Kala Pani's horror stories revisited

A
A

BANGALORE: Pitch-dark hellholes teeming with mosquitoes and scorpions, and aweful food for survival... the history of Indian Independence will never be complete without the Cellular Jail in Andamans, said Pramod K Srivastava, professor of history at Lucknow University, on Wednesday.

Srivastava was speaking at the first ever public talk organized by the Oral History Association of India. "Without the oral history of Cellular Jail, the history of India's freedom struggle is lopsided, as no history book contains information on the prison," he said.

Recalling the information he had gathered from interviewing 19 prisoners in 1985, Srivastava said these interviews revealed unknown horror stories about the famous Kala Pani.

Quoting Achyut Ghatak, an associate of Bhagat Singh, who was transported to Cellular Jail, Srivastava said, "None of us ever imagined of returning to the mainland alive. I was transported in the third batch and the first two batches were already waiting for us to start the hunger strike of 1933. The condition of prisoners there was so deplorable that they preferred to die of hunger rather than dying a slow death in the prison".

Shiv Verma, another associate of Bhagat Singh was taken to the jail hospital when he complained of pain the eye. The doctor put alcohol in his eye, resulting in loss of vision, said the professor. He also recollected some of the prisoners telling him that the cell was full of scorpions. "Scorpion bites caused high fever, but no medical care was provided," he said.

"The treatment meted out by the colonial government to revolutionaries was inhuman. The other side of the story is available only through oral history," said the historian.

Freedom fighter Udham Singh tore 8-page statement before judge


Freedom fighter Udham Singh tore 8-page statement before judge


SUNAM: While facing the historic trial in England for killing former Punjab lieutenant governor Michael O'Dwyer, freedom fighter Udham Singh had prepared an eight-page statement, which he wanted to read out in the court. However, the judge interrupted him. Angered over this, Udham tore the pages and hurled them towards the judge.

Taken aback, the court employees put together the bits of the torn paper to make them legible as the judge realised the undertrial may have wanted to say something. Today, those glued-back pages can be found in the national archives.

A new book on the martyr - hailing from Punjab's Sunam town - has thrown up such little known facts about Udham, which add more punch to his powerful persona.

The book titled 'Azadi di shama da parwana, Mahan Ghadri Inqulabi Shaheed Udham Singh' has been written by Rakesh Kumar. Rakesh, too, is a resident of Sunam.

The book brings to the fore the making of a revolutionary, who had shot Dwyer on June 5, 1940 avenging the Jallianwala Bagh massacre in Amritsar on April 13, 1919.

Member of Ghadar Party - Udham -- as stated in the book -- said his aim was not just to assassinate Dwyer, but he wanted the world to know that India needed Independence. "My only aim was not to kill Dwyer. If it was so I could have killed him earlier and didn't have to wait for 21 long years to shoot him in Caxton Hall of London. Dwyer used to go for morning walk in a park and I too used to go there. I easily could have gunned him down, but I wanted to show to the whole of world that India wanted to break free and chose Caxton Hall to highlight the viewpoint of most of the Indians," Udham had averred as the book says.

Rakesh said Udham had even shown his anger towards the British rule in India and stated during the trial that he did not care about the death sentence. "I do not care about dying. We are suffering from the British Empire. I am not afraid to die. I am proud to die for my country. I want to help my native land in getting freedom and I hope when I am gone, my countrymen will drive out the Englishmen," the book quotes Udham.

Rakesh has further highlighted in his book that Udham did not just wander for 21 years to kill Dwyer, he had joined the Ghadar Party and worked for it at various places in England and Europe.