1933, 1940, and 1942-1943.
Pandit’s long career in politics officially began with her
election to the Allahabad Municipal Board. In
1936, she was elected to the Assembly
of the United Provinces, and in 1937 became minister of local
self-government and public health—the first Indian woman ever to become a
cabinet minister.
Like all Congress party officeholders, she resigned in 1939 to
protest against the British government’s declaration that India was a
participant in World War II. In September 1953, she was appointed as
the first woman and the first Asian to be elected president of the U.N. General Assembly.
15. Annie Mascarene
Image Credit: Veethi
Annie Mascarene was born into a Latin
Catholic family belonging to Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala. She was one
of the first women to join the Travancore
State Congress and became the first woman to be part of the Travancore State Congress Working Committee. She
was one of the leaders of the movements for independence and integration with
the Indian nation in the Travancore State.
For her political activism, she was imprisoned for various periods
from 1939—47. Mascarene was elected to the First Lok Sabha in the Indian general election, 1951. She was the
first woman MP from Kerala and one of only 10 elected
to Parliament in those elections. Prior to her election to
Parliament, she had served briefly as Minister in Charge of Health
and Power during 1949-1950.
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