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Ambedkar Jayanti in Delhi , India

The national holiday Ambedkar Jayanti honours the birthday of Dr. Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar, a polymath and civil rights champion. People from all walks of life gather on April 14th each year to honour his tireless efforts in eradicating untouchability and the caste system in India. He spent his entire life serving his country, preserving the rights of the Dalit community, 

helping to draught the new constitution, founding the Central Bank of India, understanding the Indian economy, and creating numerous economic doors for the nation. The birth anniversary of Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, known affectionately as the "Father of the Indian Constitution," also known as Bhim Jayanti and Mahaparinirvan Diwas, is honoured as a public holiday since 2015.

 

Importance Of Ambedkar Day

This occasion is observed across the nation to mark the anniversary of Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar's birth. He was a distinguished politician, anthropologist, economist, and philosopher who is credited with creating the Indian Constitution. The brilliant Dr. Ambedkar was the first untouchable in society to finish a doctorate in economics and receive degrees from the esteemed Columbia University and the London School of Economics, making him the first such person for the uneducated. Every Indian should be extremely proud of the fact that he is the only Indian to have a statue next to Karl Marx in the London Museum.

He made a name for himself in society as a brilliant student and legal scholar who also took part in numerous initiatives for social and political freedom. His initiatives were always focused on helping and elevating the "untouchables" of society—the most poorest members of the caste system.

Journey Through Babasaheb Ambedkar's Life

Dr. Ambedkar was an economist and social reformer who devoted his life to fostering equality and progress in Indian society. He was born on April 14th, 1891, into a poor family in the Madhya Pradesh village of Mhow. Early on in his life, he experienced casteism, and this prejudice inspired him to resist India's caste system. Later in adulthood, he changed his religion to Buddhism and began to follow Lord Buddha's teachings. He was regarded as a


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