Independence—as an idea, a state of being, lived reality—means nothing to the majority in India. The majority that votes, the majority that sustains the structure of political democracy, yet the majority that does not ask for or get anything in return. In a Tamil Nadu village, a Dalit woman walks with her footwear in hand and casts her vote in the panchayat election, imposing faith in a system that will not even guarantee her the right to let the chappals remain on her feet. In rural North India, women who mildly resist inhuman treatment are routinely paraded naked and branded witches. Pedki Devi of Dhanbad in Bihar was accused of using black magic, branded a witch, stripped and tortured. Her crime: as a widow she would not let her husband’s relatives gobble up the little piece of land she had tilled.