Uttawar, India — When all people ran, in the direction of the jungles and close by villages, or dived right into a properly to cover from authorities officers, Mohammad Deenu stayed put.
His village, Uttawar, within the Mewat area of northern India’s Haryana state, about 90km (56 miles) from the capital, New Delhi, was surrounded by the police on that chilly evening in November 1976. Their ask: males of fertile age should assemble within the village floor.
India was 17 months into its closest brush with dictatorship – a state of nationwide emergency imposed by then-Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, throughout which civil liberties have been suspended. 1000’s of political opponents have been jailed with out a trial, an in any other case rambunctious press was censored, and, backed by monetary incentives from the World Financial institution and america, India launched into a large compelled sterilisation programme.
Deenu and his 14 associates have been amongst its targets. They have been pushed into the forces’ automobiles and brought to ill-managed sterilisation camps. To Deenu, it was a “sacrifice” that saved the village and its future generations.
“When everybody was operating to save lots of themselves, some elders [of the village] realised that if nobody is discovered, it could create even larger, long-lasting troubles,” Deenu recalled, sitting on a torn picket cot. “So, some males from the village have been collected and given away.”
“We saved this village by our sacrifice. See round, the village is filled with God’s kids operating round in the present day,” he mentioned, now in his late 90s.
Because the world’s largest democracy marks 50 years for the reason that imposition of the emergency on June 25, Deenu is the one man who had been focused in Uttawar as a part of the compelled sterilisation venture who remains to be alive.
Greater than 8 million males have been compelled to bear a vasectomy throughout that interval, which lasted till March 1977, when the state of emergency was lifted. This included 6 million males in simply 1976. Practically 2,000 folks died in botched surgical procedures.
5 many years on, these scars reside on in Uttawar.
‘A graveyard, simply silence’
In 1952, simply 5 years after securing its freedom from the British, India turned the world’s first nation to undertake a nationwide household planning programme. On the time, the thought was to encourage households to have not more than two kids.
By the Sixties, at a time when delivery charges have been shut to 6 kids per lady, the federal government of Indira Gandhi started adopting extra aggressive measures. India’s booming inhabitants was seen as a burden on its economic system, which grew at a median of 4 p.c from the Nineteen Fifties till the Nineties.
The West appeared to share that view: The World Financial institution loaned India $66m for sterilisation initiatives, and the US made meals assist to a ravenous India contingent on its success at inhabitants management.
Nevertheless it was throughout the emergency, with all of the democratic checks and balances eliminated, that the Indira Gandhi authorities went into overdrive, utilizing a mixture of coercion and punishment to strain authorities officers into implementing compelled sterilisation, and communities into accepting it.
Authorities officers got quotas of how many individuals they needed to sterilise. Those that failed their targets had their salaries withheld or confronted the specter of dismissal from their jobs. In the meantime, irrigation water was lower off from villages that refused to cooperate.
Safety forces have been additionally unleashed on those that resisted – together with within the village of Uttawar, which had a predominantly Muslim inhabitants, like lots of the communities focused. The Muslim birthrate in India on the time was considerably increased than that of different communities, making members of the faith a specific focus of the mass sterilisation initiative.
Within the lane subsequent to Deenu’s home, Mohammad Noor, then a 13-year-old, was sleeping in his father’s arms in a cot outdoors their home when policemen, a few of them driving horses, raided their house. His father ran in the direction of a close-by jungle, and Noor rushed inside.
“They broke the doorways and the whole lot that got here of their approach; they shattered the whole lot they might see,” Noor recalled. “To make our lives worse, they combined sand in flour. There was not even a single house within the village that might prepare dinner meals for the following 4 days.”
Noor was picked up within the raid, taken to an area police station and crushed earlier than he was let go. He mentioned that as a result of he was underneath 15, he was deemed too younger for a vasectomy.
That evening of scare, because the village calls it now, additionally gave delivery to an area folklore: the phrases of Abdul Rehman, then the village head. “Outdoors our village, nobody would bear in mind this title, however we do,” mentioned Tajamul Mohammad, Noor’s childhood pal. Each are actually 63 years previous.
Earlier than raiding Uttawar, a number of officers had come to the village, asking Rehman to offer away some males. “However he remained steadfast and denied them, saying, ‘I can not put any household on this place’,” mentioned Tajamul, with Noor nodding passionately. Rehman additionally didn’t agree to offer away males from neighbouring areas both, who have been sheltering in Uttawar.
In accordance with an area Uttawar legend, Rehman instructed the officers: “I cannot give away a canine from my space, and you’re demanding people from me. By no means!”
However Rehman’s resolve couldn’t save the village, which was left in a state of mourning after the raids, mentioned Noor, sucking tobacco from a hookah.
“Individuals who ran away, or those that have been taken away by the police, didn’t return for weeks,” he mentioned. “Uttawar was like a graveyard, simply silence.”
