“Have you seen the Constitution?” Vinay Kumar, 40, asked everyone who looked into the stall as he pointed to the tome resting on a wooden stand.
Visitors to the “Constitution Curious” stall at the Durgotsab puja pandal in Delhi’s Greater Kailash neighbourhood gasped on discovering a replica of the original Indian Constitution, as calligraphed by Prem Behari Narain Raizada and illustrated by Nandalal Bose.
Kumar invited them to flip through its pages and take in a piece of history. In addition to going through the not-so-little book, visitors could take a short quiz based on the Constitution and win a prize. Or they could print for themselves a copy of the preamble using a screen-printing contraption made by Kumar.
An engineer and lawyer by training, Kumar told Scroll that he designs medical devices for a living. But he gave up having a full-time job years ago to practice his art and activism.
In five days at the stall , he made over a thousand copies of the preamble free of cost for those who visited the stall. The initiative was the result of a collaboration between two non-profit organisations: the Delhi-based National Foundation for India and Kumar’s own Reclaim Constitution.
Sandwiched between a Domino’s outlet and hoardings that advertised real estate deals,...
Read more
You may also like
'Breathtaking abuse of power': Newsom slams Donald Trump for deploying 300 California National Guard troops to Oregon; vows legal action
Women's World Cup: 'Perfect Strike' as Amit Shah, former players hail India's big win over Pakistan
Ange Postecoglou reveals Nottingham Forest owner talks as pressure builds
Northeast Frontier Railway records 9.63 per cent rise in freight unloading
Sant Eshwer Samman celebrates 10 glorious years honouring India's unsung social reformers