
Testimony to the enduring spirit of Indian democracy
On a summer evening in 1976, a group of people were enjoying a friendly chat at the bungalow of a prominent figure in Mainpuri city, when a frail man approached the host and prostrated at his feet. The man, a washerman from a village nearby, had a harrowing tale to tell.
His ordeal started with an altercation—the person with whom he had tangled, turned out to be a relative of a police sub-inspector. This, the washerman learnt when, a few days after the incident, a police team raided his house to apprehend him for 'conspiring to uproot railway tracks with the aim of bringing about armed revolution".
Fortunately for him, he was away visiting a distant relative when the raid was conducted. Else he would have landed in prison on charges framed under the Maintenance of Internal Security Act (Misa).
Though the group initially doubted the story, they found it to be true and got district authorities to resolve the matter. The washerman's case was not an aberration. Nationwide, about 35,000 people were detained under Misa (Maintenance of Internal Security Act), and more than 75,000 under the equally notorious Defence of India Rules (DIR) during the Emergency. Millions more, ranging from as young as nine to over 90 years of age, were arrested under various other laws. Politicians of all hues, barring those of the Congress and Left parties, were among the detainees.
Also read | Firm and focused leadership keeps India on course
What nurtured such extremes during the Emergency? The bureaucracy had turned alarmingly autocratic working hand in glove with the government.
Paradoxically, the initial days of the Emergency had brought a sense of order that many welcomed. Trains began running on time. Buses adhered to schedule. Crime rates plummeted. Government employees were punctual, and the insidious practice of 'bribes" to expedite files seemed to vanish. Classes in schools ran regularly, and street hooliganism largely disappeared.
Vinoba Bhave, a close associate of Mahatma Gandhi, even lauded the Emergency as an anushasan parv (festival of discipline). Middle-aged and elderly people then said it felt as if the time of the British bahadur had returned, an era where sher aur bakri ek hi ghat se paani peete the (the lion and the goat used to drink water from the same source), implying a return to strict but fair governance. It might seem astonishing to read this in 2025, but many at the time indeed considered such actions necessary.
This week marks 50 years since the beginning of the anushasan parv, and the memories of those days continue to stir me.
Apparently, Indira Gandhi imposed the Emergency after the Allahabad high court annulled her election. However, other darker forces were at play. In the 1971 general elections she coined the slogan garibi hatao (remove poverty), fielded 442 Lok Sabha candidates and won 352 seats. But she failed to eradicate poverty and unemployment, and a disillusioned student community and labourers took to streets in protest. A woman who was called Durga during the victorious Bangladesh campaign was now a failed ruler and the Emergency was the last gambit of a terrified ruler.
Also read | A nation falling for the lure of majoritarianism
Tragedies such as the Turkman Gate incident unfolded in New Delhi. The government machinery, armed with 10 bulldozers and a large police contingent, descended upon the Turkman Gate area in the name of 'beautification". When residents resisted, they were fired at, resulting in an undisclosed number of deaths and injuries. The government never released the exact figures, and a muzzled media could not effectively report on it.
Those were truly dark days for India.
Pupul Jayakar, Indira's friend, later wrote in her book how even Indira was disturbed by these aberrations. She sought counsel from the philosopher Jiddu Krishnamurti, and it was only after this spiritual reflection that she decided to lift the Emergency and call for elections. The Congress lost the general elections in 1977, and the Janata Party came to power. How Indira later returned to power is another story for another day, but 50 years on, while there is regret in remembering those days, there is also immense pride that despite such a tremendous stumble, we Indians stood up, brushed the dirt and went on to not only preserve our democracy but also to achieve new milestones of development over the following decades.
We can all be proud of this enduring democratic and never-say-die spirit of our countrymen.
Shashi Shekhar is editor-in-chief, Hindustan. Views are personal.
Also read | This may be the nail in the coffin of Maoist menace
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
15 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Bihar deploys 2.25 lakh staff for special intensive revision of electoral rolls
The Bihar election office has mobilised 2,25,590 administrative staff and volunteers for a special intensive revision (SIR) of electoral rolls to ensure voter list accuracy across all 38 districts in the poll-bound state, chief electoral officer (CEO) Vinod Singh Gunjiyal said on Monday. Voters pose with enumeration forms in Bihar's Patna. (Santosh Kumar/ HT Photo) The process, to be carried out by 81,753 administrative personnel and 1,43,837 volunteers, involves conducting door-to-door surveys at the booth level. Gunjiyal said booth level officers (BLOs) have been trained under district election officers to oversee the distribution and collection of counting forms. Volunteers will assist BLOs in filling these forms, with supervisors and sector officers monitoring the process. 'We urge citizens to cooperate with BLOs and volunteers to make this campaign a success,' Gunjiyal said. The Election Commission of India (ECI) has ordered the deployment of 20,603 additional polling booth officials, along with 77,895 existing ones, to manage new polling stations in Bihar. Over 1.5 lakh booth level agents (BLAs) appointed by political parties are actively verifying voter lists to ensure accuracy. Voters can access updates on the SIR campaign through the CEO's social media handles on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram, or contact toll-free helpline number 1950 for assistance. The poll body is carrying out the SRI in Bihar despite strong opposition from parties such as the Congress, Rashtriya Janata Dal, Trinamool Congress, and AIMIM, who have alleged that the SIR in Bihar risks disenfranchising voters and resembles a 'backdoor NRC'. The SIR, launched on June 25, 2025, involves administrative staff and volunteers conducting door-to-door surveys to verify 78.9 million electors, with 29.3 million required to submit citizenship proof. Critics, including Congress leader Digvijaya Singh, said the rushed timeline and documentation demands could lead to marginalised groups being excluded, as opposition parties plan to challenge the SIR in the Supreme Court claiming electoral manipulation.


