Referring to a comment by Yadav, the Minister said "I think it is paradoxical that today Sharadji, a very senior parliamentarian, yet again told me 'sit down, sit down. Imagine if such a politician was a part of the Drafting Committee.
Participating in the debate on commitment to the Constitution in Rajya Sabha, she said as a woman in India, she celebrate the fact that women in many nations across the world had to struggle to get their right to vote.
"But imagine, as the Leader of the House said today, what kind of restrictions such a senior parliamentarian would have imposed on a woman like me while this was being drafted. Would I have been told 'You have dark complexion, so you don't have right to vote?' Would I have been told 'you have short hair, you have no right to vote?'
"I see that some are disturbed by what I say. But apart from the social realities that were counted in this very House today, this also is a realty we must embrace, for the victims of such realty do not reside only outside this House, but we have witnessed this in this very House" she said.
She further said a correspondent went to Babasaheb and said, "Why is Sanskrit?" and he replied "What's wrong with Sanskrit?".
"It is ironical that six-and-a-half decades later, I too get posed that question and I have a similar response. But, this is the very evidence and the essence of a thriving Constitution which allows debates to permeate over decades till such time a consensus emerges," the Minister said.