Release of the updated Constitution of India in Gujarati and Tamil languages and the latest Legal Glossary (English–Hindi) on International Mother Language Day
1. At a Glance
- Vice President released the updated Constitution of India in Gujarati and Tamil plus the latest Legal Glossary (English–Hindi) on International Mother Language Day (21 Feb 2026) [S1].
- Initiative of the Official Languages Wing, Legislative Department, Ministry of Law & Justice; advances Article 348(3) / Eighth Schedule access to law [S1][S2].
- Examinable as a current-affairs hook for linguistic federalism, Eighth Schedule, Official Languages Act 1963, Authoritative Texts (Central Laws) Act 1973, and UNESCO observances [S2][S3].
2. Why in the News
- On 21 February 2026, Vice President Shri C. P. Radhakrishnan released the updated Constitution of India in Gujarati & Tamil and the latest Legal Glossary (English–Hindi) at the Vice President's Enclave, New Delhi [S1].
- PM Narendra Modi's message was read at the event, stressing linguistic inclusivity and citizen access to the Constitution and laws [S1].
3. Background & Evolution
- Official Languages Wing is the successor of the erstwhile Official Language (Legislative) Commission, housed in the Legislative Department, Ministry of Law & Justice [S2].
- Mandate flows from:
- Official Languages Act, 1963 — translation of Bills, Central Acts, Ordinances, subordinate legislation into Hindi [S2].
- Authoritative Texts (Central Laws) Act, 1973 — authoritative translations of Central laws into languages of the Eighth Schedule [S2].
- International Mother Language Day: proposed by Bangladesh; approved by UNESCO General Conference on 17 November 1999; observed worldwide since 2000; commemorates the Bengali Language Movement martyrs of 21 Feb 1952, Dhaka [S3].
4. Core Static Facts
- Event date / occasion: 21 Feb 2026 / International Mother Language Day [S1].
- Releaser: Vice President C. P. Radhakrishnan [S1].
- Venue: Vice President's Enclave, New Delhi [S1].
- Publications released: (a) Updated Constitution of India — Gujarati, (b) Updated Constitution of India — Tamil, (c) Latest Legal Glossary (English–Hindi) [S1].
- Implementing body: Official Languages Wing (Regional Languages Unit), Legislative Department, Ministry of Law & Justice [S2].
- Constitutional/legal basis: Article 348 (language of courts/legislation); Eighth Schedule (currently 22 scheduled languages incl. Gujarati & Tamil); Official Languages Act 1963; Authoritative Texts (Central Laws) Act 1973 [S2].
- UNESCO basis for IMLD: 30th General Conference resolution, 17 Nov 1999; first observance 2000 [S3].
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional - Operationalises Article 348(3) — translations of Central laws in regional languages [S2]. - Reinforces Eighth Schedule status of Gujarati and Tamil among 22 scheduled languages [S2]. - Authoritative translations are governed by the Authoritative Texts (Central Laws) Act 1973 [S2].
Social / Cultural - Lowers the language barrier in accessing fundamental rights, duties, DPSPs [S1]. - Aligns with UNESCO's multilingualism agenda for preserving linguistic diversity [S3].
Administrative / Federal - Centre-led translation; aids State judiciaries, law colleges, and citizens in Tamil Nadu and Gujarat [S1][S2]. - Standardises legal terminology via the Legal Glossary, reducing inconsistent Hindi renderings of English legal terms [S2].
Historical - IMLD memorialises the 21 Feb 1952 Dhaka killings of protesters demanding Bengali as a state language of Pakistan — a precursor to the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation [S3].
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- 21 Feb 2026: Updated Constitution in Gujarati & Tamil + new Legal Glossary (English–Hindi) released by VP C. P. Radhakrishnan [S1].
- Feb 2026 edition of the consolidated Constitution of India uploaded by Legislative Department [S4].
- PM Modi's message highlighted government's drive to publish the Constitution in more regional languages [S1].
7. Prelims Hooks
- International Mother Language Day is observed on 21 February every year [S3].
