Elections are not a festival of power. They are the sacred voice of the people — the ordinary farmer, the teacher, the labourers, the woman who walks miles to cast her vote. Babasaheb Ambedkar ensured that every Indian, regardless of caste, class, gender or religion, had one equal weapon — their vote. He gave us dignity through democracy.
But what happens when that very vote is stolen? What happens when citizens are reduced to ghosts in their own democracy? That is the India we are staring at today.
The Great Voter List Scam
In Bihar alone, a staggering 65 lakh names were wiped out from voter lists by the Election Commission — not by accident, but without due process. Imagine what that means: a Dalit farmer reaching his polling booth after walking 5 km, only to be told, “Your name doesn’t exist.” A widow in a small village, voting for 30 years, suddenly erased. This is not democracy. This is mass disenfranchisement.
Rahul Gandhi, armed with meticulous data and years of groundwork, has dragged this truth into the national spotlight. His voice is the echo of crores of Indians whose names have been deleted, their existence denied, their power stolen.
History Repeats Itself
On 13th August 1977, Indira Gandhi rode an elephant into Belchhi, Bihar, standing with the oppressed after a brutal massacre. It was not just a visit — it was a political thunderclap that realigned India’s politics.
Now, 48 years later, Rahul Gandhi begins his yatra from Sasaram — a mere 212 kilometers away — fighting not just for seats or power, but for the very survival of India’s democracy. If Belchhi was about oppressed voices crying for justice, Sasaram is about citizens demanding the right to exist on their own voter rolls.
This is no less than Rahul Gandhi’s Belchhi moment.
A Democracy in Chains
For the last decade, the BJP has hollowed out India’s democratic institutions. The Election Commission, meant to be the guardian of fairness, now stands accused of stealing voices. Parliament has been bulldozed into silence, where opposition MPs are suspended and citizens’ issues ignored. Courts are under pressure. Media is muzzled. This is not democracy, this is dictatorship wearing the mask of elections.
The Voice That Refuses to Die
Rahul Gandhi has emerged as the stubborn voice of the people, whether in Parliament or on the streets. Against relentless attacks, disqualification, and vilification, he has refused to be silenced. His yatra is not just a political campaign — it is a war cry for every Indian whose name was deleted, whose vote was stolen, whose dignity was denied.
The Call to Every Indian
The real question is this: If they can delete 65 lakh names in Bihar today, what stops them from deleting yours tomorrow?
Every Indian must ask themselves — is democracy only about results on TV screens? Or is it about the power of each citizen to shape the future?
Rahul Gandhi’s march from Sasaram is not his fight alone. It is the people’s fight. The choice is clear — rise and defend your vote, or remain silent and watch democracy be reduced to ashes.
From Belchhi in 1977 to Sasaram in 2025, the message is the same: the people’s voice cannot, and will not, be erased.
Kavitha Reddy - Kaagaz Foundation www.kavithareddy.in