‘Mass Castration’, Mechanical Devotion? Slavery, Surgery and As-If Devotion in a North Indian Guru Movement
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Abstract
This essay examines mass castration allegations within the North Indian guru movement Dera Sacha Sauda. Drawing on court records, public commentary, and prior fieldwork, it traces how surgical procedures served as a mechanism of enforced proximity and devotional binding. Castration here functions less as renunciation than as anatomical control within a system of engineered devotion that sutures followers into machinic forms of loyalty. The essay situates these acts within a broader politics of sacrificial excess, linking them to hijra initiation, Mughal-coded sovereignty, and strategies of masculine containment. What emerges is a devotional regime of irreversible subtraction and a sovereignty staged through ritual overreach.
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Copeman, J. (2025). ‘Mass Castration’, Mechanical Devotion? Slavery, Surgery and As-If Devotion in a North Indian Guru Movement. Religions, 16(9), 1216. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16091216
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https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16091216Sponsors
The APC was funded by the Consellería de Cultura, Educación e Universidade, Galicia, in collaboration with the University of Santiago de Compostela
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© 2025 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by/4.0/).
Attribution 4.0 International
Attribution 4.0 International








