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Home » A fight over figures: the constitutional debate over numerals

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A fight over figures: the constitutional debate over numerals

Times Desk
Last updated: January 22, 2026 3:00 am
Times Desk
Published: January 22, 2026
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Contents
  • Pride versus pragmatism
  • The inclusive compromise
  • Unity in diversity

December 22 of every year is celebrated as National Mathematics Day to honour the genius of Srinivasa Ramanujan. Upholding the same spirit a month later, it is worth revisiting a remarkable constitutional episode involving numerals.

One of the most passionate debates in the Constituent Assembly was not just about fundamental rights or federalism, but about the choice of numerals — Devanagari (१, २, ३) or international numerals (1, 2, 3). Two blocs emerged: the traditionalists who championed Devanagari, and the moderates who favoured international numerals. For the Hindi traditionalist group, numerals were cultural artefacts that affirmed India’s civilisational identity. In that pursuit, they were willing to overlook national unity for linguistic uniformity. As Granville Austin writes in The Constitution of India: Cornerstone of a Nation, “The Hindi-wallahs were ready to risk splitting the Assembly and the country in their unreasoning pursuit of uniformity. They thus denied the Assembly’s belief in the concept of accommodation and in decision making by consensus. Assembly members preferred to take decisions by consensus or by as near to unanimity as possible. Not only was this method deeply embedded in the Indian tradition, it was manifestly the most practical way to frame the Constitution. A system of government would not work effectively, Assembly members knew, if large segments of population were opposed to it. Every attempt had to be made, therefore, to achieve the broadest possible agreement. The Hindi-wallahs, however, announced that they would impose Hindi on the country, if they had one-vote majority. To prevent this, the moderates went to great lengths to find a compromise.” That is, Hindi chauvinism was not confined to language and script but extended to numerals as well. The traditionalists demanded Devanagari numerals and categorically rejected “Arabic” or “International” numerals. The dispute persisted throughout the framing of the Constitution.

The Hindu, in an editorial dated August 23, 1949, even suggested that after the inauguration of the Constitution, a language commission should be established to examine the choice of numerals, among other issues.

Pride versus pragmatism

On August 26, 1949, the Constituent Assembly spent a tense and acrimonious three hours debating numerals, with Pattabhi Sitaramayya in the chair. When the issue was put to vote, the initial show of hands exposed a sharp polarisation — 63 members favoured international numerals and 54 supported Devanagari numerals. A revision was demanded, and the result was a dramatic 74–74 tie. At Sitaramayya’s and Nehru’s urging, the House concluded that Devanagari numerals could not be imposed on the republic by such a slender margin.

For days thereafter, the Hindi group, led by Purushottamdas Tandon, continued to resist international numerals. Their adamancy drove many Gujarati, Marathi, Bengali and even Bihari members away from the Hindi camp and into the ranks of the moderates. South Indian members were already firmly in favour of international numerals. Seth Govind Das, leading the traditionalists, thundered: “If we cannot even adopt our own numerals, what self-respect can this country claim? Countries which forget their culture lose everything.” For them, rejecting Devanagari numerals meant rejecting India’s soul. But others viewed the proposal as exclusionary and impractical. Frank Anthony, speaking for minorities and linguistic pluralists, warned: “To impose Devanagari numerals is to impose a culture on those who do not share it. This will not unite; it will divide.” For many from the South and minority communities, the debate symbolised a deeper anxiety — that a cultural majority might emboss its identity onto the Republic through symbolic dominance.

Jawaharlal Nehru, the architect of India’s scientific imagination, urged restraint and reason. He emphasised that science, commerce and international exchange depended on international numerals. Imposing Devanagari numerals, he argued, would burden a young nation with unnecessary complications. International numerals were already the backbone of modern administration — banking, education, telegraphy, engineering and trade. Replacing them would have disrupted governance and isolated India from global scientific practice.

The inclusive compromise

After months of tense negotiation, the Munshi–Ayyangar compromise resolved the impasse with constitutional wisdom. Article 343, reflecting this compromise, adopted the “international form of Indian numerals” (0–9). The Constitution gave the President only transitional and administrative powers in this domain. Under Article 343(2), the President could issue orders during the initial 15-year period (1950-1965) authorising the use of Hindi alongside English and prescribing related procedural arrangements, which implicitly covered allied matters such as numerals. However, the President had no independent authority to alter or prescribe the official numeral system. Article 343(3) vested exclusive power in Parliament to legislate, after the transition period, on whether the Union should use English or the Devanagari form of numerals for specified purposes. As Parliament never enacted such a law, international numerals continued by constitutional design. Dr. Rajendra Prasad, Chairman of the Constituent Assembly, remarked of the compromise that “we have done the wisest possible thing.”

Article 343(1) uses the curious expression “the international form of Indian numerals.” The phrase captures a long civilisational journey. The numerals used today — 1, 2, 3 — originated in India’s place-value decimal system, travelled to West Asia, and eventually reached Europe. Their visual forms became international, but their intellectual roots remained Indian. By adopting them, the Constituent Assembly acknowledged India’s mathematical heritage, embraced scientific universalism and ensured administrative efficiency — a decision shaped by both cultural pride and pragmatic foresight.

Unity in diversity

The numerals debate may seem quaint today, but its message is strikingly contemporary. In an era where cultural symbols are frequently deployed to assert majoritarian dominance, the Munshi-Ayyangar formula stands as a constitutional reminder that India’s unity cannot be built on uniformity. It affirms that nation-building requires accommodation, not homogenisation; pluralism, not cultural conquest. By balancing Hindi in Devanagari script with the adoption of international numerals, the framers sent a quiet but profound signal: India’s identity would be inclusive, layered and capacious — never the monopoly of a single culture, language or community. In the film The Man Who Knew Infinity, Professor Hardy tells Ramanujan, “We are merely explorers of infinity in the pursuit of absolute perfection.” So too were our Constitution-makers — explorers navigating the infinite diversity of India. Their choice of numerals reminds us that even the smallest symbols can carry the largest constitutional truths: that India thrives not when one identity triumphs, but when all identities find room to belong.

Faisal C.K. is Deputy Law Secretary to the Government of Kerala and author of The Supreme Codex: A Citizen’s Anxieties and Aspirations on the Indian Constitution.

Published – January 22, 2026 08:30 am IST



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