Within the years that adopted, the affect turned extra seen and dreadful. Neighbouring villages wouldn’t enable marriages with males of Uttawar, even those that weren’t sterilised, whereas some broke their current engagements.
“Among the folks [men in Uttawar] have been by no means in a position to recuperate from that psychological shock, and spent years of their lives anxious or disturbed,” mentioned Kasim, an area social employee who goes by his first title. “The stress and the social taboo killed them and lower their lives brief.”

Echoes in in the present day’s India
At the moment, India now not has a coercive inhabitants management programme, and the nation’s fertility charge is now simply greater than two kids per lady.
However the ambiance of worry and intimidation that marked the emergency has returned in a brand new avatar, underneath Prime Minister Narendra Modi, consider some consultants.
For 75-year-old Shiv Visvanathan, a famend Indian social scientist, the emergency helped perpetuate authoritarianism.
Within the face of a rising scholar motion and a resurgent political opposition, the Allahabad Excessive Court docket on June 12, 1975, discovered Indira Gandhi responsible of misusing state equipment to win the 1971 elections. The decision disqualified her from holding elected workplace for six years. 13 days later, Gandhi declared a state of emergency.
“It was the banalisation of authoritarianism that created the emergency, with no second of remorse,” Visvanathan instructed Al Jazeera. “In actual fact, the emergency has created the emergencies which have adopted in in the present day’s India. It was the inspiration of post-modern India.”
Indira Gandhi’s loyalists in contrast her with Hindu goddess Durga, and, in a play with phonetics, to India, the nation itself, very like Modi’s supporters have in contrast the present prime minister with the the Hindu god Vishnu.
Because the tradition of the character cult grew underneath Indira Gandhi, “the nation misplaced the sense of understanding”, mentioned Visvanathan. “With the emergency, authoritarianism turned an instrument of governance.”
Visvanathan believes that regardless that the state of emergency was lifted in 1977, India has since slid in the direction of full authoritarianism. “All the way in which from Indira Gandhi as much as Narendra Modi, every one in all them contributed and created an authoritarian society whereas pretending to be a democracy.”
Since Modi got here to energy in 2014, India’s rankings have fallen swiftly on democratic indices and press freedom charts, because of the jailing of political dissidents and journalists in addition to the imposition of curbs on speech.
Geeta Seshu, the cofounder of Free Speech Collective, a gaggle that advocates for freedom of expression in India, mentioned a similarity between the emergency years and in the present day’s India lies in “the way that mainstream media has caved in”.
“Then and now, the affect is felt within the denial of data to folks,” she mentioned. “Then, civil liberties have been suspended by legislation, however in the present day, the legislation has been weaponised. The worry and self-censorship prevalent then is being skilled in the present day, regardless of no formal declaration of emergency.”
For Asim Ali, a political analyst, the defining legacy of the emergency “is how simply institutional checks melted away within the face of a decided and highly effective government management”.
However one other of the emergency’s legacies is the profitable backlash that adopted, he mentioned. Indira Gandhi and her Congress celebration have been voted out of energy in a landslide in 1977, because the opposition highlighted the federal government’s excesses – together with the mass sterilisation drives – in its marketing campaign pitch.
“[Like the 1970s], whether or not Indian democracy is ready to transfer past this part and regenerate once more [after Modi] stays to be seen,” Ali mentioned.
![An elderly in Uttawar, who lived through the emergency years. [Yashraj Sharma/Al Jazeera]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/Local-in-Uttawar-1750790376.jpg?w=770&resize=770%2C578&quality=80)
‘Seven generations!’
Again in November 1976, Deenu mentioned he solely considered his pregnant spouse, Saleema, as he sat contained in the police van whereas he was being taken away. Saleema was at house on the time.
“Plenty of males, single or childless, pleaded with the policemen to allow them to go,” Deenu recalled. None of Deenu’s 14 associates was let go. “Nasbandi ek aisa shrap hai jisne Uttawar ko tabse har raat pareshan kiya hai,” he mentioned. (Sterilisation is a curse that has haunted Uttawar each evening since.)
After eight days underneath police custody, Deenu was taken to a sterilisation camp in Palwal, the closest city to Uttawar, the place he was operated upon.
A month later, after he returned from the vasectomy, Saleema gave delivery to their solely baby, a son.
At the moment, Deenu has three grandsons and several other great-grandchildren.
“We’re those who saved this village,” he mentioned, grinning. “In any other case, Indira would have lit this village on hearth.”
In 2024, Saleema handed away after a chronic sickness. Deenu, in the meantime, revels in his longevity. He as soon as used to play together with his grandfather, and now performs together with his great-grandchildren.
“Seven generations!” he mentioned, sipping from his plastic cup of a bubbly chilly drink. “How many individuals have you ever seen that get pleasure from this privilege?”