For years Romi Jan's mornings would begin with the plaintive call to prayer that rang out from the central mosque in Indian-occupied Kashmir's largest city. The voice soothed her soul and made her feel closer to God.
Not anymore. For nearly four months now, the voice that would call out five times a day from the minarets of the Jamia Masjid and echo across Srinagar has been silent, a result of India's ongoing security operations in this Muslim-majority region.
"The mosque closure is a relentless agony for me and my family," Jan said. "I can't tolerate it, but I am helpless."
Already one of the most militarised places in the world, last summer India began pouring more troops into occupied Kashmir. It implemented a security lockdown in which it pressed harsh curbs on civil rights, arrested thousands of people, blocked internet and phone service, and shuttered important mosques.