what were the condition of country india whithout constitution ?
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Answers
Answer:
◇If there is no constitution, then there will be lack of rules and regulations.
◇People will be deprived of their rights and the government will function according to its will.
◇Justice will be denied to the people and a chaotic situation will prevail in the absence of laws because Constitution is the source of laws.
With the Forty-second Amendment of the Constitution of India enacted in 1976,[1] the Preamble to the Constitution asserted that India is a secular nation.[2][3] Officially, secularism has always inspired modern India.[2] The Supreme Court of India stated that India was secular since the Republic was founded through Part III of the constitution that deals with fundamental rights.[4] There is separation of religion and state. For example, it does not have an official state religion and state-owned educational institutions are constitutionally prohibited (Article 28(1)) from imparting religious instructions. Furthermore, Article 27 of the constitution of India prohibits the use of tax-payer's money for funding or promoting anything religious, such as funding religious pilgrimages, building places of worships, funding religious organisations for a non-secular activity etc.[5][6] India, however, does not completely separate religion and state.[2] The Indian Constitution has allowed extensive interference of the state in calling for restrictions in religious affairs, such as the abolition of caste system and untouchability.[7][8] The Islamic Central Wakf Council, which is a statutory body under the government tasked with managing and maintaining historical Islamic heritage architectures, and many Hindu temples which are considered to be heritage structures of unique architecture are administered and managed by the Indian government[9][10]. Several states in India also have laws that restrict proselytizing by religious groups or organisations.[11] The Supreme Court of India and different high courts on several high profile cases ruled on issues of secularism and the separation of state and religion further evolving the discourse of secularism in modern India.