864 DR. BABASAHEB AMBEDKAR : WRITINGS AND SPEECHES
It means that the Hindus of the Punjab will not be governed by this Code.
An Hon. Member : What is the harm ?
Pandit Thakur Das Bhargava : The harm is this. I want the whole of the Punjab and India to come under the Code. There should be some uniformity in regard to our laws. I have given an amendment that so far as our customs are concerned they should be preserved. I have even suggested that the sections of the Code should be relaxed in such a manner that if our Provincial Assembly wants certain portions of the Code to be applied they should be applied. I have gone further and said that in regard to our customs, such as relating to succession, we should be allowed to own our law. At the same time I do not want to be cut off from the rest of India. In fact that is the basis of the Hindu Code. If I had heard the speech of Dr. Ambedkar, which he made moving for the consideration of the Bill, he said clearly that he wanted the whole of India to be governed by this Code and that such things as had crept into Hindu practices in their pristine glory should be repaired. If I remember his words he said that those damages should be repaired. I am one with him and I do not want that the whole of the Punjab should be taken away from the operation of the Hindu Code. I would rather like to be governed by the Code which applies to the whole of India rather than plough my own lonely furrow. Therefore I am anxious that this provision should either be taken away or amended in such a manner so that these persons may not be excluded.
If my amendment is accepted sub-clauses (3) and (4) need not be there at all. According to me all those persons to whom the present law applies do come under these five categories which I have mentioned in my amendment. My amendment really seeks to attain the very same object which the Mover of the Bill has in his view. Only the wording is different. But I agree with him that so far as the scope of the Bill is concerned it should be extended to all those persons to whom the Hindu Law at present applies and only Muslims, Christians and Jews should be excluded. It is not that I want their exclusion for any purpose but for the purpose that those people themselves would not like to be governed by the Code. If they think that they would like to be bound by the Code let them pass a resolution or make a proposal to that effect. I want that the Hindu Code should