Hyderabad, April 16 -- The framers of the Indian Constitution deliberately bequeathed a document that was "silently pluralistic," avoiding the rigid, often incendiary, ethnic categorisations found in other postcolonial charters. Instead, they opted for a functional, protective framework. 

As established in the constitutional scheme, Articles 29 and 30 were never intended as "privileges" for the weak, but as "safeguards" for the unique: essential structural components designed to preserve the cultural, linguistic and educational identity of communities within India's federal fabric.

The camouflage unveiled

The 2026 Bill seeks to shatter this silence with the cacophony of aggressive disruption, imposing a monochromatic structure upo...