Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (civil) 16 of 2005
PETITIONER:
Sanjeev Bhatnagar
RESPONDENT:
Union of India & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/05/2005
BENCH:
CJI R.C. Lahoti & P.K. Balasubramanyan
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
R.C. LAHOTI, CJI
On 24th January 1950, the Constituent Assembly of India finally
met to sign the Constitution. The question of having a National
Anthem for India as a free country and a nation was under
consideration. The Constituent Assembly had appointed a Committee
to make recommendations about the final selection of a National
Anthem.
After deliberations it was considered desirable to leave it with
the President to make a declaration in the Assembly on the question of
adopting a National Anthem for India. In the Constitution Hall, on 24th
January 1950, where the Constituent Assembly of India finally met to
sign the Constitution, President Dr. Rajendra Prasad declared his
decision on the matter relating to National Anthem in his opening
statement in the following words:-
"There is one matter which has been pending
for discussion, namely the question of the National
Anthem. At one time it was thought that the
matter might be brought up before the House and
a decision taken by the House by way of a
resolution. But it has been felt that, instead of
taking a formal decision by means of a resolution,
it was better if I make a statement with regard to
the National Anthem. Accordingly I make this
statement.
The composition consisting of the words and
music known as Jana Gana Mana is the National
Anthem of India, subject to such alterations in the
words as the Government may authorise as
occasion arises; and the song Vande Mataram,
which has played a historic part in the struggle for
Indian freedom, shall be honoured equally with
Jana Gana Mana and shall have equal status with
it. I hope this will satisfy the Members."
___Constituent Assembly Debates, XII.
(24th January, 1950)
After the Constitution had been signed by all the members of
the Assembly, the President, on the request of Shri M.
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Ananthasayanam Ayyangar permitted all members of the House to
sing Jana Gana Mana in chorus. Then led by Shrimati Purnima Banerji
all of them sang it in chorus for the first time after its formal adoption
as our National Anthem.
The following is the transliteration i.e. the text of the National
Anthem in Hindi:
"Jana-gana-mana-adhinayaka, jaya he
Bharata-bhagya-vidhata.
Punjab-Sindh-Gujarat-Maratha
Dravida-Utkala-Banga
Vindhya-Himachala-Yamuna-Ganga
Uchchala-Jaladhi-taranga.
Tava shubha name jage,
Tava shubha asisa mange,
Gahe tava jaya gatha,
Jana-gana-mangala-dayaka jaya he
Bharata-bhagya-vidhata.
Jaya he, jaya he, jaya he
Jaya jaya jaya, jaya he!"
(Source __ India 2004, A Reference Annual, published
by Publications Division, Ministry of Information
and Broadcasting, Government of India, p.22)
The great poet Rabindranath Tagore had himself rendered the
English translation of his poem which reads as under:-
"Thou art the ruler of the minds of all people,
dispenser of India’s destiny.
Thy name rouses the hearts of Punjab, Sind,
Gujarat and Maratha,
Of the Dravida and Orissa and Bengal;
It echoes in the hills of the Vindhyas and Himalayas,
mingles in the music of Jamuna and Ganges and is
chanted by the waves of the Indian Sea.
They pray for thy blessings and sing thy praise.
The saving of all people waits in thy hand,
thou dispenser of India’s destiny.
Victory, victory, victory to thee."
(Source, India 2004, ibid, p.22)
The song was first sung on December 27, 1911 at the Calcutta
session of the Indian National Congress. Ever since the date of its
being adopted by the Constituent Assembly of India, the National
Anthem has been sung throughout the length and breadth of India, by
every patriot, every citizen and all people of this country. It has been
sung even in places beyond India.
The Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act, 1971 (Act No.
69 of 1971) enacted by the Parliament makes it an offence for
whoever intentionally prevents the singing of the Indian National
Anthem or causes disturbance to any assembly engaged in such
singing. Article 51A of the Constitution of India, inserted by Forty-
second Amendment, provides for it being the fundamental duty,
amongst others, of every citizen of India to abide by the Constitution
and respect its ideals and institutions, the National Flag and the
National Anthem. The Constitution of India, its ideals and institutions,
the National Flag and the National Anthem have been treated almost
on par. From the language of Clause (a) of Article 51A, it is clear that
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the National Anthem is an ideal and an institution for the Indian
citizens. In Re: Kerala Education Bill, 1959 (1959 SCR 995), S.R.
Das, Chief Justice, quoted a stanza from the National Anthem as India
sending out its message of goodwill to the world and thus the genius
of India finding unity in diversity by assimilating the best of all creeds
and cultures.
