The Constitution Is Not for Courts Alone
26 January Special | A Message to the Public
When people hear the word Constitution, they often imagine courtrooms, judges, and legal arguments.
Something distant. Something complicated. Something meant for experts.
But the Constitution was never written only for courts.
It was written for ordinary people living ordinary lives.
It speaks when a child is denied education.
It speaks when a worker is treated unfairly.
It speaks when a voice is silenced simply because it is different.
The Constitution is not activated only when we go to court.
It is activated every time we choose fairness over power, dignity over discrimination, truth over convenience.
A society that treats the Constitution as a legal document alone slowly disconnects from its spirit.
Laws may survive, but justice fades.
The Constitution does not ask us to memorize articles.
It asks us to practice values.
Equality is not a chapter. It is a habit.
Liberty is not a clause. It is a culture.
Justice is not a verdict. It is a daily choice.
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