‘Secularism' and ‘socialism' not part of Preamble drafted by Ambedkar, must be reviewed: RSS
Noting that 'secularism' and 'socialism' were not part of the Preamble of the Constitution as drafted by B.R. Ambedkar, Rashtriya Swayamsewak Sangh general secretary Dattatreya Hosabale on Thursday (June 26, 2025) called for the later inclusion of these terms to be reviewed.
Mr. Hosabale was speaking at an event to mark the 50th year since the Emergency, at which he also asked the Congress party to apologise to the nation for the 'draconian act'.
Discussing the 'several injustices' propagated against the people during the Emergency by the Congress government of that time, the RSS leader said that over one lakh people were sent to jail, including 250 journalists. The government of that time violated fundamental rights in multiple ways including the forceful sterilisation of over 60 lakh people, he added.
'Is socialism eternal for India?'
'Freedom of judiciary was also curtailed... but one more thing. Two words — that are, secularism and socialism — were added in the Preamble of the Indian Constitution during the Emergency. These two words were not there in the Preamble before. Preamble is eternal to the nation, but are the views and values of socialism, in terms of ideology, eternal for India?' he asked.
The word 'secularism' was not originally in the Indian Constitution, he emphasised. 'Yes, the ideas of secularism may have existed, they may have been part of governance and state policy — that's a different matter. But should these two words remain in the Preamble? This is something that deserves a review,' he said.
Added during Emergency
Mr Hosabale cautioned the audience that, when the Constitution is discussed at present, it is not just about Ambedkar's Constitution, but also includes later additions.
'Because I know — and I'm saying this while standing in the building named after Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar, the architect of our Constitution —that these words were not included by him. These words were added during the Emergency when citizens' rights were suspended, when Parliament was ineffective, when the judiciary was crippled. At that time, this was inserted,' he said.
Mocking Congress leader Rahul Gandhi without naming him, Mr. Hosabale said that it was his ancestors who had shattered the Constitution, but now he protests in the Parliament with copies of the same Constitution in his hand.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Print
31 minutes ago
- The Print
‘Anti-constitutional': Cong slams RSS over call to review terms ‘Socialist', ‘Secular' in Constitution's Preamble
'The thinking of the RSS-BJP is anti-constitutional. Now, RSS general secretary Dattatreya Hosabale has demanded a change in the preamble of the Constitution,' the Congress said in a post on X. In a post in Hindi on X, the Congress said it will never allow the BJP-RSS 'conspiracy' to succeed and will oppose any such move. New Delhi, Jun 26 (PTI) The Congress on Thursday accused the RSS and the BJP of being 'anti-constitutional' after Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh General Secretary Dattatreya Hosabale called for reviewing the words 'socialist' and 'secular' in the Preamble of the Constitution. The party claimed that Hosabale wants the words 'socialist' and 'secular' to be removed from the preamble. 'This is a conspiracy to destroy Baba Saheb's Constitution, which the RSS-BJP has been hatching for long,' the Congress said. The opposition party claimed that when the Constitution was implemented, the RSS opposed it and burnt its copies. 'In the Lok Sabha elections, BJP leaders were openly saying that they needed more than 400 seats in Parliament to change the Constitution, but the people taught them a lesson. 'Now, once again, they are engaged in their conspiracies, but Congress will not let their intentions succeed at any cost. Hail Constitution,' the Congress said. The RSS, the ideological mentor of the ruling BJP, on Thursday called for reviewing the words 'socialist' and 'secular' in the Preamble of the Constitution, saying they were added during the Emergency and were never part of the Constitution drafted by B R Ambedkar. Addressing an event here organised on the Emergency, Hosabale said, 'The preamble of the Constitution, Baba Saheb Ambedkar never had these words. During the Emergency, when fundamental rights were suspended, Parliament did not work, the judiciary became lame, then these words were added.' He said discussions were held on this issue later, but no effort was made to remove them from the preamble. 'So, whether they should remain in the preamble should be considered,' he added. PTI SKC RHL This report is auto-generated from PTI news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.


The Hindu
an hour ago
- The Hindu
From The Hindu, June 27, 1975: President proclaims national Emergency
New Delhi, June 26: A national Emergency was proclaimed to-day in the face of what the Prime Minister, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, described in a broadcast to the nation as a 'deep and widespread conspiracy' that had been brewing for a long time, leading to violence and disruption of normal life. After a hurriedly summoned Cabinet meeting at 5 a.m. at the Prime Minister's residence, the President issued the Proclamation under Article 352(1) of the Constitution declaring that a 'grave emergency exists whereby the security of India is threatened by internal disturbances.' A number of preventive arrests have been made by the Central and State Governments. The Centre has directed the State Governments and Union Territories' administrations to use the emergency powers for the maintenance of law and order and the unity of the nation.


The Print
2 hours ago
- The Print
RSS's Hosabale calls for ‘review of secularism, socialism' inserted into Preamble during Emergency
This year marks 50 years since then Prime Minister Indira Gandhi declared a nationwide Emergency on 25 June, 1975, citing internal disturbances. The Emergency, which lasted for about 21 months, saw the suspension of civil liberties, censorship of the press, arrests of political opponents under MISA, and sweeping powers handed to the executive. He also said the Congress must apologise for the Emergency and excesses committed under the Indira Gandhi government, calling it a period when citizens' rights were crushed and institutions weakened. New Delhi: Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) general secretary Dattatreya Hosabale Thursday called for a review of the words 'secular' and 'socialist' inserted into the Preamble to the Constitution by way of the 42nd Amendment, saying they were added during the Emergency and were not part of the original text drafted by B.R. Ambedkar. Speaking at an event to mark the anniversary in New Delhi, Hosabale said insertion of the two words into the Preamble needs to be revisited. 'Freedom of judiciary was also curtailed … but one more thing, during the Emergency, two words were added to the Preamble to India's Constitution. We all know: secularism and socialism. These were not in the Preamble earlier. They were added later. The Preamble is meant to be eternal.' 'So, from the perspective of ideology, should socialism be considered eternal for India?' he asked. 'The word secularism was not originally in the Indian Constitution. It was added to the Preamble. Yes, the ideas of secularism may have existed, they may have been part of governance and state policy, that's a different matter. But should these two words remain in the Preamble? This is something that deserves reflection,' Hosabale said. Adding, 'Because I know, and I'm saying this while standing in the building named after Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar, the architect of our Constitution, that these words were not included by him.' He went on to say, 'When you discuss the Constitution, it is not just about Babasaheb Ambedkar. There are also aspects that were not part of what Ambedkar had framed.' Hosabale emphasised that the changes were made at a time when democratic institutions were severely weakened. '… when citizens' rights were suspended, when Parliament was ineffective, when the judiciary was crippled, at that time, this was inserted.' Adding, 'That is why, I believe, many such matters still need to be reviewed even today.' He also said the Congress must apologise for the Emergency. 'They have not apologised to the people of the country till today. They haven't sought forgiveness. One lakh people were jailed, 60 lakh forcibly sterilised, 250 journalists were sent to jail, the judiciary was crippled but still, no apology was made. They will have to apologise to the nation. If your ancestors committed the mistake, then apologise in their name. What's the issue with that?' 'Those who did such things are today moving around with the Constitution's copy. They have still not apologised … Apologise,' he said. 'Your ancestors did it… You must apologise for this to the country.' (Edited by Amrtansh Arora) Also Read: Ex-BJP MLA's 'second marriage' puts Uttarakhand BJP on back foot, Congress calls out UCC hypocrisy