The petitioner is an advocate. He has filed this petition,
claiming to be in public interest, invoking the extraordinary jurisdiction
of this Court under Article 32 of the Constitution of India seeking a
direction to the Union of India to rectify the text of National Anthem
and delete the word ’Sindh’ therefrom. Earlier too, he had filed a
similar petition, registered as W.P.(C) No.506/2004. When the matter
came up for hearing on 20.9.2004, the Court was not inclined to
entertain the petition. However, the petitioner insisted that the
Government of India had the authority to alter the text of National
Anthem and therefore, a direction by the Court in that regard was
called for. The petition was dismissed though the petitioner was
allowed liberty of inviting the attention of the Central Government to
the facts stated in the writ petition and such other material as may be
with the petitioner. The petitioner did make a representation on
24.9.2004. On 3.12.2004, he once again filed this writ petition seeking
the very same and the only relief as was sought for earlier. The Court
directed a notice to be issued to the respondent-Union of India for
having its response.
While the Union of India has filed its response opposing the
prayer made by the petitioner, there are a number of applicants
seeking intervention in the hearing so as to oppose the writ petition.
Some of the intervenors are \026 All India Sindhu Culture Society headed
by a former Judge of the High Court, Rashtriya Sindhu Parishad
headed by an Advocate, Sindhi Council of India \026 A Registered Society,
International Sindhi Forum, Sindhi Jagriti Sabha, Delhi Pradesh Sindhi
Samaj and a few other similar institutions and representative bodies.
A few individuals belonging to Sindhi or non-Sindhi community have
also sought for intervention. In substance, all the intervenors have
offered their vehement opposition to the petition submitting that their
feelings, first as an Indian and then as members of Sindhi community
who love Sindhi as a language and also as a culture, have been hurt
by the move of the petitioner. They have sought for the petition being
dismissed.
The stand taken by the Union of India is that the National
Anthem is a highly emotive issue; any alteration/substitution in the
National Anthem will distort the National Anthem and may give rise to
several unnecessary controversies, while no fruitful object will be
served. The National Anthem is not open to mutilation. The song is a
literary creation which cannot be changed. The National Anthem
reflects our culture spread throughout the length and breadth of India
whether it is North, South, East or West.
Having heard the petitioner appearing in-person, the learned
Attorney General for the Union of India and the several counsel for
intervenors led by Mr. Ram Jethmalani, Senior Advocate, and a few
intervenors appearing in-person, we are satisfied that the petition is
wholly devoid of any merit and is liable to be dismissed. The main
plank of the petitioner’s case is that the geographical region known as
’Sindh’, was a part of India pre-partition (i.e. before 15th August,
1947) and ever since then it is not a part of India, and therefore, the
use of the word ’Sindh’ in the National Anthem is misplaced and
deserves to be deleted for which an appropriate direction needs to be
issued to the Union of India. In our opinion, the submission is
misconceived for very many reasons which we proceed to summarize
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herein below.
A National Anthem is a hymn or song expressing patriotic
sentiments or feelings. It is not a chronicle which defines the territory
of the nation which has adopted the anthem. A few things such as __ a
National Flag, a National Song, a National Emblem and so on, are
symbolic of our national honour and heritage. The National Anthem
did not, and does not, enlist the states or regional areas which were
part of India at the point of time when it was written. Nor is it
necessary that the structure of the National Anthem should go on
changing as and when the territories or the internal distribution of
geographical regions and provinces undergoes changes. Very recently
Uttaranchal, Chhattisgarh and Jharkhand have been carved out by
reorganizing certain states. Does it mean that the National Anthem
should be enlarged, re-written or modified to include the names of
these new states? The obvious answer is \026 no. The National Anthem
is our patriotic salutation to our motherland, nestling between the
Himalyas and the oceans and the seas surrounding her. The mention
of a few names therein is symbolic of our recollection of the glorious
heritage of India. ’Sindh’ is not just a geographical region. It refers to
the place and to its people. Sindhis are spread throughout the country
and they derive their such name as having originated and migrated
from Sindh. ’Sindh’ also refers to the river ’Sindhu’ or ’Indus’. It also
refers to a culture, one of the oldest in the world and even modern
India feels proud of its having inherited the Indus Valley Civilisation as
an inalienable part of its heritage. River Indus (Sindhu) finds
numerous references in the Indian Classical Literature including Rig
Veda.
The National Anthem is the poem as it was written by
Rabindranath Tagore. He himself had said that the five stanzas in
which the poem was written is addressed to God. The poem is a
reflection of the real India as a country ___ a confluence of many
religions, races, communities and geographical entities. It is a
message of unity in diversity. It is a patriotic song. It has since the
decades inspired many by arousing their patriotic sentiments when
sung in rhythm. It is the representative of the ethos of the country.
Any classic, once created, becomes immortal and inalienable; even its
creator may not feel like making any change in it. Any tampering
with the script of the poem would be showing disrespect to the great
poet ___ Rabindranath Tagore.
