New Delhi: Chief Justice Bhushan Gawai, only for the head of the judiciary from the Dalit community, on Friday, the journey for the creation of a equitable, equal and inclusive India has not yet been completed, although the appointment of Draupadi Murmu, daughter of a poor tribal family, as President, shows the distance that the country has covered towards achieving the target.In his Independence Day speech in the Supreme Court, CJI said, “It is the fate of India that the Santhal community, which was one of the first people to rise against the British in 1855, is now its daughter, President Draupadi Murmu, who organizes the highest constitutional office in the land.” He said, “His journey from a small village in Odisha to Rashtrapati Bhavan is one of a will that we have traveled for how far. And yet, we must remember that after hoisting the tricolor in SC, we are far from the completion of the work of a equitable, similar and inclusive India after hoisting the tricolor.He said that it is the responsibility of judges of the constitutional courts to take responsibility for promoting, saving, protecting, protecting them and defending the ideals of freedom, equality and fraternity. He repeated the judges of the Constitutional Courts, HCS and SC, co-colored and should bear the responsibility of “a comprehensive, more purposeful interpretation for the values of the Constitution”. The CJI said that when the rights of margins are preserved, Mahatma Gandhi’s Swaraj will be real and Ambedkar’s idea of democracy will be fulfilled.The contribution of Jyotiro and Savitribai Phule was mentioned after hours after PM, CJI Gavai said, “From the hills of today’s Jharkhand, where the Santhals burnt the first flames of the rebellion, where Birsa Munda saw the dirty as a dirty to submerge the destroy, and the renunciation of a nighthud by Tagore against the protest against injustice, and protests against injustice by Tagore. From crafting, the moral compass of Mahatma Gandhi, our freedom was united by a dream of India, not at one place, nor by one people, but with the courage of many people.,