Thick slabs of ice lined the front of Vinod’s home in Sokhana village of Hathras, Uttar Pradesh, making his two storey brick tenement unusually chilly for an overcast afternoon in July. On those blocks of ice had lain, just a few hours ago, the inert, mangled bodies of his septuagenarian mother Jaywati, his 42-year-old wife Raj Kumari, and his daughter Bhoomi, who was just 9-year-old. The three were among the 121 people officially killed in a stampede that broke out during a satsang (religious congregation) held just a few kilometres from the village. “I lost everything, my whole family,” a hysteric Vinod wept after cremating three generations of his family’s women. “And all this for what? Who is responsible?” he asked. In Hathras, no one has the answer.