Petwar, a small agrarian village in Haryana’s Hisar district, is set to witness an unprecedented public celebration as Chief Justice of India Justice Surya Kant arrives on a homecoming visit to his native place, marking his first return to the village after assuming the highest judicial office in the country. The visit forms part of the Chief Justice’s two-day official programme in the region and carries both personal resonance and institutional significance.
The village administration and local residents have made extensive preparations to accord a traditional civic reception to the Chief Justice at the government school where he received his early education. Born on February 10, 1962, into a rural family in Petwar, Justice Kant studied at the village school during a period when the institution functioned with limited infrastructure and minimal facilities.
His father, a Sanskrit teacher, is widely acknowledged to have played a formative role in shaping his academic discipline and ethical grounding. The homecoming celebration is expected to draw the participation of senior constitutional and executive dignitaries, including Union Minister for Law and Justice Arjun Ram Meghwal and Haryana Chief Minister Nayab Singh Saini, alongside villagers, students and members of the local legal fraternity.
The visit coincides with the CJI’s broader engagement with judicial capacity building at the grassroots level. As part of his official itinerary, the CJI Kant is scheduled to lay the foundation stones for sub-divisional judicial complexes at Narnaund and Barwala, initiatives aimed at strengthening trial-level infrastructure and improving access to justice. The expansion of judicial facilities at the district and sub-divisional levels aligns with the constitutional vision embodied in Articles 21 and 39A of the Constitution of India, which emphasise timely justice delivery and equal access to legal remedies.
The 53rd CJI is also expected to interact with advocates and judicial officers at programmes organised by the Hisar and Hansi Bar Associations, as well as participate in an alumni meet at Government College, Hisar, from where he graduated between 1978 and 1981. His professional journey began at the Hisar Bar in 1984, before he went on to serve as Advocate General of Haryana and later as a judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court, culminating in his elevation to the office of the Chief Justice of India.
During his engagements with the legal fraternity, Justice Kant has consistently underscored the need for strengthening institutional capacity at the district court level, noting that trial courts constitute the first point of interface between citizens and the justice delivery system. He has advocated for the integration of digital case management tools, e-filing systems and e-library facilities, drawing from the judiciary’s extensive reliance on technology during the Covid-19 pandemic, when virtual courts ensured uninterrupted judicial functioning.
He further highlighted the evolving nature of litigation at the grassroots, particularly the rise in cybercrime, digital fraud and technology-driven offences. Effective adjudication of such cases required familiarity with electronic evidence, forensic analysis and statutory frameworks under the Information Technology Act, 2000, as well as contemporary evidentiary standards governing digital material. The increasing volume of commercial disputes arising from economic growth and foreign investment underscored the need for robust judicial capacity at the district level, particularly in the context of the Commercial Courts Act, 2015, and the Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996.
Security arrangements for the visit have been reviewed by the district administration, with senior civil and police officials overseeing preparations to ensure orderly conduct of the events. As Petwar prepares to host the Chief Justice amid grand celebrations, the visit is widely seen as a moment of collective pride for the village and a symbolic reaffirmation of the constitutional promise that public institutions, education and merit can enable a journey from rural beginnings to the apex of the Indian judiciary.
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