Abstract
Detainee testimonies from periods of constitutional crisis, particularly during the Emergency (1975–1977) in India, have played a significant role in shaping the interpretation and evolution of fundamental rights and emergency provisions under the Constitution. These personal narratives exposed the misuse of state power, arbitrary detentions, suspension of civil liberties, and the weakening of judicial safeguards. Testimonies highlighted the limitations of legal protections at the time, especially in cases like preventive detention, which led to critical judicial and legislative introspection. As a result, they influenced landmark developments such as a broader interpretation of Article 21 (Right to Life and Personal Liberty) and the strengthening of safeguards against executive excess through the 44th Constitutional Amendment.
At the psychological level, detainees adopted various coping mechanisms, including resilience through solidarity, reliance on ideological beliefs, emotional suppression, and meaning-making through suffering. Many testimonies reflect long-term trauma, fear, and identity disruption, but also highlight resistance and mental endurance. These lived experiences brought attention to the psychological cost of state repression, which had previously been ignored in legal discourse.
Consequently, post-emergency legal reforms began to indirectly acknowledge the need for humane treatment of detainees and protection of dignity. Although Indian law still lacks a comprehensive framework for psychological rehabilitation of survivors, judicial recognition of mental well-being as part of the right to life marks an important shift. Overall, detainee testimonies have bridged the gap between lived experience and constitutional law, contributing to both legal reform and a deeper understanding of human rights in India.
Keywords: Emergency, detainee testimonies, fundamental rights, Article 21, preventive detention, psychological trauma, coping mechanisms, constitutional evolution, 44th Amendment, human rights, legal reform.