India Gazette
21 minutes ago
- India Gazette
"What BJP says and does are two different things": Manickam Tagore on probe committee into Kolkata gangrape case
New Delhi [India], June 30 (ANI): Congress MP Manickam Tagore on Monday hit out at the BJP after the party formed a probe committee into the alleged Kolkata gangrape case and said that while crimes against women must be strongly condemned and no government should overlook them, the BJP should also turn its attention to similar incidents reported from states governed by the party. The Congress MP said that 'What the BJP says and does are two different things,' while referring to the proceedings in the Gujarat Bilkis Bano case. 'Whenever something happens in Bengal, the BJP shows a lot of interest. The attacks on women are condemnable, and we should not let any government ignore them. But the BJP should also focus on Odisha. There have been gangrapes there, and similar incidents against women are happening in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh. What is their government doing in those places?' Tagore told ANI. Taking a swipe at the BJP, Tagore said the party's response amounted to mere 'lip service' aimed at publicity, and that there is often a stark contrast between what the BJP says and what it actually does. The Congress MP attacked the BJP over the Bilkis Bano Case in which all 11 convicts in the case were granted remission by the Gujarat government and released on August 15, 2022. 'The BJP's lip service may be for PR events, but we must understand that what the BJP says and what it does are two different things because in Gujarat, the BJP was the only party that welcomed a rapist with garlands and flowers,' Tagore further said. Reacting to the same, Congress leader Pawan Khera earlier said that problems are not solved by ignoring a rape in BJP ruled state and considering rape in non BJP ruled state as a bigger thing. Speaking to ANI, Khera said, 'Definitely it is a law and order issue. It's the issue pertaining to the way our society is, the way we raise male children. I mean, these are questions that governments alone can't address. But all of us need to address, put our heads together and discuss some solutions instead of saying rape in Hathras is fine to be ignored but a rape in Kolkata is a bigger thing. A rape in Odisha should be ignored because it's a BJP rule state but in Kathua not only rape should be ignored but a rapist should be celebrated. In Bilkis Bano case you garland those who raped her. This is not the way you solve problems.' The committee, formed on June 28, includes former Union Minister and ex-police officer, Mumbai, Satpal Singh; Meenakshi Lekhi, former Union Minister; Biplab Kumar Deb, Member of Lok Sabha; and Manan Kumar Mishra, Rajya Sabha Member. The panel is tasked with visiting the incident site and submitting its probe report to party had strongly condemned the crime and demanded the resignation of Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee. On June 25, a female student was allegedly gang-raped inside the South Calcutta Law College in Kolkata's Kasba area. The police have arrested four persons, including the main accused Manojit Mishra, and formed a five-member Special team to investigate the incident. The police have arrested three persons, including the main accused, and a five-member Special team has been formed to investigate the incident. The main accused, Manojit Mishra, and his accomplices, Zaib Ahmed and Pramit Mukhopadhyay, have been remanded to police custody till July 1. (ANI)


Time of India
22 minutes ago
- Time of India
Congress suffers major setback as Jaya Sadhwani and husband join Shiv Sena before Ulhasnagar civic poll
Ulhasnagar: The Congress has suffered a major setback before the upcoming Ulhasnagar Municipal Corporation (UMC) election. Maharashtra Congress women's vice-president and former deputy mayor Jaya Sadhwani, along with her husband, a former corporator who also held the post of city vice-president of the party, left the party and joined the Shiv Sena . They, along with their supporters, joined the party in the presence of deputy chief minister Eknath Shinde at Mukta Giri Bungalow in Mumbai. Sadhwani was a corporator from the Congress on four occasions, and her husband, Mohan, was a corporator from the Congress twice. Her departure from the Congress dealt a significant blow to the party in the city. Sadhwani also held the post of deputy mayor in 2003 after winning the Ulhasnagar Municipal Corporation election on a Congress ticket. You Can Also Check: Mumbai AQI | Weather in Mumbai | Bank Holidays in Mumbai | Public Holidays in Mumbai After joining the Shiv Sena, Sadhwani said, "I am excited to work under the leadership of Eknath Shinde and will work hard for the development of Ulhasnagar." With Sadhwani joining the Shiv Sena, the party gained a strong Sindhi leader in the city, increasing the possibility of the Shiv Sena becoming stronger in the upcoming UMC election.