The hue and cry raised by the petitioner in his petition and also
during the hearing at the Bar does not amount to raising any
constitutional issue or canvassing any fundamental right for the
enforcement of which the jurisdiction of this Court under Article 32 of
the Constitution can be invoked. The issue is puerile. Shri Milon
Banerjee, the learned Attorney General for India, submitted that the
Union of India, a democratically elected popular Government is not in
favour of making any alteration in or any tampering with a finely
structured poem or song, which is the National Anthem. Every word
placed therein is carefully in position in the whole composition. A
suggestion seeking a substitution of words in the National Anthem
would be "a bid to rob Tagore of his greatness". He further submitted
that in any poetry the structure has some purpose other than to clarify
the content. Poetry is more structured than prose. It is the structure
which forces the author to be more creative; to find ways of saying
things which do not disrupt the flow. The choice of words and the
structure often provide a path for the reader to follow outside the flow
of the theme and a good poet achieves interesting things by playing
the flow through the content and off the content. The fabric of words
is the creation of the author. A poem once popular, more so if
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adopted as a National Anthem, becomes symbolic of the feelings, ideas
and images that have come to be associated in our minds with the
words used by the author in structuring the poem and then the
meaning of a word or a group of words reaches far beyond its
dictionary definition. The learned Attorney General invited our
attention to the book "India’s National Anthem" by Prabodhchandra
Sen, published by Vishva Bharti, Calcutta in May 1979, wherein
Mahatma Gandhi, the Father of the Nation, has been quoted as having
said in a prayer discourse on 8th May, 1946 on the occasion of
Rabindranath Tagore’s Birth Anniversary about Jana Gana Mana ___ "It
is not only a song but is also like a devotional hymn". The National
Anthem has been given a tune. Its singing or playing takes 52
seconds.
The learned Attorney General read out the following passage
from "India’s National Anthem" (ibid) which we feel inclined to quote
verbatim for its value:
"THE MORNING SONG OF INDIA"
In the year 1919, during his tour of South
India, Rabindranath spent five days at the
Theosophical College, Madanapalle, at the
invitation of Principal James H. Cousins. There he
sang the song ’Janaganamana’ at some function.
The audience was very much moved by the tune
and at their request he made an English translation
of the song and called it ’The Morning Song of
India’. The college authorities, greatly impressed
by the tune and the lofty ideals of the song,
selected it as their prayer song to be sung every
morning before the day’s work commenced. In a
letter (23.7.34) Principal Cousins writes:
Every working morning Janaganamana is
sung by hundreds of young people in our big
hall. We want to extend its purifying
influence by sending copies of it to other
schools and colleges in India and by making
it known abroad.
Later, in the year 1936, the translation
mentioned above was printed in the Poet’s own
handwriting in the College Commemoration Volume
and distributed widely, with a note that this ’would
become one of the world’s most precious
documents\005 From Madanapalle Janagana has
spread all over India, and is admired in Europe and
America.’
In the next year (1937), when a bitter
controversy was raging throughout the whole
country over the selection of India’s National
Anthem, Principal Cousins issued a statement to
the Press (3.11.37) in which he stated:
My suggestion is that Dr. Rabindranath’s
own intensely patriotic, ideally stimulating,
and at the same time world-embracing
Morning Song of India (Janaganamana)
should be confirmed officially, as what it has
for almost twenty years been unofficially,
namely, the true National Anthem of India."
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Mr. Ram Jethmalani, the learned senior counsel leading the
intervenors, severely criticized the conduct of the petitioner who has
mentioned in the writ petition that the continued use of the word
’Sindh’ in the National Anthem offends patriotic sentiments of the
citizens of India and is offensive of sovereignty of the neighbouring
country. He goes on to allege that the sentiments of 100 crore Indians
can be soothened by correcting and updating the "National Anthem".
The learned senior counsel posed the questions __ Whose cause the
petitioner is pleading ___ of the citizens of India or of a neighbouring
country? Wherefrom does the petitioner gather an impression and
plead that he is espousing the cause of more than one billion people of
India? The learned senior counsel was at pains to point out that ever
since this petition was filed in the Court and notice was directed to be
issued the Indian newspapers have been flooded with editorials and
hundreds of ’letters to the editor’ highlighting the sentiments of the
people of India, and in particular of Sindhis who have felt hurt by the
move of the petitioner. There are several oppositions filed in the
Court. There is not even one who may have spoken in support of the
petitioner.
We find merit in the submissions made by the learned Attorney
General for India and Mr. Ram Jethmalani, the learned senior counsel
appearing for the intervenors, and agree with the same.
We are satisfied that the petitioner is not entitled to the relief
prayed for. The petition is wholly devoid of any merit. The petition is
not in public interest. It is a petition which should never have been
filed. It is more of the publicity interest litigation wherein the
petitioner seems to have achieved his purpose. To discourage the
filing of such like petitions which result only in wasting the valuable
time of this Court, we direct the petition to be dismissed with costs
quantified at Rs.10,000/-.