Khawaja Moeenuddin still remembers the crisp white kurta he donned on the morning of that voting day – in India’s first-ever general election held between 1951-52. He was then in is early twenties and could barely contain his excitement, skipping across his small town to the polling station, breathing in the celebratory air of a newly independent democracy.
Now 72 years later, Moeen is in his tenth decade. On May 13, 2024, he once again stepped out in the morning dressed in a crisp white kurta. But this time he walked to the polling booth with the help of a cane. The spring in his step was gone, as was the celebratory atmosphere of voting day.
“Tab desh banane ke liye vote kiya tha, aaj desh bachane ke liye vote kar rahe hai [I voted to build the country back in the day, now I am voting to save it],” he says speaking to PARI at his home in Maharashtra’s Beed city.
Born in the early thirties in Shirur Kasar tehsil of Beed district, Moeen worked as a chowkidar (watchman) in the tehsil office. But in 1948, he was forced to run away to the city of Beed – about 40 kilometres away – to escape the violence during the accession of the then princely state of Hyderabad to the Indian union.
A year after the bloody Partition in 1947, three princely states – Hyderabad, Kashmir and Travancore – resisted to accede to the union of India. The Nizam of Hyderabad sought an independent state that would be neither a part of India nor Pakistan. The agrarian region of Marathwada – in which Beed falls – was part of the princely state of Hyderabad.
Indian armed forces moved into Hyderabad in September 1948 and forced the Nizam to surrender in less than four days. However, according to the Sundarlal committee report, a confidential government report that was made public decades later, at least 27,000 to 40,000 Muslims lost their lives during and after the invasion, forcing teenagers like Moeen to run for their lives.
“The well in my village was filled with dead bodies,” he recalls. “We escaped to Beed city. It has been my home ever since.”