- IMLD was proclaimed by UNESCO on 17 November 1999; first observed in 2000 [S3].
- IMLD originated from a proposal by Bangladesh, commemorating the 1952 Bengali Language Movement martyrs of Dhaka [S3].
- Updated Constitution in Gujarati and Tamil released on 21 Feb 2026 by the Vice President [S1].
- Latest Legal Glossary released is in the English–Hindi pair (not Hindi-only) [S1].
- Nodal body: Official Languages Wing, Legislative Department, Ministry of Law & Justice (NOT Ministry of Education / Rajbhasha Vibhag of MHA) [S2].
- Statutory base for translations into Eighth Schedule languages: Authoritative Texts (Central Laws) Act, 1973 [S2].
- Hindi translation of Bills and Central Acts is mandated under the Official Languages Act, 1963 [S2].
- The Eighth Schedule currently lists 22 languages, including Gujarati and Tamil [S2].
- Article 348 of the Constitution deals with the language of Supreme Court, High Courts, and authoritative texts of Acts/Bills [S2].
- The Vice President at the time of the 21 Feb 2026 release was Shri C. P. Radhakrishnan [S1].
8. Mains Relevance
- GS-II: Indian Constitution — features, amendments; Government policies for welfare; Functioning of executive (Ministry of Law & Justice).
- GS-I: Indian culture — salient aspects of languages and literature.
- Possible question stems: 1. "Translation of the Constitution and Central laws into Eighth Schedule languages is a constitutional necessity, not a cultural courtesy." Discuss. 2. Examine the role of the Official Languages Wing of the Legislative Department in advancing linguistic federalism in India. 3. Critically assess India's compliance with the spirit of International Mother Language Day in legal and administrative communication.
9. Related Topics to Study Next
- Eighth Schedule of the Constitution — 22 languages, demands for inclusion (Tulu, Bhojpuri, etc.).
- Article 343–351 — Official Languages Part XVII.
- Official Languages Act, 1963 and Rules, 1976.
- Authoritative Texts (Central Laws) Act, 1973 — translation regime.
- Classical Language status — Tamil (2004), Sanskrit, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Odia, Marathi, Bengali, Assamese, Pali, Prakrit (recent additions).
- UNESCO Atlas of World's Languages in Danger — Indian languages flagged endangered.
- Bharatiya Bhasha Diwas / Hindi Diwas (14 Sep) — distinguish from IMLD.
- National Education Policy 2020 — three-language formula, mother-tongue instruction.
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong ministry: It is Ministry of Law & Justice (Legislative Department), not Ministry of Education or Ministry of Culture [S2].
- Wrong Act: Translation into Eighth Schedule languages is under the Authoritative Texts (Central Laws) Act, 1973, NOT the Official Languages Act, 1963 (which covers Hindi) [S2].
- IMLD ≠ World Hindi Day (10 Jan) ≠ Hindi Diwas (14 Sep) ≠ Bharatiya Bhasha Diwas (11 Dec) [S3].
- IMLD was a Bangladesh initiative, not an Indian one; commemorates 1952 Dhaka language martyrs, not the 1971 war [S3].
- The Legal Glossary released is English–Hindi, not in Gujarati or Tamil [S1].
11. Sources
- [S1] Release of the updated Constitution of India in Gujarati and Tamil languages and the latest Legal Glossary (English–Hindi) on International Mother Language Day — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2231333 — (tier: 1)
- [S2] Official Languages Wing / Constitution of India in Regional Languages, Legislative Department — https://www.legislative.gov.in/constitution-of-india-in-regional-languages — (tier: 1)
- [S3] International Mother Language Day, UNESCO / UN — https://www.unesco.org/en/days/mother-language ; https://www.un.org/en/observances/mother-language-day — (tier: 2)
- [S4] The Constitution of India [As on February, 2026], Legislative Department PDF — https://www.legislative.gov.in/static/uploads/2025/07/316140f5938919bbbce4c22f1bf3d5ff.pdf — (tier: 1)