Odishatv Bureau
New Delhi: He has been an active President but Pranab Mukherjee still remains a copybook Head of State who would go by the Constitution and not venture beyond.
 
As he completes one year in office this week, Mukherjee, a stickler for rules and conventions in his heydays as parliamentarian or minister, used occasions, whenever he got, to impress upon the lawmakers to shed disruptions in the House while asking the judiciary to avoid overreach.
 
He was seen as proactive when he disposed of the mercy petitions of 26/11 attack convict Ajmal Kasab and Parliament attack convict Afzal Guru that had triggered a controversy but his aides explain that as President he had no choice but to go by the Cabinet advice.
 
Interaction with people comes naturally to Mukherjee, who has been in active public life for over four decades and this has not changed during his first year as the Head of the State, an office known for maintaining strict protocol.
 
Be it reaching out to the cheering crowd or interacting with the best brains of the country during discussions in educational institutions, Mukherjee enjoys every bit of his interactions with people.
 
During the last one year as the President of the country of over one billion people, Mukherjee had travelled to 23 states which includes five states of northeast during which he visited 36 educational institutions.
 
Shunning the ceremonial pomp, Mukherjee makes it a point to have an informal discussion with teachers and students whenever he is visiting an educational institute to know their point of view and convey to them his ideas.
 
He has dropped the use of honorific "His Excellency" while being addressed and removed strict protocol and security restrictions for Rashtrapati Bhavan events as well as participants. 
 
Paying attention to small details is a characteristic of 77-year-old Mukherjee who has been in public life for last 44 years and it reflected in the renovation of the imposing Rashtrapati Bhavan which is his new abode for last one year.
 
His love for history is evident in the way disused Durbar Hall and adjoining library have been renovated since he took over the office.
 
Till about a year back, the historical hall was not in its best shape because of poor upkeep and disuse as bigger Ashoka Hall was used to conduct official ceremonies.
 
Due to Mukherjee's interest in the restoration of this heritage building as he completes first year in office, Durbar Hall is back to its pristine glory and fitted with an ultra- modern acoustic system to cut down the echo which was a big problem while conducting programs in the hall with its 33 m tall dome.
 
The Library, where books were once dumped, now houses some rarest of books dating as old as 1800 AD neatly racked in almirahs which were constructed in 1930s on the designs given by Edwin Landseer Lutyens, the British architect who designed this 340-room building.
 
Known for his love of history, Mukherjee pressed for the renovation project to revive interest of public in the history and heritage associated with this 85-year-old building spread in 320 acres.
 
The Morning Room, Committee Room, Garden Loggia and North and South Drawing Rooms, Library, durbar hall, museums, antique furniture and specially rare books were given carefully renovations under the guidance of specialists to bring them back to their pristine best.
 
 
 
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